The Adult Boy: Becoming a Man

by Oli Anderson, Transformational Coach for Realness

The Adult Boy is a Boy in a Man’s Body Because He Hasn’t Completed His Childhood

There’s a strange thing can happen to a lot of men in modern times:

On paper, they’re ‘adults’ because they’ve got the age to be an ‘adult’, the job to be an ‘adult’, the responsibilities to be an ‘adult’, and maybe even a mortgage, a relationship, a business and/or a career that looks solid from the outside but inside…well, something just doesn’t line up.

Deep down they can’t shake off the feeling that “I feel like a boy pretending to be a man” (or something similar).

I don’t mean this in the sense that they’re being “immature” and acting like clowns or whatever but more in the unsettling sense that life has continued to roll forward over the years but something inside never quite caught up.

This is one of the most consistent patterns I’ve seen working with men over the years (which is why I’ve decided to write this article):

The external identity looks like an ‘adult’ but their inner world is still dominated by the feeling that they’re still operating from an older version of themselves – one that’s shaped by childhood over the adult consciousness that’s actually now available to them at all times.

This gap between these two states creates inner tension that you may be familiar with yourself:

  • Confusion.
  • Anxiety.
  • Restlessness.
  • The subtle sense of being stuck in life – even when things look fine on the surface.
  • Etc. etc. etc.

The ‘good’ news is that this isn’t a rare problem and so 1) you’re not alone, and 2) it can be sorted out.

Actually, it’s pretty common (as you may see if you look at the world around you) – it’s just that it usually goes unnoticed because most men assume “becoming a man” just happens automatically with age or that it’s about the externals more than any sense of real “inner work” or cultivation of a real relationships with themselves and life.

The truth is that so many of us can grow older without ever actually leaving boyhood behind – this article is about leaving that season behind once and for all and stepping over the threshold into manhood.

Let’s dig a little deeper:

The Adult Boy must die and be integrated into your rebirth as a man.

The Adult Boy: What We'll Cover in This Article

The Adult Boy: The Boy in the Man’s Body

A very common theme I see is men who have entered adulthood as nothing more than just a number – 18, 25, 40, 50, whatever – but internally still feel like a boy.

Like we said in the intro, sometimes they’re highly functional or even ‘successful‘ despite having this problem and so they can still perform, achieve, and hold things together in the world around them but – internally – they feel the mismatch: a sense that they’re simply performing adulthood rather than embodying it.

The end result of this is that it creates a split or fragmented sense of identity:

  • The outer self that functions in the world.

  • The inner self that still reacts like a child shaped by old conditioning and mental and emotional blocks.

This leads a subtle but draining experience of being unreal or inauthentic where they find themselves being incapable of being as fully present within themselves and their own lives as they’d like to be because part of them is still trying to become acceptable rather than simply being real.

Man or a Boy? The Common Symptoms of “Unfinished Boyhood”

From what I’ve seen looking at my own life and working with others, this “Adult Boy” or “Boy in a Man’s Body” pattern shows up in predictable ways because it’s always rooted in the same fundamental problem (which we’ll get onto).

Not all men have all of these symptoms going on in their lives but they do tend to cluster together:

1. Needing permission to live

A man who hasn’t fully stepped into adulthood often still feels like he needs permission from others to act – maybe not always literally but internally there’s a sense that they need this ‘permission’ before acting (normally because he had a strict or overbearing parent and lost touch with his own capacity for self-authority).

This means he wastes time waiting for validation before making decisions, looks for approval before trusting himself to act, and unconsciously asks: “Is it okay if I do this?”

The end result is that he often becomes passive and loses the capacity for spontaneity and real action.

2. Being ruled by feelings instead of being guided by them

The “Adult Boy” gets pulled in every emotional direction going because every time a feeling arises, it suddenly becomes the authority in his life in that moment and so he either follows it or tries to suppress it.

What this means is that instead of holding a stable centre or groundedness in himself from which he can respond, he gets lost in reactivity and so his day his day becomes a series of emotional detours instead of a unified and consistent flow towards any real purpose.

