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Sanity and Society

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Welcome to "Sanity and Society," where we peel back the layers of the modern mind and the cultural forces that shape it. I'm your host, a therapist with a passion for exploring the deep and sometimes daunting aspects of human psychology as they intersect with today's most pressing societal issues. Life doesn't come with an instruction manual, but you can think of this program as a guide for better understanding the complexities of the human psyche and the societal trends impacting us all. psychfox.substack.com

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Episode How to Create Positive Masculinity with Brian Maierhofer Cover

How to Create Positive Masculinity with Brian Maierhofer

How men can develop confidence, competence, and quests to serve them well for a lifetime. A quote-driven compilation from my conversation with Brian on what the male nervous system actually needs Jeremy Fox, LPC Brian and I have been bouncing observations off each other on X for a while. When we finally sat down on his Sanity and Society podcast, the conversation moved faster than I expected. What follows is a compilation of what I think were the most clip-worthy lines from both of us, organized around the natural arc the conversation took. The framing is light. The quotes are doing the work. Where It Has Gone Wrong Brian opened with a wide-angle question: where, structurally, has the relationship between men and therapy broken down. My first answer was about venues. JEREMY: “The elimination of third spaces where you don’t have home and work, and now even that’s collapsed into one space. Men do really well with parallel play.” Brian picked up parallel play immediately and ran a clinical observation through it. BRIAN: “You put two men together and they’re building something or they’re chopping, they’re going to get vulnerable. They start talking about that, but they’re not looking at it.” The geometry of male connection is sideways rather than face-on. The activity is the medium. When the venues for shared activity vanish, the male coalition has nowhere to assemble, and what shows up in my consulting room is the downstream effect of that vacancy. Brian named the somatic component of it next. BRIAN: “So much of why men struggle today is because they are deeply, deeply disconnected from their own sense of pleasure, which exists in their body and is actually rooted in deep cultural homophobia.” I had not heard that exact framing before. BRIAN: “The moisture, the moisture, right? So many men are just so dry of the moisture of life, that Eros.” Coupling Off as the Default Male Strategy What men do, in the absence of a friendship coalition, is route the entire relational load onto a romantic partner. JEREMY: “Your best hope is to couple off, outsource the relational component to your wife, hope that that provides you a good social life, do stuff with other couples, maybe. But that’s not your only route to friendship as a guy.” Brian flagged the deeper cultural prohibition underneath that strategy. BRIAN: “The idea of relying on somebody as a man is such a thing there. We’re about to be the needless man.” He framed his own location on the cultural map honestly. BRIAN: “I’m kind of a 50 percent red pill, 50 percent therapy guy. I kind of split the difference a little bit because there’s a lot in there.” My corresponding observation was about the asymmetry between the sisterhood and the absence of any comparable brotherhood. JEREMY: “Some men, when they marry, it’s the wife and kid, they don’t pay forward or mentor other dudes. Women do that. There’s a sisterhood. There’s old wives’ tales. There’s women teaching other women how to attract, how to drop the handkerchief, so to speak.” Church culture illustrates the asymmetry at the scheduling level. JEREMY: “In the church, you’ll see tons of women’s Bible studies, which is amazing. And then you’ll see men’s stuff is usually sunrise, like start at six or seven, so that they’re not doing it at night and they can be home.” Self-Esteem and the Test Men Are Not Allowed to See Brian offered one of the cleanest lines of the conversation on the male route to a coherent sense of self. BRIAN: “For men, I feel that self-esteem is built through doing esteemable things. Where I feel like for women it’s way more relational.” I extended the point through the cultural script. JEREMY: “Women get told a lot, sometimes very directly, sometimes very rudely. Men aren’t given the answers to the test. Even if the answers are cruel and superficial, men are told figure out what’s on the test, but if you fail, you’re F’d.” Brian named the silent killer underneath this script. BRIAN: “The lie that there’s nothing