Unc Talk Podcast

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

36 min · Eilen
jakson Ep 18 Identity Is the Curriculum: Black Mental Health, "Man Up" & The Education That Has to Happen at Home kansikuva

Kuvaus

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

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Unc Talk Podcast-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

18 jaksot

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

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

Eilen36 min
jakson Ep 17 Black Mental Health: Brotherhood, Anime Clubs & Mental Health kansikuva

Ep 17 Black Mental Health: Brotherhood, Anime Clubs & Mental Health

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Chapters & Timestamps 0:00 Cold Open — "Anger Taxes You, Dismissiveness Puts the Monkey Back on Them" 0:59 Happy Mental Health Awareness Month: What's Ahead 3:53 "Man Up" Worked — But What Do We Add For Our Kids? 4:46 Power Starts With Identity: The Hotel Test 6:24 Brotherhood as Armor: Three Strings Are Harder to Break 7:09 Nobody's Making Friends Anymore & From Five to Three 9:23 Intentionality: Building Brotherhood on Purpose 10:39 Teaching Kids What a Real Friend Is 14:02 Dad's Few Words: "You'll Mess Up the Best Thing in Your Life" 16:47 The OGs Had Wisdom, Not Language 18:10 The Anime Club: A Space for Kids to Just Be 22:43 When the Library Didn't Make Them Welcome 27:00 "We Don't Have the Privilege of Feeling Good in Any Space" 28:05 Men's Events & The Percentages: Showing Up Saves Someone 32:18 Community Is the One Thing They Can't Sell You 33:22 "Mr. Monetize": Joe's Evolution & The Corporate MBA 36:42 Outro: The Mental Health Series Continues Summary The Unc Talk Podcast kicks off Mental Health Awareness Month with Episode 17 — Jay, Joe, and Jared still in Austin, off the road and out of the studio, picking up the thread from the "Man Up. Process. Let Go." conversation and turning it toward the thing that actually holds men together: brotherhood. The cold open lands the through-line — "anger taxes you; dismissiveness puts the monkey back on them" — and from there the uncles make the case that real mental resilience starts with identity. You can dismiss disrespect when you already know who you are. But the heart of this episode is connection. The brothers sit with an uncomfortable truth: nobody's making friends anymore. No 2 AM call, no lasting bonds. They get honest about their own circle — it started as five and is now three — and name why: the two who drifted didn't see the importance of intentionality. This group, by contrast, was built on purpose. They committed to meeting every year and creating something, and they've been rewarded for it. That intentionality extends to the next generation. Jared walks through the anime club his homeschool community built — born after his kids went to a library anime club and weren't made to feel welcome. So they made their own. A mom opened her home and built a three-month curriculum: story development, character design, cosplay. The point wasn't anime. It was creating a place where Black kids can simply be themselves, without the code-switching and survival-assimilation they'll later be asked to perform in corporate America. The same logic drives the men's events — bowling nights, cigar lounges — where the brothers do the math out loud: in any group of dads, one or two are quietly struggling, and just being in the room helps. The episode closes on a thesis: community is the one thing they can't sell you. Human interaction can be packaged and monetized; community has to be built, cultivated, and earned — more agrarian than capitalist. Joe debuts his new identity, "Mr. Monetize," an evolution of "Mr. Get-A-Job," and reframes his own layoff as business, not personal. This one's about building the spaces that keep men — and their kids — whole. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

2. kesä 202637 min
jakson Ep 16 Black Mental Health: Man Up, Process, and Let Go kansikuva

