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We don't want another study - we want open conversations to find a set of tangible, meaningfull actions that we can all take to ensure that men feel supported to face everything that life throws at them.
Stepping onto the open road together because we know that discussions about mens mental health benefits everyone - it creates more authentic and resilient relationships with partners, friends, and family, reduce invisible emotional labour, and contribute to safer, more connected communities.
"A bit of a drive" is a reflection of the fact that real change doesn’t happen in isolation. It happens when people choose to stay the course, lean into discomfort, and move forward side by side.
Endure Together speaks to the reality that life will test us. Pressure, uncertainty, setbacks and personal struggles are part of the human experience. For many men, those pressures are carried quietly. Endurance, in this context, isn’t silent suffering - it’s shared resilience. It’s mates checking in. It’s partners noticing shifts. It’s communities refusing to let people drift into isolation. When we endure together, we reduce loneliness, strengthen connection and build the kind of social support that research consistently shows protects mental wellbeing.
Speak with Courage acknowledges that conversation can be confronting. Cultural expectations have long told men to contain emotion, to power through, to avoid vulnerability. Courage is choosing differently. It’s saying, “I’m not travelling well,” before crisis hits. It’s asking a mate how he’s really going. For friends, partners and collegues it's listening without judgement. Open dialogue reduces stigma, increases early help-seeking, and improves outcomes - not just for individuals, but for families and workplaces. Courage in conversation shifts culture.
Act as One recognises that awareness alone is insufficient. Communities must move beyond symbolic support to practical, collective action. That means creating safe forums for men to connect. It means involving women as allies and advocates. It means workplaces, clubs and organisations publicly recognising and backing initiatives that prioritise mental wellbeing. Collective action builds legitimacy, reduces shame and embeds support into everyday life - not just crisis response.
This is a long road. Endurance sustains it. Courage propels it. Collective action ensures it leads somewhere meaningful.
And here’s the uncomfortable truth: if we leave this to individuals to solve privately, we will keep seeing the same outcomes. Cultural change requires visible, sustained participation. It requires community ownership. It requires all of us.