Borderlands | Retreats for men navigating a midlife crisis

Men at Midlife: Sexual Identity, Hidden Lives, and the Cost of the Mask

I am a straight man. Does it matter? Should it matter?

I ask these questions because something is revealing itself in the hundreds of conversations I have with men who reach out to Borderlands — something I didn’t expect, and something I can no longer stay quiet about.

Borderlands is a space for men in midlife. All men. We do not ask about sexual orientation and we do not need to — our work is the same regardless. And yet, across these calls, a pattern has emerged. The proportion of gay, bisexual, and queer men who find their way to us is notably higher than the statistics would predict for the general population.

I don’t think this is accidental. But the more I sit with it, the more I think the real question is not why these men are coming to us. The real question is what it says about Indian masculinity that so many men have reached midlife without ever having had a single room where they could be fully honest about who they are.

This article is about why. It is about what it costs a man to spend decades hiding his sexual identity — the cost to him, to his partner, to his children, and to the wider world those hidden lives ripple through. And it is about what midlife does to that cost: why the reckoning tends to arrive in full force somewhere between 35 and 60, and what becomes possible when a man finally stops performing.

Drawing from direct conversations with men across orientations, and from the pattern of what surfaces when those conversations are given real space, this article explores one of the least-spoken-about dimensions of the midlife experience for men in India.

Understanding Sexual Identity Through the Lens of Head, Heart, and Gut

At Borderlands, we often explore men’s experience through three interrelated centres: the head — thought, meaning, narrative; the heart — emotion, connection, relationship; the gut — instinct, desire, the body’s unmediated truth.

These are not abstract ideas. They are lived dimensions of experience.

For a man whose sexual identity has been suppressed, all three centres are affected. The head constructs a parallel narrative — one that can be spoken at the dinner table, in the office, at family gatherings. The heart learns to operate within a narrowed range, steering away from what it actually feels. And the gut — the seat of instinct and desire — is managed, suppressed, or simply never listened to.

Over time, the cost is not just emotional. It is structural. A man who cannot align what he thinks, feels, and instinctively knows is carrying a split — and that split does not stay internal. It shows up in his relationships, his presence, his capacity for intimacy, and his ability to be fully alive in his own life.

Midlife is often where that split becomes impossible to keep quiet.

The Hesitation Before the Real Conversation

The call with a man who is not straight tends to follow a particular arc.

He begins carefully — speaking about fog, about a lack of direction, about feeling like the life he has built no longer quite fits. The language is careful, forward-facing, safe. He has used it before.

And then, at some point in the space between what he has rehearsed and what he actually feels, he pauses.

“Can I share something? You won’t judge me?”

I have heard this hesitation often enough to recognise its weight — the breath before the crossing. He is gay. Or bisexual. Or somewhere in the territory our culture has never given him language for. And what follows — once the words are out — is not relief. Not yet. What follows is the story of a man who has spent years, sometimes decades, carrying an identity in secret.

The hesitation is real, and it is learned. It is not dramatic or theatrical — it is the hesitation of a man who has gathered enough evidence to know that this truth is dangerous. That rooms often do not hold it. That families frequently cannot. That the cost of saying it has seemed, for most of his life, greater than the cost of not saying it.

Understanding that hesitation is the beginning of understanding everything else in this article.

What Our Society Has Made of Non-Straight Identity

I grew up in a world where I did not know Indian men could be gay. The word existed — the way you know about a country you have never been to. But what I absorbed, through every signal available to a boy becoming a man, was that it was to be avoided. Those men were to be avoided. I absorbed this without question, the way you absorb everything you are never directly told.

It took years of living in environments where the full range of human identity was visible and unremarkable — and sustained, honest friendship with gay men — to decondition that. To arrive at what should have been obvious: that a non-straight man is simply a man. That his identity does not require my management or my discomfort.

I say this not to position myself as enlightened. I say it because I know exactly how this conditioning operates, how long it takes to undo, and how thoroughly it shapes the world that a gay or bisexual man in India is required to navigate.

The signals are everywhere and they are persistent: in how same-sex desire is treated in popular culture, in how families discuss marriage, in how peer groups bond, in what is left unsaid at every gathering. A man does not need to be told directly that his identity is unacceptable. The message arrives through silence, through avoidance, through the complete absence of any image of a life like his that is treated as ordinary and worthy of respect.

