Cover image of show Confessions of a Gen-X Mind: Culture, Media Literacy, and Personal Growth

Confessions of a Gen-X Mind: Culture, Media Literacy, and Personal Growth

Podcast by George Ten Eyck

English

Health & personal development

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About Confessions of a Gen-X Mind: Culture, Media Literacy, and Personal Growth

Confessions of a Gen-X Mind is a podcast about media, culture, identity, mental health, and personal growth told through the perspective of someone who grew up analog and now lives in the algorithm age.Hosted by George Ten Eyck, the show blends personal storytelling with cultural commentary to explore how family systems, media narratives, religion, technology, and generational experience shape the way we understand ourselves and the world around us.Episodes often examine topics like media literacy, inherited roles within families, neurodivergence, boundaries, worldview shifts, and the long process of seeing our lives more clearly as we move into adulthood and midlife.Rather than offering quick fixes or motivational clichés, Confessions of a Gen-X Mind focuses on awareness, perspective, and integration. It is about recognizing patterns without bitterness, honoring what was good, accepting what never was, and building forward with clarity.This is a podcast for thoughtful listeners navigating identity, relationships, cultural change, and the strange transition from an analog childhood into a digital world shaped by algorithms.New episodes explore ongoing themes through personal reflection, media analysis, and generational perspective. The goal is simple: slow down, think clearly, and make sense of a complicated world.

All episodes

43 episodes

episode The Masks That Saved Me: When Persona Becomes the Prison artwork

The Masks That Saved Me: When Persona Becomes the Prison

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1929883/fan_mail/new] Somewhere in midlife, a lot of us start realizing the person we became to survive is not always the same person we actually are. For me, that meant looking at the masks. The BMX kid. The media guy. The rebel. The insider. The steady one. The one who learned how to function, perform, achieve, and keep moving. None of those selves were fake. They helped me survive. But at some point, the persona that saves you can also become the prison. This next episode goes into Carl Jung, masks, shadow, ego, grief, family, identity, and the strange work of trying to put the scattered pieces of yourself back together in midlife. Not by becoming someone new. By finally telling the truth about who you’ve been. If you’re Gen X, there’s a good chance you know exactly what I mean. New episode soon: The Masks That Saved Me: When Persona Becomes the Prison  This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

22 Apr 2026 - 1 min
episode I Never Believed in Hell: Rapture Fear, Cold War Anxiety, and The Art of Happiness artwork

I Never Believed in Hell: Rapture Fear, Cold War Anxiety, and The Art of Happiness

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1929883/fan_mail/new] Growing up in Texas during the Reagan years, I absorbed a potent mix of evangelical end-times theology, Cold War nuclear dread, Christian school culture shock, and satanic panic. In this episode, I talk about how those fear-based messages shaped my view of death, obedience, and the unknown, and why The Art of Happiness by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and psychiatrist Howard Cutler gave me a calmer, more humane way to think about suffering, attachment, and mortality. This is a personal story about religious trauma, grief, Buddhist thought, and what it takes to loosen fear’s grip on the nervous system   This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

7 Apr 2026 - 17 min
episode The Belief That I Was the Problem: Childhood, Emotional Neglect, and What It Leaves Behind, artwork

The Belief That I Was the Problem: Childhood, Emotional Neglect, and What It Leaves Behind,

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1929883/fan_mail/new] How childhood emotional neglect and early attachment loss shape lifelong self-beliefs, and how those beliefs can follow you into adulthood. Why do some people grow up believing they were always “the problem”? In this episode of Confessions of a Gen-X Mind, George Ten Eyck explores how early childhood experiences, including emotional neglect, sibling-raised dynamics, and the sudden loss of attachment figures, can shape a child’s sense of self in ways that last for decades. Growing up in a Gen X household with limited emotional availability, George reflects on what happens when the people you depend on for connection are inconsistent, overwhelmed, or suddenly gone. What begins as a child’s attempt to make sense of confusion often turns into a lifelong belief: that something about you is difficult, flawed, or unlovable. This episode also examines how those early beliefs can be reinforced later in life, especially during periods of mental health struggle, when well-meaning but outdated approaches reduce complex emotional patterns to a single solution: medication. This is not a rejection of treatment. It is an exploration of something deeper. What if the belief itself is wrong? Topics include: • childhood emotional neglect and attachment  • being raised by older siblings in a Gen X household  • how early loss shapes identity and self-worth  • the long-term impact of feeling like “the problem”  • why self-beliefs formed in childhood can persist into adulthood  • the difference between managing symptoms and understanding origins If you’ve ever felt like you were too much, difficult to love, or somehow responsible for the emotional tone around you, this episode offers a grounded and thoughtful look at where those beliefs begin and how they can be reexamined. Confessions of a Gen-X Mind explores identity, media, mental health, and personal history through the lens of a generation that grew up between analog childhood and digital adulthood. Follow, rate, and share if this episode resonates.  This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

4 Apr 2026 - 14 min
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