expected of men in the world is a huge, huge thing. And it is a silent killer because it is communicated in every other way.” Anger, Aggression, and Meeting Amorality With Eyes Wide Open Brian opened the section on male aggression with what he frames as a cultural castration. BRIAN: “Men have been culturally conditioned away from their aggression, away from their anger, away from their sword. That fire in my belly, that is the same fuel that burns into my vitality.” My response leaned on the trauma piece. JEREMY: “Trauma teaches us to fear anything unknown or suspenseful. And that’s where fear of all male aggression or male anger or vitality comes from. It is trauma, and it’s curable, full stop.” The conversation moved to the meekness-versus-weakness distinction. The Christian formulation only works when the strength is real. JEREMY: “Meekness is not weakness. Meekness is a decision from strong men to lead in a righteous way. If you’re weak, you can’t really be meek, because you’re just afraid. You can only be righteous when you’re deciding against evil, not when you’re too scared to do evil.” Brian brought the dark triad framework in, and offered a coinage worth sitting with. BRIAN: “I only know true empathy through my own impulse for sadism. I only know altruism through my own instinct to be self-oriented and self-serving. You have to go through the negative polarities of this triangle to flip it on its head to get that light triad lifestyle.” Then he made the move that I think will travel furthest from this episode. BRIAN: “There are amoral men that exist, and a lot of these men run the f*****g world. I believe that there is a necessity for the good men to meet that amorality with eyes wide open. With eyes wide f*****g open.” I underscored the point from the religious tradition. JEREMY: “Anger isn’t a sin. The Bible says be angry and sin not. Great men throughout the Old Testament and the New have had anger. Peter cut off someone’s ear who was trying to arrest Christ on the day He was apprehended in Gethsemane.” Eros and the Body Brian returned the conversation to the body, which is where his most original work lives. BRIAN: “The people who are most seductive, they’re seducing life.” He described his own physical practice as a non-negotiable. BRIAN: “I have to have like skin-to-skin male contact in my life. Like pickup basketball, like wrestling, like activity. There is something singular that exists within a fully male space that has permissiveness for some of the aggression, some of the anger, some of the loudness, some of the messiness.” And then he named the political reason this is rare. BRIAN: “Groups of men that are cohesive and aligned and together in a group is very dangerous, right? To people. So I think it’s discounted. I think some of it is kind of intentional. They want men alone. They want them stripped away from the Eros.” My addition was about what happens to men who lose access to sensory aliveness entirely. JEREMY: “Men are paying for these retreats to go basically LARP, to live-action role-play as a soldier. They’re transmuting their desire for pleasure into this sort of almost desire for pain. There is a craving that men have to be in touch with sensory experiences, and the men who are the driest make really good defenders in some ways, or really good sacrifices, but they don’t have the Eros, they don’t have the joie de vivre.” Why Dating Apps Are the Wrong Fishing Rod Brian made one of the more original somatic observations of the conversation. BRIAN: “We’ve all been so trained and conditioned to this visual instinct, this visual impulse, this visual attraction. And I think that it really, really discounts our biology. Attraction is way more pheromonal, energetic.” My version of the same problem was structural. JEREMY: “We’re scaling and optimizing for addictiveness whenever it’s apps. Now that they’ve opened Pandora’s box on the trading-card facet of, get a little card, swipe left or right on it, that’s just the thing now. When that was discovered, that became the arms race ticket of the most addictive thing to suck the most of your time and money.” And the emotional consequence is exactly the kind of all-or-nothing mood pattern that I see clinically. JEREMY: “It’s almost like you acquire borderline personality disorder from dating apps, where everything becomes so all-or-nothing. There’s no savoring the experience. It becomes either your partner of all time, or, my gosh, what a waste.” Brian named the projection problem that compounds it. BRIAN: “You think you already know who this person is because of their job and they like this, and they show up and you’re showing up with this full loaded chamber of expectation and ideal.” My closing point on this section was about what the nervous system was actually