“…In the last 30 years, research in men and masculinities has produced a body of literature that has found many negative outcomes correlated with masculine norms and related constructs ( Wong & Wester, 2016 ). Notably, the endorsement of traditional masculinity ideology, conformity to masculine norms, gender role conflict, and gender role stress have been related to depression, anxiety, low self-esteem, stress, decreased relationship satisfaction, increased systolic blood pressure, aggression and violent behavior, substance abuse, alexithymia, negative attitudes toward help seeking, racial bias, sexism, and a number of other concerning variables (see Gerdes, Alto, Jadaszewski, D’Auria, & Levant, 2017 ; O’Neil, 2012 ; Wong, Ho, Wang, & Miller, 2016 ). Parallel to these trends in the literature, men’s health researchers have advocated for positive conceptions of masculinity (e.g., Kiselica, Benton-Wright, & Englar-Carlson, 2016 ; Kiselica & Englar-Carlson, 2010 ) and strengths-based approaches (e.g., Mahalik, Good, Tager, Levant, & Mackowiak, 2012 ; Wong, 2006 ) in order to be more effective in clinical work with men and to engage men in reconstructing their definition of manhood to be healthier ( Levant & Kopecky, 1995 ).…”