For the generation of men now in midlife, this environment was even more airtight. Section 377 was still law. The vocabulary for LGBTQ+ experience in mainstream Indian culture was essentially non-existent. For many of these men, the only frameworks available for understanding what they felt were shame and secrecy.

That is not a personal failing. That is the cost of a society’s refusal to make space. The issue is not that some men are gay, bisexual, or queer. The issue is that Indian masculinity has often made heterosexual performance the price of belonging.

The Hidden Marriage: When One Identity Swallows Another

The most consistent pattern across these conversations is this: a man who cannot openly inhabit his sexual identity will eventually find another identity to inhabit instead.

He becomes a husband. A father. A provider. A professional. He builds a life of genuine substance and genuine effort — and he builds it, in part, to answer the question his society has given him no other way to answer.

“I did what was expected. I thought the rest would follow. It didn’t.”

The woman he marries is not a casualty of his dishonesty, in most cases. She is a person he may genuinely care for, navigating a marriage with someone who is, at some level, absent in ways she can feel but cannot name. Over time she may sense a distance she cannot bridge, an intimacy that does not fully arrive, a partnership that functions but does not reach her. She may spend years wondering what she is doing wrong.

The children they raise grow up inside a family whose emotional atmosphere is shaped, in ways no one has language for, by a fundamental concealment at its centre.

None of this is intentional. It is the downstream consequence of a man who was never given the conditions to live honestly — and who, in the absence of those conditions, made the choices his world made available to him.

~100 million

Official figures put the number of non-straight men in India at around 2.5 million — a number almost no researcher takes seriously. Unofficial estimates, which account for the scale of concealment this article describes, range from 50 to 75 million. Even at the conservative end of that range, if a fraction marry opposite-sex partners — as social pressure consistently encourages — and raise one child per family, the mathematics of concealment become staggering.We are not describing isolated personal choices. We are describing a systemic pattern with consequences that ripple outward across several generations. An epidemic of unlived lives, and the unhappiness that radiates from them.

Midlife as the Reckoning Point

Midlife is an inflection point for all men. The signs of midlife are well-documented: restlessness beneath a functioning life, a shift in what drives and what drains, a growing sense that the map no longer matches the terrain. The old structures — career, role, identity — that once gave direction begin to feel like constraints.

For many of the gay or bisexual men we speak to, this reckoning arrives with particular force.

Sexual identity is not a peripheral piece of who a person is. It is not a preference or a category. It is one of the most fundamental truths a person carries — about desire, about intimacy, about how they move through the world. To have suppressed it for two or three decades is to have suppressed something very close to the centre of oneself. By midlife, the pressure of that suppression tends to be significant.

“I have done everything right. I don’t know why I feel like I haven’t started.”

Midlife also removes many of the buffers that made suppression manageable. Children are older and more observant. Professional achievement has plateaued in ways that no longer fully distract. The marriage has settled into a shape that makes the distance in it harder to explain away. The structures that once absorbed attention are less absorbing.

What is left, in that quieter space, is the question that has always been there: who am I, actually? And am I living inside that truth?

For many men, midlife is the first time that question has the silence it needs to become impossible to ignore.

The Cost of the Mask — to Everyone

Suppression is not a neutral act. It does not simply hold something in place — it has consequences for the person carrying it, and for everyone connected to them.

A man who cannot acknowledge his own desire is a man who cannot be fully present in any intimate relationship. The impact on a marriage is real and measurable: emotional distance that no one can name, physical intimacy that gradually narrows, conversations that stay on the surface because something in the room makes depth dangerous.

The mask also costs a man his relationship with himself. One of the most consistent findings from our conversations with men at midlife is the degree to which suppressed identity narrows a person’s entire inner life. When one truth cannot be said, it does not stay contained to that single territory. It creates a general wariness about self-expression — a learned habit of managing from the inside rather than feeling.

“I haven’t known how to be with myself, honestly. For a very long time.”

If I had to suppress my own identity every single day — if who I was could never be said out loud — I do not think I would be fine. I don’t think anyone would be. The weight of that performance, sustained over decades, is not a manageable adjustment. It is a daily diminishment of aliveness. And it does not stay personal — it permeates every relationship, every conversation, every space in which the person who is concealing themselves is also trying to connect.