designed to do. JEREMY: “Our nervous systems are not evolved for constant, chronic stress. Acute stress to fight and flee, fine. When you fled, your brain gets the signal, okay, I’m out of the danger. But chronic stress constant is so damaging and warps our sense of safety and what we move toward.” The Manosphere Filled the Vacuum the Field Left Open Brian raised the Louis Theroux Manosphere documentary. I had already responded to it with Dr. Paul. My take: the documentary surveys the surface and never explains why people wanted the Manosphere there in the first place. My deeper diagnosis ran underneath the documentary entirely. JEREMY: “We’ve taught men to hate each other and have a hyper-scarcity mindset. If you want to destroy people, you need to teach them to isolate. Teach them not to be excellent, to kind of just sit around and do nothing, give them endless dopamine, visual stimuli, and teach them that other men are always their enemies. And then they’ll destroy themselves for you.” Brian’s take on the documentary itself was unexpectedly contrarian, and I think he is right about it. BRIAN: “I’d much rather have those other guys next to my shoulder. And it’s not because they’re bigger or muscular. It’s because, I don’t like them, but at least there’s a little bit of trust and I know what I’m going to get.” The Manosphere voices were not better people than the documentarian. They were more predictable, which is its own form of trustworthiness for a male audience evaluating who to follow. My corresponding line was about why the legitimate alternative has not shown up. JEREMY: “Therapy gets this rap as being just talking. It isn’t just that. Many people in law enforcement and first responders, Army veterans, cops, have had EMDR therapy or exposure work for trauma and said, listen, this is not your grandma’s therapy. This stuff’s real.” What the Consumer Mode Costs You One of my favorite formulations from the conversation, and one I keep coming back to in practice. JEREMY: “When we’re good consumers, we’re bad lovers. When you learn that everything you want, you deserve, and you can click a button or swipe on it, you become horrible to deal with.” Brian located the same problem at the level of the nervous system. BRIAN: “Hyper-attunement. It’s a survival thing, because they’re too porous. Their nervous systems are too porous. Too many of the neuroceptive signals and everything from other people is getting in.” On Vulnerability and the Ick Brian asked one of the more useful questions of the conversation: women report wanting male vulnerability and then experience visceral disgust when they get it. He attributed the dissonance, in part, to specific kinds of vulnerability rather than to vulnerability as such. BRIAN: “A woman wanting vulnerability from their partner, and then they get it, and then it’s, but not, not that kind.” My read on it was that vulnerability needs a foundation. JEREMY: “Your vulnerability with a partner needs to come probably a little bit after you’ve established the attraction. If a man loses his job, guess what he didn’t lose? His competencies, the thing that helped him get the job, his mojo, whatever that is. Your verbal skill, your math skills, your charisma, your diligence, your endurance.” And the partner has work to do also. JEREMY: “Women need to know what gives them the ick. People say, I just do, or I don’t know, it just is. Well, you need to know. That doesn’t mean you owe the person to be with it even when you don’t feel it, but you need to understand yourself and others.” What This All Adds Up To The conversation closed with a familiar point: therapy is not weakness; therapy is what you do when your nervous system gets stuck in a particular gear and you want to change it to another. The hyper-stoic and hyper-therapeutic positions both miss the patient. The corrective is somewhere in the middle, and it requires male voices willing to show up at scale to claim the middle. I will leave the closing word with Brian. BRIAN: “I believe that a man really turns on his generative masculinity, his masculine fire, through his relationship to innocence and empathy.” And one final line of mine that I think captures the whole project. JEREMY: “No matter your height, no matter your weight, no matter your genetics, you can make yourself more appealing and show that you have something to offer. And other men aren’t your enemy. Everyone’s not going to take your girl.” You can hear the full conversation on Brian’s Sanity and Society podcast. Subscribe to my Substack at psychfox.substack.com for the longer-form clinical and cultural work this kind of conversation feeds into. Get full access to Next Level Psychology at psychfox.substack.com/subscribe [https://psychfox.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

