Unc Talk Podcast

Ep22 Spiritual Health: Faith, Manhood & Why Black Men Leave the Church

32 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Ep22 Spiritual Health: Faith, Manhood & Why Black Men Leave the Church

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] The Unc Talk Podcast closes its men's health series with the pillar that's hardest to put on camera. After the body and the mind, the uncs land on spiritual health — and this time the episode opens cold, stacking its biggest lines up front: a man needs something guiding him, it all starts with love, and "even though you lie, even though you hide — I still love you." Host Jay Stafford, Jared, and Joe trade the couch for a "talk after dark" in Austin — tacos, a tavern, and cigars behind them — to ask what it means to bring church outside the pews. The hard mirror is the data. Weekly church attendance has slid from roughly 32% to 20%, and for years the religiously unaffiliated kept climbing — yet commitment to the teachings of Jesus has jumped from about 54% to 66%, with even most of Gen Z on board. People are keeping the faith and leaving the building. Jay names the sharper edge from his own pew: five women for every man at church events. Is that an institution problem or a man problem? The guys trace it to an operating system handed down by the matriarch, never the patriarch — boys raised in church who "never saw men in the church" except the pastor and the band director. Then Joe turns it personal. He didn't drift from faith; he spited God when the church couldn't answer his questions. What brought him back wasn't a sermon but an ego-death experience that "looked through me" and "blasted through all the walls" — and on the far side of all his worst, told him, "I still love you." A rose by any other name. He hadn't walked away from Christ; he'd walked away from the institution. The move they land on is relationship over ritual. Joe trades transactional prayer for daily conversation — "I'd rather ask for guidance than a handout." Jay presses the harder point: most of us were taken to church but never taught to absorb the word, to lead a household spiritually, to read the book ourselves instead of reciting its platitudes. This one's for any Black man, father, or uncle who still believes but stopped showing up. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Unc Talk Podcast!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

22 episodios

Portada del episodio Ep22 Spiritual Health: Faith, Manhood & Why Black Men Leave the Church

Ep22 Spiritual Health: Faith, Manhood & Why Black Men Leave the Church

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] The Unc Talk Podcast closes its men's health series with the pillar that's hardest to put on camera. After the body and the mind, the uncs land on spiritual health — and this time the episode opens cold, stacking its biggest lines up front: a man needs something guiding him, it all starts with love, and "even though you lie, even though you hide — I still love you." Host Jay Stafford, Jared, and Joe trade the couch for a "talk after dark" in Austin — tacos, a tavern, and cigars behind them — to ask what it means to bring church outside the pews. The hard mirror is the data. Weekly church attendance has slid from roughly 32% to 20%, and for years the religiously unaffiliated kept climbing — yet commitment to the teachings of Jesus has jumped from about 54% to 66%, with even most of Gen Z on board. People are keeping the faith and leaving the building. Jay names the sharper edge from his own pew: five women for every man at church events. Is that an institution problem or a man problem? The guys trace it to an operating system handed down by the matriarch, never the patriarch — boys raised in church who "never saw men in the church" except the pastor and the band director. Then Joe turns it personal. He didn't drift from faith; he spited God when the church couldn't answer his questions. What brought him back wasn't a sermon but an ego-death experience that "looked through me" and "blasted through all the walls" — and on the far side of all his worst, told him, "I still love you." A rose by any other name. He hadn't walked away from Christ; he'd walked away from the institution. The move they land on is relationship over ritual. Joe trades transactional prayer for daily conversation — "I'd rather ask for guidance than a handout." Jay presses the harder point: most of us were taken to church but never taught to absorb the word, to lead a household spiritually, to read the book ourselves instead of reciting its platitudes. This one's for any Black man, father, or uncle who still believes but stopped showing up. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

Ayer32 min
Portada del episodio Ep21 Men's Health After 40: Train to Live, Not for Look

