Respondents agreed on the sociocultural rules in force as the most important determinant perpetuating this intolerance. One participant stated, “Since childhood my family kept saying that I should not mourn—that is for girls, so I was a boy and had to act like a man. . . . I used to see the daughters of my neighbors, and I just wanted to play with them, but that was unacceptable for my family because girls were playing with women’s things and I was a man.”