20. Mai 2026 - 1 h 10 min
Episode Why Men Are Suffering and How to Stop It (with Lisa Britton) Cover

Why Men Are Suffering and How to Stop It (with Lisa Britton)

Where Male Ambition Goes When Nobody Wants It A conversation with Lisa Britton on undirected male energy, male-friendly therapy, and how men can survive and thrive in today’s world. NOTE: for timestamps of specific mic-drops and imprtant points, go to the botton of this article Lisa Britton came to the men’s mental health question from inside feminism. She volunteered abroad in Tanzania, the Middle East, and Central America (8:30), helped build a girls’ dormitory in a Tanzanian village where, in her words, they still see daughters being sold for the price of a goat (2:14). She returned to the United States, attended the first Women’s March in 2017, and described the moment that turned her: a small girl on her father’s shoulders, instilling a victimhood mentality in this little girl before she could even spell the word victim (3:15). She has been working on boys and men ever since. I wanted to interview her because her core observation maps onto my own clinical work. Britton argues that male ambition does not vanish when shamed, but instead relocates. Where it goes, and what it does once it gets there, is the basis of our conversation. Where the energy goes Britton’s recent viral piece on the demonization of male ambition came out of a Wall Street Journal article framing the male-dominated podcast space as a sexism problem (11:00). Her response is as follows: “If we try to shame male ambition and make men and women exactly the same, that might actually hurt our innovation.” — Britton (12:30) She described watching a friend’s boyfriend channel his striving into video games, raising the question of whether the gaming environment is now the de facto container for male ambition (13:35). I offered the evolutionary frame in reply: “Sports, when done well, approximate the ancestral male reward loop. You have the fighting and winning instinct that they can pursue. You have physical fitness and exhaustion, healthy exhaustion, healthy feeling of accomplishment. And you have team bonding dynamics.” — Fox (14:41) And then the clinical concept that names what is happening in the redirect: “There’s this concept of a super-stimulus, or an exaggerated artificial version of a natural stimulus. We love sweetness as human beings, fruit, other naturally occurring foods. But then you have super sugar saturated foods that we’ve got now that addict us to this new hypercharged version of something. Video games are super gamified competitive stimuli that don’t always add to your ability to earn money, provide for a partner, or climb a status hierarchy as a male.” — Fox (15:18) Britton agreed the redirect is real. The energy is still there, but the container has changed. Want to learn more ways psychology can improve your relationships? Consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Capable, not confident The most generative reframe of the conversation came when Britton substituted the capable in place of confident (17:50). I had raised what I think is one of the most damaging cultural misconceptions about male psychology: “Men aren’t born confident. There’s a cultural misconception that women have to be taught confidence and boys and men are naturally born that way and need to be tamped down. But many aren’t, especially now where you’re not taught: go for the gold, constantly trying to shine. Men have to know when to lead, but they’re not supposed to practice it. You have to keep practicing this to get that up.” — Fox (17:00) Britton’s response did something better than agreement. She refused the word entirely: “You can do this for yourself by just waking up every day and being like, you are capable. You’re capable in almost imagining scenarios and how you would react in that scenario.” — Britton (18:14) She illustrated with a journalist whose wife went into labor in an ambulance: rolling up my sleeves, guess I gotta deliver this baby (19:30). The point being that capability is not waiting until you feel ready; it is cultiviating an internal belief that one may become competent. The reframe matters clinically because it sidesteps the cocky-versus-arrogant debate that derails most conversations about male confidence. As I put it in reply: “The a-hole factor is what we would call in behavioral science an intervening variable. It’s a variable that is not the key one. It’s confounding. It’s actually that competence and that self-assuredness. An after-effect of that is that some men just don’t care how they come across.” — Fox (20:33) The therapy problem When I asked what therapists should do better, Britton flagged a structural issue I have