Ep21 Men's Health After 40: Train to Live, Not for Look

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Chapter 0:00 Cold Open: You Did Not Make Time 0:38 Welcome to Men's Health Month 1:41 Back Into It — The Leisure-Time Debate 3:02 Value, Looks & What We Maintain 4:00 Health at 40: Longevity, Not Looks 4:52 Train to Live, Not to Bulk 5:26 Nutrition Is the Other Half 9:01 The 15-Minute Truth: Zone 2 + Squats 10:26 The "Good Starter" Trap 15:24 Seven Brothers, One Mud Run 17:30 How You Snowball Into It 18:18 The Number: Men 35–44 Down ~40% 18:37 "You Did Not Make Time" 20:23 The Giver, Books & Escapism 21:16 Describing Color to Someone Who's Never Seen It 22:23 Carrying the Pain So Others Don't Have To 31:07 Close: Back Next Week Synopsis J Staff opens Men's Health Month from the road — still in Austin, off the couch and around a domino table, tiles clicking under the whole conversation. He, Joe From Work, and He's Jared kick the episode off with a quick montage of what's coming, then settle in and pick the men's-health talk right back up where Episode 20 left it. The thesis is quiet but it runs the whole table — taking care of yourself, body and mind, isn't a program you start. It's a thing you keep showing up for, preferably with your brothers in the room. The hardest truth lands as a number. Regular exercise among men 35 to 44 has dropped nearly 40% in a decade, and the uncs name the usual alibi out loud: career, family, kids. Then one of them turns the mirror on himself. "A lot of times I lie and say I don't have time. But no — you did not make time. Trust me, I don't have time for half the stuff I do." It isn't a lecture. It's a grown man catching his own excuse in the act — and admitting the hours quietly go to the scroll. The reframe is mercifully practical. At 40 the goal shifts from looks to longevity — you're not chasing a bulk, you're training to live — and it takes less than you fear: a little zone-two walking, fifteen honest minutes of weights, food that actually fuels the work. Then the table drifts somewhere tender, to The Giver — the book about a boy chosen to hold a whole community's memory of pain so nobody else has to feel it. One man carries all of it so the rest can live easy, and he turns out to be the only one who can still feel anything at all. In a room full of men, the metaphor just hangs there. What you do with it is simple and hard. Make the time. Find the brothers. Pick a thing to train toward — seven of them are signing up for a mud run together — and stop trying to carry it all alone. No studio, no script, just three men playing dominoes and telling the truth, which turns out to be exactly the medicine the month is about. This one's for any brother at 40 who keeps saying he'll start Monday. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

30 de jun de 202631 min
Portada del episodio Ep20 Physical Health Is Mental Health: Real Talk on Vitality at 40

Ep20 Physical Health Is Mental Health: Real Talk on Vitality at 40

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Chapters 0:00 Cold Open: I Thought I Mens Health 1:32 Welcome to Men's Health Month 1:47 Off the Couch, Onto the Domino Table 4:51 Back From the Studio: Push-ups & Vitality 5:34 The 20% Stat: Men and Movement 6:13 Facing Mortality + Discipline at Home 8:22 "Incremental Progress": The Focus Word 9:50 From "Pretty" to "Big Cute Boy" 11:51 Legacy Is the Push-Up 12:29 How Contagious It Is 13:35 Why I Needed a Locker Room 16:41 The Magic Number: 150 Minutes a Week 17:42 Where Black Men Land + What We Maintain 20:10 Train to Live, Not to Look 21:42 Nutrition Is the Other Half 25:08 What Maintenance Takes 28:13 Close: Back Next Week Synopsis Jay Staff opens Men's Health Month from the road — still in Austin, but off the couch and around a domino table, tiles clicking under the whole conversation. This is where the Unc Talk Podcast's men's-health arc begins: Jay, Joe, and Jared trading honest talk about bodies at 40 while they play. The thesis lands early and never leaves — you're not training to look good anymore, you're training to live. The hard mirror is a number. Around one in five men report zero physical activity, and the uncs put themselves on the wrong side of it without flinching. Joe gets vulnerable about it: he went from the kid who played every sport, "feeling good, looking good," to what he calls "big cute boy" — and he misses being desirable, misses vitality. It isn't a flex or a complaint. It's a grown man saying the quiet part out loud at the table. And the crew doesn't dodge the part that stings — heart trouble hits Black men hard, and a sedentary life is one of the few levers they actually get to pull. The reframe is small on purpose. The focus word for the year is "incremental." Ten push-ups in the closet while you pick out clothes; a set of squats while the microwave runs. The magic number turns out to be friendly — 150 minutes of moderate movement a week, the kind that cuts heart risk by 30 to 40%, and that's just a walk, a bike, a run. Better still, it's contagious: a wife who's disciplined with her food, kids who climb on the Peloton, a house where one person moving gets everybody moving. The honest catch is that most of these men learned to train in a locker room, and doing it alone is the hard part — which is exactly why they're doing this on mic, together. Eat to fuel the work, move a little every day, and let the people around you pull you along. Recorded as the opener of a two-part men's-health conversation that picks back up next week, this one's for any uncle or father at 40 who's ready to train to live, not just to look. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

23 de jun de 202628 min
Portada del episodio Ep 19 Brothers for the Brotherless: Black Mental Health & The Case for Showing Up

Ep 19 Brothers for the Brotherless: Black Mental Health & The Case for Showing Up