What Straight Men Have to Do With This

There is a role for straight men in this conversation — and it is not peripheral.

The environment that makes it costly for a non-straight man to be visible is not only maintained by institutions and laws. It is maintained, quietly and often unconsciously, by how straight men respond when the subject comes up. Most straight men do not think of themselves as cruel. That is part of the problem. The harm is rarely in open hostility. It is in the joke that passes. The silence after someone shares something real. The slight tightening in the room. The assumption that every man’s desire, marriage, future, and family life must look basically the same. This is how a room teaches a man what he is allowed to say — not through one dramatic act of rejection, but through hundreds of small signals.

I spent years of my own life avoiding gay men — not out of active hostility, but out of discomfort I had never interrogated. That discomfort was not mine in any meaningful sense. It was handed to me, and I carried it without examining it. Deconditioning it took contact, time, and the willingness to sit with something unfamiliar until it became simply ordinary.

That is what is being asked of straight men. Not performance, not declarations, not the management of how they appear. Simply: the willingness to be in a room with a non-straight man as a full equal, without internal contraction, without subtle signals that his presence is conditional on staying invisible.

That is not a large ask. But for many men in this generation, it requires work they have not yet done.

Honesty Is Not the Same as Public Disclosure

There is a difference between secrecy and discernment.

A man does not owe every part of himself to every room. We all live through roles — son, husband, father, friend, colleague, professional. In each role, different parts of us come forward, and different parts remain private. That is not necessarily falsehood. It is part of the complexity of being human.

But concealment becomes damaging when a man has no room anywhere where he can be whole.

For many of the men we speak to, the question is not simply: have I told everyone? That may not be possible, wise, or safe. The deeper question is: is there anywhere I do not have to perform? Is there anyone with whom I can be fully real? Have I at least told the truth to myself?

There must be some zone — a trusted friend, a therapist, a men’s group, a carefully held retreat space, a circle of people who can receive the truth without turning it into drama — where the divided self can begin to come back together.

The danger is not privacy. The danger is exile from oneself.

A Borderlands Perspective: All Orientations, One Work

Borderlands is not a retreat designed only for gay or queer men. It is a space for men navigating midlife — the inflection point where identity, meaning, and aliveness come back up for examination.

The work at Borderlands — beginning in the body, moving through somatic practice, authentic expression, and deep relational encounter — does not change based on sexual orientation. The questions it asks are the same. What have you been performing? What has gone quiet in you? What would it mean to stop managing and start feeling?

What differs is what those questions surface. For a gay or bisexual man, they may surface something that has been sealed for thirty years. For a straight man, they may surface the conditioning that contributed to that sealing — the places where his own discomfort has, without his awareness, made rooms smaller for the men around him.

In our retreats, men of different orientations do this work together. That matters. Not because we theorise about it, but because it happens — in triads, in shared practice, in the space after someone has said something that took courage to say. Men who have spent years performing a version of themselves in front of other men slowly discover what it is like to be met instead.

The men who reach us from non-straight orientations are not coming because they need a LGBTQ+ space. They are coming because they need a space where the mask — the deepest mask, the one beneath all the others — can finally come down.

And the straight men who share that space with them are doing something important too: learning what it is to be in an honest relationship with the full range of what men actually are.

That is, at its core, what we mean when we talk about forging a new kind of masculine identity. Not narrower and harder. Wider and more honest.

Frequently Asked Questions

The pressures are both cultural and structural. Families carry strong expectations around marriage and lineage. Peer groups rarely provide models of openly gay men living ordinary lives. For most of the generation now in midlife, same-sex relationships were legally criminalised until 2018. The vocabulary for talking about non-straight identity — within families, within friendships, within men themselves — is still catching up. The result is a set of conditions where concealment has, for most of these men, felt like the only realistic option. Not because they chose to hide, but because the cost of visibility was genuinely high, and the support structures for being visible were largely absent.

The underlying midlife experience — the sense that the old maps no longer work, that the life built in the first half may not fit the person one has become — is broadly shared across orientations. What differs for a gay or bisexual man is the additional layer: that the life built in the first half may have been organised around an identity that was never fully his own. For straight men, midlife often asks what do I actually want? For non-straight men navigating hidden identity, it tends to ask something more foundational: who am I, and have I ever allowed myself to fully be that person? The reckoning is the same in shape. It is different in weight.