discussed for some time: “We seem to be almost blaming and shaming men... I don’t think we should be telling men they have to change for our mental health system. I think we should be changing our mental health system to better support men’s needs.” — Britton (22:10) Her argument is not that the feminine model is bad, but that we keep telling men they need to change to fit the system, rather than asking whether the system needs to change to fit them. She volunteered EMDR as one of the modalities that already does this differently, having done EMDR herself for a childhood accident (23:50). She described her therapist’s metaphor of a disorganized file folder, where reprocessing files the memory properly so the brain stops re-living it (25:30). That metaphor is essentially the Adaptive Information Processing model in everyday language. Then she said something that should be quoted at every continuing education event: “EMDR therapy for men should be promoted up the yin-yang. You don’t have to talk. It’s logical, it’s scientific. That’s an approach we should be promoting for men’s mental health.” — Britton (26:45) I elaborated on why and how EMDR fits the male presentation: “Men have what Roger Kingerlee would call this reflection abandonment mechanism. When they start getting in their own heads, they will push that away, and they experience externalizing symptoms of trauma, addiction, lashing out, anger, stuff that points to deeper hurt, but that doesn’t outwardly say I’m hurting. EMDR helps the person to lock into that signal of trauma, reprocess it with minimal verbalization. The therapy is very gamified. It’s very structured and sequential. You have a clear task there. It’s not pity-based. Pity for men in therapy is the kiss of death.” — Fox (27:25) This aligns with Kingerlee, Precious, Sullivan, and Barry (2014), whose work on engaging men in therapy through male-specific service design informs my clinical approach. Their argument is that less extreme forms of male distress routinely go unrecognized because men, and the people around them, abandon psychological reflection before symptoms even become visible. Britton then named the second structural problem. She described a moment when she shared a phrase with her own therapist, the future is everyone, and watched her therapist flinch and then circle back to call it offensive (35:00). She realized the relationship was over because the ideological mismatch had broken trust: “This must be how a lot of men feel when they go to therapy. If we did have that kind of trusting relationship, I’d have to walk on eggshells. That’s not the place you want to be as a client with a therapist, is to walk on eggshells to make sure you don’t make your therapist upset. That defeats the whole purpose.” — Britton (35:50) I responded with what I take to be the professional baseline: “It’s not our job as therapists to get offended. Certainly when someone shares an ideological difference with you as a therapist, it’s not my job to intervene and say, hi, I don’t like that. It’s my job to be respectful of their beliefs and work with them if I can. It’s always about the client needs. It’s not about our needs or comfort as a therapist.” — Fox (34:32) Holloway, Seager, and Barry (2018) confirmed empirically what Britton intuited experientially: male clients routinely identify systemic barriers to help-seeking that map onto exactly this dynamic. Walking on eggshells is completely counterproductive to a genuine therapeutic relationship. Male-only spaces and the man-keeping problem Britton turned next to a chart she had posted showing that liberal women are the demographic least likely to endorse male-only spaces as a net positive for society (45:30). Her response was direct: “We as a society need to recognize that male-only spaces are a positive thing for society. Let men have their spaces and their time together, their bonding. They’re not doing anything bad at six in the morning. They’re just working out with their friends and picking on each other.” — Britton (46:00) I framed it as a Rorschach test of how the question is asked: “With all-male spaces, I think we need to brand them differently. If you ask how positive are male-only spaces for society, that’s going to sound like men in some runaway, ooh, raw, masculine testosterone show. Reframe it: how important is it for men to have supportive friendship groups of just men? We’re talking about dudes meeting for bowling or to get their pump on at the gym.” — Fox (50:24) Then I pushed into some accountability territory: “Men aren’t sometimes doing that much to help themselves. Men need to learn that socialization is not just to get a date. You got to build up your male friendships. Up until the late twentieth