In short, the man who is stuck in the season of boyhood is unable to integrate is feelings and so instead he either suppresses them or obeys them blindly (both of which lead to a disconnection from his REALNESS).

3. A gap between inner truth and outer expression

More often than not, the “Adult Boy” knows who he is deep down – or at least senses it here and there – but doesn’t express it consistently and so his external life becomes an expression of his inauthenticity or unreality.

Ultimately, because there is no real expression or communication, life becomes a performance where he lives to maintain and defend a carefully managed version of himself that avoids rejection, conflict, or discomfort.

4. Trapped or restless energy

The gap between who he pretends to be (ego) and who he actually is (realness) creates trapped emotional energy that often shows up physically: leg rocking, fidgeting, overthinking, insomnia, agitation, etc. etc. etc.

This is really just the body expressing what the mind is suppressing – unprocessed emotion and unexpressed direction that needs an outlet that will carry him into the next season of his life: manhood.

The actual problem is that this energy is being resisted and unclaimed and so it starts to go primal and turn against the boy until he steps up and starts doing something REAL with it.

5. Avoidance of real direction

The “Adult Boy” keeps himself busy in worrying, thinking, planning, analysing and playing around with concepts and ideas but avoids decisive action.

This type of overthinking becomes a sophisticated form of self-protection for the ego that stops him finding out who he really is (which what he’s really craving deep down in most cases).

6. Fake Stoicism

One of the most deceptive patterns I’ve seen is using philosophy to suppress emotion:

For example, he tells himself that he’s “stoic”, “logical”, or “above emotion” (etc.) but what’s really happening is her is that he’s resisting reality for whatever reason (usually because he’ll have to face himself and life and he doesn’t think he’s ready).

Real stoicism includes feeling our feelings without being taken places we don’t want to go in the long-term – ‘fake’ (internet bro) stoicism is emotional disconnection dressed up as wisdom (in other words, it’s a type of spiritual bypassing).

7. Fear of risk and getting in ‘trouble’

Underneath the mask of everything looking oaky on the surface the “Adult Boy” is often driven by a sense of unconscious shame (a disconnection from truth in the form of a core assumption about oneself that “I am not good ‘enough’ as I am”).

Driven by this shame (and the fear of finding out it’s real), he avoids risk, avoids visibility, and avoids standing out – not because he’s lazy or weak but because part of him still feels like a child who might be punished for stepping out of line.

8. A distorted relationship with anger

Many men who are trapped in this state have buried their anger because it it was often shamed early in life – frequently by a father figure or a strict environment of origin (which is why they have “Daddy Issues“).

This is unfortunate because anger is a very healthy and real emotion that helps us to protect our boundaries and serves as rocket fuel for building the future we want.

When it’s trapped and denied, it just turns inward and becomes the kind of sadness, anxiety, or passive frustration that holds a man back as an “Adult Boy”.

9. Living inside an imaginary audience

Instead of acting from real intention and building a life that he actually wants to live from a place of presence, he unconsciously tries to impress a mental image of “mummy and daddy” and ends up playing it safe and holding back on himself and life.

Even as an adult, he is still trying to earn approval from an internalised authority system because he still thinks that they ways he learned to gain ‘love’ in childhood are the only ones available to him in manhood.

(Spoiler: they’re not – you can learn to love (accept) yourself first and foremost by living from the inside-out instead of the outside-in).

10. Deep shame

At the root of it all is that core assumption of shame mentioned above:

I am not good enough as I am“.

Driven by this, life just becomes an attempt to manage perception, control outcomes, and avoid being “found out” – this always leads to life becoming more and more unreal and the Void becoming more and more persistent as one’s experience.

The Core Issue of the Adult Boy: Childhood Never Got Completed

All of these symptoms are variations of the same underlying issue which is that:

The man never fully left the psychological season of boyhood.

This isn’t because there’s something ‘wrong’ with him but simply because childhood conditioning was never fully released and so he’s ‘stuck’ in the same energy that it conditioned him to identify with and think of as being real (when it isn’t).