The effects are real even when the cause is unnamed. A partner often senses distance she cannot explain — intimacy that doesn’t fully arrive, presence that is somehow held back. Over time the marriage may settle into a pattern of functional co-existence: managing the household, raising children, maintaining a social front — while the emotional and physical connection that both people need quietly thins. In many cases the woman spends years wondering what she is doing wrong, without access to the actual answer. The damage is not primarily caused by the man’s orientation — it is caused by the concealment that social pressure produced. The solution is not moral judgement. It is creating conditions where the truth does not need to be hidden in the first place.

More common than is generally discussed, particularly in cultures where early disclosure was not realistic. The midlife period — typically between 35 and 60 — removes many of the structures that made concealment manageable. Children are older. Professional identity is more settled. The marriage has clarified into its actual shape. What these changes produce is not a new desire, but a new confrontation with a desire that has always been present. Midlife does not create the question. It removes the noise that made the question easier to defer.

The effects are significant and well-documented. Chronic suppression of core identity is associated with elevated anxiety, depression, emotional numbing, and a persistent sense of inauthenticity — the feeling of performing a life rather than living one. Beyond clinical measures, what shows up consistently in conversations with these men is a particular kind of tiredness: the accumulated cost of managing two realities simultaneously for decades. Many describe a diminished capacity for joy, spontaneity, and genuine connection — not because those things are unavailable to them, but because the energy required to maintain the performance has crowded them out.

What most of these men need is not a programme designed specifically for gay men. What they need is a space where they do not have to perform any version of themselves — where they can arrive as they are, be met without judgement, and do the deeper work of reconnecting with what has gone quiet. A well-held men’s retreat offers that: a container strong enough to hold the truth, with other men who are asking their own hard questions, and facilitation experienced enough to work with what actually emerges. For many, it is the first time they have been in a room where they did not need to manage how they were seen.

The most important thing is rarely active or declarative. It is the internal work of examining conditioned discomfort — the places where a non-straight man’s presence produces a contraction that hasn’t been looked at. For many straight men, that discomfort is not hostility. It is simply unfamiliarity, absorbed without questioning. Making space for a gay or bisexual man to be fully himself requires that the room not signal, however subtly, that his full self is a problem. That signal is produced less by what straight men say and more by what they do not examine in themselves. The work is quiet, personal, and entirely possible.

Yes. Borderlands welcomes men of all sexual orientations. The facilitation is designed to hold what actually surfaces — which, in a genuine men’s retreat, is often the material that has been most carefully concealed. The men who attend come from across the spectrum: straight men examining their own conditioning, gay men who have never been in a room where their full identity was unremarkable, bisexual men navigating identities that neither straight nor gay worlds have always made room for. The work is not about orientation. It is about the man underneath the performance — and that is common ground. We reply to all enquiries personally at connect@inborderlands.com.

Closing Reflection

A society that forces men to conceal who they are does not only harm those men.

It creates marriages built around concealment. Families formed inside a gap. Partners left wondering what is missing, without access to the answer. Children raised in households where something real is perpetually just out of reach.

The scale of that pattern — across one country, across one generation — is not a series of individual tragedies. It is a collective one. And it is a preventable one, to the degree that we are willing to build the conditions under which a man no longer has to choose between who he is and who he is allowed to be.

Midlife is where many of these men find, for the first time, that the cost of concealment has become greater than the cost of honesty.

What they need in that moment is not fixing. They are not broken. They need a space that can hold the truth — and men, of every orientation, who are willing to be in the room with what is real.

The work is not to force a man into public confession. The work is to create the conditions where he no longer has to be exiled from himself. For some men, that may eventually mean disclosure to family. For others, it may begin more quietly: one honest friendship, one trusted circle, one room where the head, heart, and gut can finally tell the same truth. That is where the mask begins to come down — not as spectacle, but as the slow return of the whole self.

For men looking for a structured space where that work can begin, a 72-hour men’s retreat or a 7-day men’s retreat can be the first place where the mask, the deepest one, finally has room to come down.

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