century, dudes hung out with each other. That’s gone the way of the dodo. Men will do anything to earn a chance to be with women. And so what they do is they think saying, yeah, whatever you say, and being pliable is the way to do that. So you end up with men who are constitutionally emotionally weak, who will do anything to get female attention.” — Fox (43:35) Britton addressed man-keeping discourse, which she has been pushing back on since it emerged from Stanford and was picked up by the New York Times (53:00). Her objection is not abstract. She had been the partner of a man, now deceased, who self-medicated with alcohol. She tried to help him by referring him to a nutritionist, not understanding at the time that addiction is often self-medication for trauma (54:23): “If I had more awareness of how men deal with things, I might have been able to get them the help they truly needed back then. How about we take the energy that we’re putting into coming up with terms like man-keeping and saying it’s a burden on women, put that energy into creating something to help women help their men.” — Britton (54:48) I responded with a cinema-therapy reference that fits the spirit of what she was describing. The Northman (Eggers, 2022) features a disenfranchised Viking prince who meets a female character providing tactical wisdom and sorceress abilities. They make a pact, respect each other, feed off each other’s strengths. As I put it during the conversation: “She was able to see his trauma, hear his trauma, see him, work alongside him, not pity, but collaboration. It’s a beautiful tale of how the masculine and the feminine can get along.” — Fox (58:21) What needs to change Britton closed the interview on the federal Office of Men’s Health bill currently in Congress, noting that there are eight federal offices of women’s health and zero for men, even with male suicide running at roughly four times the rate of female suicide and most male suicide decedents having no prior mental health diagnosis (1:02:00; Fowler et al., 2022). Her ask is modest. Start with one. Build infrastructure that recognizes male symptom presentation, male help-seeking patterns, and male-friendly intervention models. My closing position, articulated to her near the end of the hour: “Men who say therapy is all bad. Well, what if I told you therapy helps you get over your approach anxiety and your inferiority so that you can talk to women? What if I told you, what if you opened your mind and listened to what desensitizing your trauma actually can do for you, not to die to yourself or become a doormat. We’re not reaching the people who love the manosphere because they think therapy is a psyop to make them have less success with women.” — Fox (1:00:04) Britton’s description of therapy for men is a useful place to conclude this article: “It’s not to weaken them. It’s to make you stronger. It’s to heal. It doesn’t matter who you are. We all have traumas from childhood. You can restructure that and be a confident, capable person.” — Britton (1:01:00) 00:00 Introduction to Men’s Mental Health Advocacy 05:39 The Shift Towards Supporting Boys and Men 08:04 Demonizing Male Ambition: A Cultural Analysis 10:24 Redirecting Male Energy: The Role of Sports and Gaming 13:23 Understanding Male Confidence and Capability 15:53 Reforming Mental Health Approaches for Men 18:42 The Importance of Male Therapists in Mental Health 21:22 EMDR Therapy: A Solution for Men’s Mental Health 24:07 Breaking Down Ideological Barriers in Therapy 30:48 Navigating Ideological Differences in Therapy 32:30 The Future is Everyone: Gender Perspectives 34:27 Expectations and Gender Roles in Relationships 38:29 The Importance of Male Friendships 42:11 Supporting Men’s Mental Health 50:29 Creating a Federal Office for Men’s Health References Eggers, R. (Director). (2022). The Northman [Film]. Focus Features. Fowler, K. A., Kaplan, M. S., Stone, D. M., Zhou, H., Stevens, M. R., & Simon, T. R. (2022). Suicide among males across the lifespan: An analysis of differences by known mental health status. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 63(3), 419–422. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2022.05.006 Holloway, K., Seager, M., & Barry, J. A. (2018). Are clinical psychologists, psychotherapists and counsellors overlooking the needs of their male clients? Clinical Psychology Forum, 309, 26–35. Kingerlee, R., Precious, D., Sullivan, L., & Barry, J. A. (2014). Engaging with the emotional lives of men: Designing and promoting male-specific services and interventions. The Psychologist, 27(6), 418–421. Get full access to Next Level Psychology at psychfox.substack.com/subscribe [https://psychfox.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

