How to Avoid Toxic Masculinity and Build Emotional Literacy in Boys With Kristin Mervich

How to Avoid Toxic Masculinity and Build Emotional Literacy in Boys

As a psychologist and parenting expert, I talk with parents every week who are doing their very best and still wondering if they are getting it right. One of the most common themes I hear is about trusting yourself while raising boys in a world that often sends confusing messages about emotions, strength, and masculinity. Parents want confident parenting tools that feel grounded in evidence-based parenting, not fear or shame.

In this episode of the Educated Parent Podcast, I sat down with Kristin Mervich to talk about how we can avoid toxic masculinity while building emotional literacy in boys. Kristin is not only a therapist and business owner, but she is also a mother navigating extraordinary challenges with honesty and clarity. Her perspective as a parenting expert brings depth to this conversation about raising emotionally healthy boys.


Why Emotional Literacy Matters for Boys

Emotional literacy is the ability to identify, understand, and express emotions in a healthy way. When boys are discouraged from talking about feelings, it can lead to emotional shutdown, anger, or shame. Avoiding toxic masculinity does not mean raising boys without strength. It means raising boys who know that emotions are part of being human.

From an evidence-based parenting perspective, emotional literacy supports better mental health, stronger relationships, and improved self-regulation. Boys who can name their feelings are better able to cope with stress and communicate their needs. This is one of the most important gifts we can give our children.


Avoiding Toxic Masculinity Starts at Home

Toxic masculinity often shows up quietly. It can sound like telling boys to toughen up, stop crying, or handle things on their own. Avoiding toxic masculinity means intentionally creating space for emotions and modeling healthy expression.

Kristin shared how trusting yourself as a parent is key here. When parents feel confident in their values, they are less likely to default to outdated messages about masculinity. Confident parenting allows you to pause and ask, what does my child actually need in this moment?

As a parenting expert, I often remind families that avoiding toxic masculinity is not about perfection. It is about consistency and connection. Every time you validate your child’s feelings, you are strengthening their emotional literacy.


Trusting Yourself as a Parent

Many parents struggle with self-doubt. Trusting yourself can feel especially hard when cultural expectations clash with your instincts. Kristin spoke openly about identity shifts, fear of judgment, and learning to listen inward instead of outward.

From an evidence-based parenting lens, parental confidence matters. Children benefit when parents are regulated, reflective, and grounded. Confident parenting is not about having all the answers. It is about believing you can respond thoughtfully, even when things feel uncertain.

When you practice trusting yourself, you model emotional literacy for your child. You show them that feelings can be noticed, named, and managed without shame.


Practical Ways to Build Emotional Literacy in Boys

Here are a few positive parenting tips grounded in evidence-based parenting that support emotional literacy and help avoid toxic masculinity:

  • Name emotions out loud during everyday moments to strengthen emotional literacy 

  • Validate feelings before problem-solving to support confident parenting

  • Share your own emotions in age-appropriate ways to model trusting yourself

  • Encourage curiosity about feelings rather than judgment or avoidance

  • Remind boys that strength includes empathy, flexibility, and connection

Each of these practices supports emotional literacy while reinforcing evidence-based parenting values.


Raising Boys With Confidence and Compassion

Avoiding toxic masculinity does not require grand gestures. It happens in small moments when parents choose empathy over dismissal and curiosity over control. Trusting yourself helps you stay aligned with your values, even when outside voices feel loud.

As a parenting expert, I want parents to know that confident parenting grows over time. Emotional literacy is a skill that develops through repetition and relationship. When we lead with evidence-based parenting principles, we raise boys who are emotionally aware, resilient, and deeply connected.

This conversation with Kristin Mervich is a reminder that growth often comes through challenge and reflection. By avoiding toxic masculinity and prioritizing emotional literacy, we give our children permission to be fully human.

If this topic resonated with you, I encourage you to reflect on where you can offer yourself more compassion and trust your instincts a little more. Your child does not need perfection. They need you to show up with intention and care.


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