There is a version of depression that doesn't look like depression at all.

You hit your deadlines. You make it to your kid's games. You're performing at work, managing the household, returning calls. From the outside, everything functions. From the inside, something has gone quiet that used to make noise.

This is high-functioning depression — and it is almost certainly the most underdiagnosed presentation I see in men across twenty years of private practice.

"The capacity to function is not evidence that nothing is wrong. It means you have the ability to function in the presence of something that needs to be addressed."

What High-Functioning Depression Actually Looks Like

The clinical picture that most people have in their heads — tearfulness, inability to get out of bed, visible distress — is real, but it's not the only picture. In men who operate at a high level, depression rarely announces itself that way.

What it looks like instead:

Why Men Don't Recognize It

The reason high-functioning depression goes unaddressed is straightforward: it doesn't produce the emergency that would otherwise force action.

You're not in crisis. You're managing. The machinery of your life is running. There are no obvious reasons to stop and address the internal landscape because the external landscape is intact.

Men are also — through some combination of socialization, psychology, and professional conditioning — extraordinarily good at compartmentalization. You learned early that internal states were largely beside the point. What mattered was output. So you produced output. And the internal states accumulated.

There is also the problem of language. Depression as a word carries connotations that don't match what you're experiencing. You don't feel "depressed." You feel flat. Or hollow. Or like you've lost access to something you can't quite name. You don't have the vocabulary for what's happening, so you don't have the words to ask for help.

What's Actually Happening Clinically

High-functioning depression often presents as a subtype called Persistent Depressive Disorder (PDD, or dysthymia) — a chronic, lower-grade depression that can persist for years and is frequently missed because it lacks the dramatic markers of a major depressive episode.

It can also coexist with periods of more acute depression — the so-called "double depression" in which a persistent low baseline is occasionally punctuated by sharper depressive episodes.

Both are treatable. Neither resolves on its own in the way that a bad week resolves.

What Happens If You Leave It Alone

The trajectory I've seen over twenty years is consistent. The compensatory strategies that worked in early stages — overwork, alcohol, distancing from relationships, numbing through screens or food — become less effective over time and develop their own costs. The marriages that were functional but distant become marriages that are failing. The professional performance that was holding begins to slip. The body that was absorbing the stress begins to show it.

High-functioning depression has a way of quietly dismantling the things you've built while you're looking the other way.

What to Do About It

The first step is accurate recognition. Calling it what it is rather than continuing to explain it away. The fact that you're functioning does not mean nothing is wrong. It means you have the capacity to function in the presence of something that needs to be addressed.

The second step is treatment. Psychotherapy — specifically structured, goal-oriented therapy — has strong evidence for both PDD and major depression in men. The approach that works best for high-achieving men is not passive or open-ended. It is direct, clinically grounded, and focused on understanding what is actually happening and building genuine psychological agency.

The third step is making the call before the situation forces you to.