19. Mai 2026 - 58 min
Episode The Resentment Industrial Complex: Why the Manosphere Keeps Winning Cover

The Resentment Industrial Complex: Why the Manosphere Keeps Winning

The Manosphere Isn’t the Problem. The Empty Center Is. What a conversation with Dr. Nathalie Martinek clarified about why young men keep wearing identities like loaner cars. I sat down with Dr. Nathalie Martinek [https://drnataliemartinek.substack.com/] to talk about the Netflix Manosphere documentary. We discussed gender relations and algorithms, eventually reaching the topic of postmodern absence of identity. Nathalie said something that sticks: “There’s a lot of people walking around who have no actual center. They wear these different identities and absorb the belief systems associated with them. Now I’m a feminist. Now I’m an incel. Now I’m a this. They’re largely invisible to themselves.” That is an entire essay in one paragraph. The Manosphere functions as a vacancy filler, and its mirror image on the other side does the same job. Both keep working because the people downloading them have no stable internal structure to push back against the install. The Vacancy Came First Costello et al. (2022) profiled 151 self-identified incels and found 75 percent screened for moderate or severe depression and 67 percent for moderate or severe anxiety, with elevated loneliness and suicidal ideation. Fowler et al. (2022) reported that males accounted for nearly 80 percent of U.S. suicide deaths in 2019, with most male decedents carrying no known mental health diagnosis on record. The Manosphere is scavenging a demographic that has already been abandoned. Nathalie put it plainly: “There used to be an ecosystem around young men. Family, village, uncles, grandparents, religion. Secularization scattered it. Opportunists fill the void.” The Resentment Industrial Complex She has a phrase for what the opportunists sell: the resentment industrial complex. The cousin concept is Rob Henderson’s luxury beliefs, though resentment runs lower on the income ladder and hits its consumers harder. A creator notices what gets engagement, drifts toward it, and sells a worldview he may not personally believe to an audience whose entire life will be organized around it. I have written about this as digital dissociation and audience capture. Natalie sharpened the point: consumers “buy in, embed it into their identity, and just breed more resentment.” Frustration → algorithmic discovery of resentment-coded content → parasocial attachment → identity adoption → behavioral imitation → renewed frustration → re-engagement with the same source. The loop pays the creator and impoverishes the follower. The Fairytale Industrial Complex Halfway through, Nathalie cited a phrase from a writer named Francesca: the fairytale industrial complex. Men get sold the Beast-and-Aladdin arc where confidence plus grand gesture wins the girl. Women get sold the princess waiting to be seen and selected. Both scripts collapse on contact with adult life, and the participants cannot name what went wrong because the script was never visible to them as a script. This is what I call orphaned instincts. The evolved drives are intact. Men still want to provide and protect; women still want to assess and select. Legitimate channels have closed. The substitute channels (dating apps, parasocial influencers, sports betting, OnlyFans subscriptions) absorb the drive without satisfying it with human contact. Sympathetic nervous system debt does not get repaid by swiping. What Therapy Got Wrong Nathalie and I diagnosed the therapist class as the new clergy: pastoral authority paired with credentialing, often without the lived material to back either. The field has positioned itself adjacent to a demographic it has not bothered to learn how to reach. A profession that treats male ambition as suspect and male bluntness as aggression will not be the place where a struggling 22-year-old goes for help. He goes where someone tells him he is allowed to want things and offers him something to do about it. The Manosphere figured this out. Therapy mostly did not. What Replaces the Vacancy Communities are a need, not a luxury. Young men require ongoing relationships with trusted male elders who can correct them without performing it for an audience. Women need the same from women. Both need real friction with the other sex in person rather than the curated frictionlessness of an app. The Friction Thesis applies. The young man who builds skill, takes rejection in person, and gets corrected by an older man who actually likes him is doing the developmental work the Manosphere monetizes the absence of. Develop a center. Then the identities stop sticking. Dr. Nathalie Martinek writes at drnataliemartinek.substack.com [https://drnataliemartinek.substack.com/]. Her work on gurupreneurs and the resentment industrial complex shaped most of what is good in this piece. References Costello, W., Rolon, V., Thomas, A. G., & Schmitt, D. (2022). Levels of well-being among men who are incel (involuntarily celibate). Evolutionary Psychological Science, 8(4), 375–390. Fowler, K. A., Kaplan, M. S., Stone, D. M., Zhou, H., Stevens, M. R., & Simon, T. R. (2022). Suicide among males across the lifespan. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 63(3), 419–422. Get full access to Next Level Psychology at psychfox.substack.com/subscribe [https://psychfox.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