The kind of conditioning that we pick up in childhood is rarely neutral because it’s shaped by parents who were carrying their own unresolved emotional ‘stuff’ – usually the Unholy Trinity of shame, guilt, and/or trauma.

This doesn’t mean that we need to obsess and start blaming our parents, btw:

Most parents are simply passing on what they inherited themselves and so they did what they could with their own level of awareness.

What gets passed on is still conditioning, though, and that conditioning becomes the invisible structure of how a man sees himself in the world until he starts to wake up to the fact that the past is DONE and he can build from where he finds himself TODAY.

How the “Adult Boy” Pattern Forms

At birth, a human being is whole which basically means that there’s spontaneity, expression, and presence – in other words there’s no internal division or split from the self.

Of course, as the child grows, certain parts of them are met with disapproval, rejection, or misunderstanding and so the child learns things like:

  • “This part of me is not acceptable”.

  • “This version of me causes trouble”.

  • “If I want connection, I need to change”.

  • Etc. etc. etc.

All of this causes the child to split from these ‘parts’ but the rejected parts don’t simply disappear into thin air and never to be seen again – instead, they go into exile underground and collectively become the shadow self.

Meanwhile – in order to keep ‘hiding’ – a socially acceptable version of the child is created which is essentially a mask designed for safety and approval.

This mask becomes the ego but – over time – the mask becomes so familiar that the person forgets it’s a mask and starts to think that it’s “Me” (when, really is just a filter between them and reality).

Nevertheless, the real self – the unfiltered, spontaneous, alive self – remains hidden underneath and adulthood never fully arrives until this split is addressed.

The Emotional Core: Sadness

Most men that are stuck in the “Adult Boy” state are not primarily angry or anxious underneath everything – they’re SAD.

Sadness is what arises when there is disconnection from realness and can ultimately be seen as the emotional signature of fragmentation instead of wholeness.

It’s also a signal because sadness is not just something to ‘fix’ – it’s also something that points to what has been left behind.

It reminds us of things like:

“Something real was abandoned and has never been reclaimed“.

Or:

“There is something from the past that remains incomplete”.

Most men try to escape this sadness through distraction, over-achievement, overthinking, constant stimulation, or even addiction but sadness doesn’t disappear through avoidance – it only completes itself through being faced and felt (as the saying goes, “you have to feel it to heal it”).

When it’s fully felt felt the past can finally be accepted as being DONE and in this acceptance of completion, space opens where there was previously only tension.

Life Happens in Seasons

Human development isn’t random – it moves through cycles that are common to us all:

  • Birth
  • Childhood
  • Adulthood
  • Ripening
  • Decay
  • Death

The transition from boyhood to manhood is really just a very natural shift between seasons but modern life often removes the structure that used to support that shift because – for most men – there are no clear rites of passage anymore.

In other words, there’s no defined threshold that says:

“You are no longer a boy – it’s time to be a man”.

This just leads to so many men unconsciously remaining mentally and emotionally in the previous season while physically attempting to ‘live’ in the next.

All this means is that they attempt to cling to what’s familiar – even if it no longer fits or feels real (mainly because they don’t know what to replace the ‘familiar’ with).

Every transition requires a form of letting go, though, – this is just a part of the human experience for all of us: the psychological “death” of an old identity is required so a new one can emerge.

Without that, life becomes stuck repetition as many “Adult Boys” know all too well.

What Needs to Change: Three Levels of Work to Cross the Threshold from Boyhood to Manhood

Becoming a man – psychologically speaking – is not all about aggression, dominance, or suppressing emotion (though aggression has it’s time and place for sure) – it’s about integration.

This starts to happens on three main levels:

1. The Body

The first step is that the nervous system must learn safety in presence so that you can feel safe with your own emotional ‘stuff’ – this will allow unprocessed emotions to move through the body rather than stay trapped as tension or restlessness.

Without this, the mind will always be unstable.

