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Most men want to support survivors—but freeze when it matters. This guide teaches the three phases men need to show up with safety and presence.

Many men believe in the MeToo movement but freeze when it’s time to actually show up. In Part 2 of the Men and MeToo series, therapist and veteran Tim Wienecke outlines a modern masculine framework for supporting survivors—focusing on emotional regulation, relational skill, and community presence.

PHASE 1 — Support Yourself (01:20–07:30)
Learn to regulate anger, fear, and protectiveness when someone discloses harm. Address your own shame, past behavior, and cultural conditioning before trying to hold someone else’s story.

PHASE 2 — Support Your People (07:30–32:00)
Master listening without interrogating. Explore the Continuum of Harm, the 10-Level Boundary Scale, and simple scripts for showing up without making things worse.

PHASE 3 — Support Your Community (32:00–45:30)
Move beyond online performance into real-world action. Learn how to enter survivor-led spaces, when men should lead (and when we shouldn’t), and what healthy masculine presence looks like.

Chapters:
00:00 – Why Men Freeze Up
00:50 – Survivor Statistics
01:20 – Phase 1: Managing Your First Reactions
03:40 – Responding Without Blame
05:40 – Looking Honestly at Your Past
07:30 – Phase 2: You Can’t Do This Alone
11:00 – Building Your Support Circle
17:00 – The Continuum of Harm
22:00 – The 10-Level Boundary Scale
31:00 – Recap
32:00 – Phase 3: Taking This Work Into the World
33:30 – Why Online Outrage Fails
36:20 – Real-World Support
38:00 – Walking Into Spaces That Don’t Belong to You
40:20 – When Men Should Lead
44:00 – Strengthening Community
45:30 – Closing

This is practical masculinity that repairs. If it resonates, share it with men who want to do better.

Series & Resources:
• Part 1: What To Do When You’re Accused
• Guide: How to Walk Into Spaces That Don’t Belong to You – https://americanmasculinity.gumroad.com/l/xvcnj
• How to Build a Men’s Group That Holds You Accountable

Key Facts:
• 1 in 4 men, 1 in 2 women, and even higher rates among trans/non-binary adults experience sexual violence (CDC 2023; NSVRC 2024).
• Very few cases result in conviction due to evidentiary limits—not because survivors are lying.
• Questioning or interrogating survivors increases self-blame and isolation (Ullman & Peter-Hagene 2014).

Full fact-check and citations: www.americanmasculinity.com
What support do you need as you try to show up better for survivors in your life?
Your story might help another man take his first step.

The American Masculinity Podcast™ is hosted by Timothy Wienecke — licensed psychotherapist, Air Force veteran, and men’s advocate.
Real conversations about masculinity, mental health, growth, and how men can show up better — as partners, leaders, and friends.
We focus on grounded tools, not yelling or clichés. If you have questions or want a tool for something you're wrestling with, leave a comment or send a message — your feedback shapes what we build next.
Note: While this doesn’t replace therapy, it might help you notice something worth exploring.

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Chapters

1. Why Men Freeze Up Around #MeToo (00:00:00)

2. Phase 1: Support Yourself (Regulate Anger, Fear, and Shame) (00:01:20)

3. Phase 2: Support Your People (Listen, Don’t Interrogate) (00:07:30)

4. The Continuum of Harm & The 10-Level Boundary Scale (00:17:00)

5. Phase 3: Support Your Community (Show Up Offline) (00:32:00)

6. Healthy Masculine Presence: When Men Should Lead — and When We Shouldn’t (00:40:20)

38 episodes