12. Mai 2026 - 1 h 11 min
Episode The Powerful Psychology Secrets in the Star Wars Films Cover

The Powerful Psychology Secrets in the Star Wars Films

It’s Star Wars Day as i’m writing this, and I’ve been thinking about why this saga keeps rewarding clinical re-reading. The sci-fi is the trimming. Lightsabers are amazing. The story underneath is one we have to help patients understand, because it is the same story we are running with them in session: a young man with great talent meets a calm voice offering solutions to the problems that voice secretly created. Palpatine is the master tactician. Anakin is fearful rage. As I said on the podcast: “Palpatine is pure unadulterated psychopathy. Anakin is fearful rage. There we go. That’s the master and the apprentice dynamic.” That is the relationship the entire nine-film arc is built on, and clinically it shows how political evil and personal evil colonize the same circuitry. Let me walk through it the way I’d walk through it with a client. A more thorough, written essay will be forthcoming later, but for now, check out the podcast. Get full access to Next Level Psychology at psychfox.substack.com/subscribe [https://psychfox.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

5. Mai 2026 - 42 min
Episode What Can We Learn from the Manosphere Documentary, and What Do Today's Men Need? Cover

What Can We Learn from the Manosphere Documentary, and What Do Today's Men Need?

This was a return to podcast form for my colleague Owen Scott Muir, M.D, DFAACAP [https://substack.com/profile/2277375-owen-scott-muir-md-dfaacap] and me. Since our earlier days of collaborating in the 2020s, awareness of “the manosphere,” a loose conglomeration of sometimes controversial, extremely online male-centric influencers, has skyrocketed, leaving us mental health professionals with the sacred task of educating ourselves on just what the men of the 2020s need, and how we can stay up to the ask of providing it. An informative written version of this interview will before forthcoming (think of it as an action-focused, research-laden transcript), but for now, here’s a succinct timestamp of our discussion, so you can navigate to the content relevant to your experiences or the needs of the ones in your life: 00:00 Introduction to the Conversation 00:15 Exploring Brain Medicine and Mental Health Tech 01:29 Understanding the Manosphere 03:05 The Exploitative Nature of the Manosphere 04:46 Dating Dynamics in the Modern Age 07:35 The Impact of Dating Apps on Men’s Mental Health 10:09 The Role of Male Friendship in Dating 12:59 Pain: Emotional vs. Physical 15:45 Rejection and Its Psychological Effects 18:42 The Importance of Interpersonal Skills 21:20 Modeling Healthy Masculinity 23:46 Equanimity and Emotional Regulation 26:15 Self-Fulfilling Prophecies in Dating 27:43 Navigating Date Dynamics 30:12 Understanding Online Dating Behavior 32:52 The Dark Triad and Attraction 36:41 Communication and Boundaries in Relationships 39:03 The Value of Connections Beyond Romance 42:45 Coffee Dates and Modern Dating Norms Get full access to Next Level Psychology at psychfox.substack.com/subscribe [https://psychfox.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

28. Apr. 2026 - 46 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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