I would like to thank my project supervisory committee members, Linda Van Pelt and Jennifer Beaveridge, for your contributions to this project. Your unlimited support, astute commentary, and sharp critique enhanced my level of inquiry. Thank you to Nicholas Bartell, for your love, support, and advice as I wrote this paper. Your endless encouragement means the world to me, and reminds me why I do the work that I do. Thank you also to Michael Rowswell, for your valued perspective on a topic with which I can never claim true expertise. Thank you to Mabel, for your sweet and steady presence at my feet, and for urging me to get out of house when I needed it the most. Finally, and most importantly, my sincerest gratitude goes to all of the men who participated in these studies and others like them. Thank you for sharing your experience and enduring wisdom. vii Glossary of Terms Cognitive Behavioural Therapy: a form of psychotherapy based upon the notion that thought distortions and maladaptive behaviours play a role in psychological disorders. The focus is on developing coping strategies and changing unhelpful thoughts, beliefs, and attitudes. It is the most widely used therapy for treating depression in adults. Gender-Role Identity or Gender-Identity: a person's deeply felt, inherent sense of being a particular gender (male, female, genderqueer, gender neutral, etc.) and the actions associated with that gender. The gender may or may not correspond to a person's sex assigned at birth. Gender-Role Socialization: the cultural process whereby traditional gender roles are normalized within a society. For example, in the West girls may be socialized to be nurturing, emotive, and gentle, while boys may be socialized to be self-reliant and stoic. Help Seeking (or Help Seeking Behaviour): the problem-focused and intentional process of seeking assistance for health problems. Help may come from a variety of sources including health care professionals, counselors, and personal or social supports. Heteronormativity: a system of beliefs or a worldview that supposes heterosexuality and the existence of gender binaries are normative and preferred within society. Heteronormativity assumes, for example, that only men can be masculine, and only women can be feminine. It is inherently linked to gender-role socialization paradigms. viii Heterosexist Bias: usually in academic work, the conceptualization of human experience in strict heterosexual terms. Consequences of heterosexist bias include ignoring, illegitimizing, or derogating non-heterosexual orientations, lifestyles, and experiences. The failure to account for non-heterosexual identities within mainstream literature may render such experiences as invisible. Masculinity: the qualities traditionally associated with men. These are often the product of gender-role socialization. Nurse Practitioners: registered nurses who have undertaken graduate studies and training in order to practice autonomously and with the ability to conduct comprehensive health assessments, make diagnoses, order...