2. The Mind

Limiting beliefs formed in childhood need to be identified and questioned so that you can replace them with something real that actually serves you as a man in the present – not intellectually but experientially.

What is true now is not what was true then so you might have to update the software you’re running.

3. Vision

A man needs direction so he can keep growing more real and expressing more truth in the world (not through words but through actions).

Without vision, energy just collapses into overthinking being ‘stuck’ again.

This free course I made can help you start creating a vision for yourself and your life: The 7-Day Personality Transplant System Shock for Realness & Life Purpose

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The Real Shift: From Performance to Presence

At its core, this journey is not about becoming someone else but about unlearning whatever you picked up along the line that is keeping you from yourself and your life in reality.

It is the process of stepping out of performance and into presence because, ultimately, performance is what a boy does to stay safe in the world but presence is what a man embodies when he no longer needs to pretend.

Practical Steps: How to Begin the Shift from Adult Boy to Man

Here are a few more practical starting points for moving out of unconscious boyhood patterns and into being the man that it’s (possibly – if you read this far) time for you to become:

1. Notice where you’re still asking for permission

Throughout your day, learn to witness yourself and to pay attention:

  • Where are still you waiting for approval or permission?
  • Where are you hesitating unnecessarily?

Then take one small action daily without asking for validation before or after.

2. Stop obeying or suppressing every feeling

Feelings are something we all experience but not all are instructions or something we have to hide from:

Learn to pause when something arises and ask:

“Is this aligned with my vision and principles or is it just a temporary emotion?”

Act from realness – not reactivity!

3. Tell the truth more often

Start expressing what you actually think and feel in low-risk situations so that you can stop rehearsing a curated version of yourself and start replacing the unreal with the real.

4. Work with the body

Daily regulation is essential – in fact it’s so important it’s worth taking a “Regulation First” policy:

  • Walks without distraction
  • Breathwork or slow breathing (especially through the nose)
  • Strength training or movement
  • Allowing physical release of tension
  • Yin yoga
  • Whatever works for you

The body can’t be skipped in this process as ‘Boyhood’ is often just as trapped in the body and nervous system as it is the mind.

5. Identify the internal “audience”

When making decisions, check in and be honest with yourself:

“Who am I trying to impress right now?”

Then deliberately choose one action that contradicts that pattern (unless you really wanna spend the rest of your life impressing certain people).

6. Build a real vision

Start to become of aware of the specific direction you want to take yourself in – this is your Vision:

  • What kind of man do you want to be in 6–12 months?

  • How does he act when nobody is watching?

  • What does he stop tolerating?

Write it down, return to it daily, and go do it.

7. Allow sadness to complete itself

Instead of analysing or attempting to escape from it, stop putting of the inevitable and allow sadness to be felt in the body without any kind of narrative or stories.

Just realise that you’re ALREADY safe and you’re ALREADY enough and feel whatever you’re feeling.

This is often the turning point because it eventually completes the past and brings you into the present.

You become a man and stop being and Adult Boy when you give up your fear and grow real.

The Final Word: The Adult Boy and REALNESS

Becoming a man is not about becoming harder, louder, or more controlled – it’s about becoming REAL.

This is pretty ‘good’ news because reality has a simple requirement:

You stop living as a version of yourself created to survive the past and start living as the embodied presence that is here now.

The boy in you was never ‘wrong’ – he was just unfinished and what makes a man is not the rejection of that boy but the willingness to finally complete the story and step forward from it.

Stay real out there,

Oli Anderson, Transformational Coach for Realness

P.S. If you’re ready to leave the past behind and to become present in yourself and your life then book a free coaching session with me and I’ll help you take real action.


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Oli Anderson, Transformational Coach for Realness

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Hi, I'm Oli Anderson - a Transformational Coach for REALNESS and author who helps people to tap into their REALNESS by increasing Awareness of their real values and intentions, to Accept themselves and reality, and to take inspired ACTION that will change their lives forever and help them find purpose. Click here to read my story about how I died, lost it all, and then found reality.

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