Description
Can a single question change a life?
What if one sentence stays with you… follows you… and quietly begins to break the walls you have built inside?
The Man Who Forgot How To Cry is not just a story. It is an emotional journey into the hidden world of silence, pain, and unanswered questions that many people—especially men—carry every day.
The story follows Rahul, a young, ordinary boy living an ordinary life. He is not dramatic. He is not weak. He is not special in the way the world defines “special.”
But one day, he reads a simple line:
“Men Are Not Made To Cry.”
That single sentence disturbs him.
Not loudly.
Not suddenly.
But deeply.
From that moment, Rahul begins to question something he never questioned before—
Why does pain stay inside even when tears don’t come out?
Why do men feel so much but say so little?
Why does silence feel heavier than crying?
As Rahul searches for answers, he meets people who slowly change his understanding of emotions, strength, friendship, and vulnerability. Through conversations, memories, observations, and quiet moments, he realises that crying is not the real issue.
The real issue is having no safe place to break.
This book talks about:
Emotional suppression in men
Society’s expectations of “strength”
Silent pain hidden behind normal lives
The importance of trust, friendship, and human connection
Questions we all think about but rarely speak out loud
But this book does not give loud lessons.
It does not preach.
It does not judge.
It simply asks honest questions—
and allows you to sit with them.
Written in simple, clear, and heartfelt language, The Man Who Forgot How To Cry feels less like a novel and more like a quiet conversation with yourself.
You may see Rahul in your own life.
You may recognise your friends.
You may recognise yourself.
This book is for:
.Anyone who feels strong on the outside and tired on the inside
.Readers who enjoy emotional, psychological, and human stories
.People who believe real strength begins with honesty
.Anyone who has ever felt something they couldn’t explain





Reviews
There are no reviews yet.