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Chapters 00:00 Cold Open — "We're Brothers for the Brotherless" 01:58 Joe's Anger Coda: Control + Levity as Twin Disciplines 04:58 The Christmas-Party Mailbox Neighbor 08:30 "Large Black Man Upset" Reads Different — The T-Rex Effect 10:00 The Stats: 80% of Men Don't Get a Friend Check-In 12:08 "Being a Man Sucks Until They Give You Your Flowers" 13:35 "It's All Good": The Greetings We Use to Survive 14:48 "Brothers for the Brotherless": The Mission 16:21 Isolation Is the Spiritual Red Alarm 22:00 The Suicide & Alcohol Numbers 24:25 The Monkey on the Back: What 40-Something Men Carry 28:00 Spiritual Health Has Been Doing Too Much Lifting 30:30 When Your Wife Makes More: Marriage as a Team 32:32 Jobs Eat 10 Hours — Where's the Time for Legacy? 33:30 Outro Synopsis  Episode 19 of the Unc Talk Podcast continues Mental Health Awareness Month and lands the spine of the whole arc: brotherhood as mental health infrastructure. Jay, Joe, and Jared open with Joe finishing the Christmas-party mailbox-neighbor story he started in Ep18 — using it to explain why he's drilled control and levity into himself as twin disciplines. A large Black man getting upset doesn't read the same as a small white woman getting upset, and Joe knows it. So he laughs his way down from the spiral and refuses to let other people's fear make him dangerous. From there the episode lays out the case for community with the kind of numbers most men never hear out loud. Only 21% of men get emotional support from friends in a given week — versus 41% of women. Nearly 80% of men go through the week without a single friend checking in. One in five unmarried men report having zero close friends. Men account for almost 80% of suicides in the U.S., and alcohol kills more than twice as many men as women each year. The reframe lands in the middle: the real currency for a Black man isn't applause from the world — it's understanding from your brother. "Being a man sucks until they're giving you your flowers at your funeral," Joe says. You can't wait for the world. You build the room that gives them to you while you're here. That's the mission they name out loud: brothers for the brotherless. Drop a comment. Send an email. Show up. Practical moves cluster around the same idea. Friendship is a muscle most men let atrophy after marriage delivers a default social circle. Isolation is the spiritual red alarm — when you notice yourself pulling away, that's a signal something is wrong, not the solution. Jared warns the brothers about leaning on spiritual health to do work that belonged to mental health all along; church can't fix what therapy and identity work were built for. The episode closes on Joe's secure take on marriage as a team — his wife's income gives him the room to build — and a hard truth: a job that eats ten hours a day leaves nothing for legacy. This one's for any man who needs permission to call somebody first. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

16 de jun de 202634 min
Portada del episodio Ep 18 Identity Is the Curriculum: Black Mental Health, "Man Up" & The Education That Has to Happen at Home

Ep 18 Identity Is the Curriculum: Black Mental Health, "Man Up" & The Education That Has to Happen at Home

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Timelime 0:00 Cold Open — "Highest-Priority Education Is in the Home" 01:11 Welcome to Mental Health Awareness Month 04:11 The Two Meanings of "Man Up": Accountability vs. Suppression 07:30 "Man Up" Was Survival — But Times Have Changed 10:00 We Need Better Language for Big Things 13:09 The Mall Analogy: Reuse, Repurpose, Reinvent — Or Become Blight 15:16 The Cops Inheritance: "Just Walking Around Blissfully" 17:23 Cultural Education & The Black Church Pipeline 20:01 Identity Is the Highest-Priority Education 21:07 "Chocolate Jotters" & Poaching Black Families Into the Co-op 24:32 Joe's Story: "My Dad Said Black Culture Sucks" 26:11 Too White for the Black Kids, Too Black for the White Kids 28:53 Identity Is a Crucial Part of Mental Health 29:38 Joe on Anger & Levity as Self-Control 35:31 Outro: Mental Health Series Continues Synopsis  Episode 18 of the Unc Talk Podcast continues Mental Health Awareness Month with Jay, Joe, and Jared back at the Austin hotel suite, pushing the "Man Up. Process. Let Go." thread into deeper territory: identity. The episode opens on a line that doubles as a thesis — the highest-priority education a Black father can give his kids is not algebra or classic literature, it's identity. Who am I? What do I come from? Who do I come from? That work has to happen in the home, because the institutions that used to carry it — the Black church, the neighborhood school — don't reliably anymore. The uncles unpack "Man Up" with the honesty the phrase rarely gets. Yes, it can mean accountability — owning your attitude and your actions. But for too many men, "Man Up" meant suppress. Don't show feelings. Let them bubble up in twenty years and ruin something. They name it plain: it was the right language for the wrong era — a survival phrase from when your village was being taken or your family was at risk. Today the threat is different, so the language has to be different. Without that update, men become a blight — like an abandoned mall, a void that sits over our kids. Jared walks through how his family builds identity on purpose: cultural education through travel, the Black church pipeline they grew up with, the homeschool community where their kids aren't "the chocolate jotters in a sea of people who don't look like them." His wife scouts other Black families in groups and recruits them into something better — we see you, we know what your kid is feeling. Then Joe goes somewhere only Joe goes. His father told him Black culture sucked. He grew up "too white for the Black kids, too Black for the white kids," and had to build his own identity from scratch. Now married to a Korean wife, he teaches his children a merged culture they didn't get from either side. The brothers connect that journey directly to mental health: when identity is shaky, anger fills the gap. Joe walks through his coping infrastructure — humor as a brake, control as the muscle, levity to keep himself from going "zero to a hundred." This is the mental health episode about who you are before you start the work. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

9 de jun de 202636 min