Ep 16 Black Mental Health: Man Up, Process, and Let Go

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Chapter Breakdown * 00:00 - 01:25: Handling Technical Difficulties: The speakers discuss managing emotional intelligence and internalizing blame when technical issues occur during recording. 1 * 01:26 - 04:36: Corporate Culture and Racial Nuance: A discussion on how Black men must navigate corporate environments where emotional outbursts are viewed differently than those of their white counterparts. 2 * 04:37 - 07:29: Setting Boundaries in the Workplace: One speaker recounts a specific incident where he had to firmly address disrespect from a colleague without losing his composure. 3 * 07:30 - 10:59: Managing Anger and External Perceptions: The speakers explore the risks of losing control, the necessity of emotional outlets, and how personal biases can lead others to feel intimidated. 4 * 11:00 - 15:39: The Impact of Betrayal and Disrespect: An analysis of how a single offensive moment can cause a person to question the entire history and depth of a professional or personal relationship. 5 * 15:40 - 18:14: Evolving for Career Progression: A speaker discusses how shifting from a non-agreeable stance to a "team player" mentality led to significant salary increases. 6 * 18:15 - 21:57: Understanding Corporate Conflict: The group debates the "game" of corporate America and the artificial creation of conflict within organizations. 7 * 21:58 - 23:58: Statistics on Emotional Sharing: Reflection on a statistic stating only 30% of men shared personal feelings in the past week, highlighting the lack of healthy emotional outlets. 8 * 23:59 - 28:54: Maintaining Composure and Blocking Noise: Advice on focusing on the "signal" of career goals while blocking out the "noise" of microaggressions and office politics. 9 * 28:55 - 32:19: Risk Management and Letting Go: Using the analogy of "bag holding" in trading to describe the importance of dropping losses and moving forward. 10 * 32:20 - 36:11: The Full Chain of Emotional Management: Final thoughts on the "Man up, process, and let go" philosophy as a way to maintain personal "squares" and missions. 11 Episode Summary The discussion focuses on the complex intersection of mental health, emotional intelligence, and professional navigation, particularly for Black men in corporate settings. The speakers begin by reflecting on recent technical difficulties, noting how such frustrations often lead to self-blame and require active emotional management. This leads into a broader conversation about the "nuance" required to survive in corporate America. One speaker highlights the double standard where a white colleague received a promotion after an angry outburst, while a Black man showing similar "fire" might be perceived as a safety threat. A central theme is the importance of setting boundaries without losing composure. One speaker details a workplace confrontation where he addressed a colleague’s disrespect directly and calmly, later refusing to let the colleague "explain away" the offense. This highlights a "zero to 100" internal temperament that many men must repress to avoid professional or legal consequences, relying instead on "outlets" like exercise or gaming to vent accumulated stress. The group examines the "game" of corporate life, noting that while many conflicts are artificially created by organizations, success often requires playing by existing rules. One speaker candidly shares that moving from a confrontational, "right-at-all-costs" attitude to a more agreeable "team player" persona resulted in his salary jumping from $12k to $130k. He argues that getting mad at the game is unproductive; instead, one must "put on the football pads" and play to win. The episode concludes with a strategic framework for emotional stability: "Man up, process, and let go". This "full chain" involves staying on one's "square" during a crisis to achieve a mission—such as getting home safely or feeding a family—then processing the event later to extract lessons, and finally dismissing the emotion entirely. By treating detractors as "older babies" or "lower-level nuisances," the speakers suggest that a man can maintain his mental focus on his ultimate goals while effectively risk-managing his professional and personal interactions. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

26. touko 202636 min
jakson Ep15 The Health Gap: A1C Wake-Ups, Mental Breakthroughs, and Building Your Life Like an iPhone kansikuva

Ep15 The Health Gap: A1C Wake-Ups, Mental Breakthroughs, and Building Your Life Like an iPhone

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] Chapter List 00:00 - Introduction and welcome to Part 2 of the physical health talk in Austin. 01:36 - Discussing the physical toll of traveling through Latin America and getting back into the gym. 05:18 - Navigating diet discipline, eating vegan, and the financial cost of healthy food vs. cheap meals. 07:28 - A breakthrough in mental health by opening up and letting go of the "gorilla" on your back. 10:04 - Why leaning on virtues is far better than leaning on empty vices. 11:31 - The crucial need for community and brotherhood to combat the silent struggles men face. 13:00 - Jay Staff shares his recent A1C diabetes wake-up call and battling milkshake cravings. 15:40 - Establishing strict dietary routines with eggs and spinach, and tracking blood sugar. 18:18 - Hustling as a 1099 business owner and reverse engineering your path to success. 23:30 - The iPhone analogy: how step-by-step sacrifice leads to reaching your complex goals. 28:46 - Addressing spiritual health and the massive spiritual void in modern culture. 30:06 - Exploring the profound connection between a healthy marriage and strong spiritual well-being. 32:25 - Wrapping up the studio session, praising the in-person energy, and looking forward to the 12-week health series. Episode Summary Welcome to Part 2 of the UncTalk Podcast's physical health discussion recorded in Austin. Hosts Jay Staff, Joe, and Jared dive deep into the multi-faceted nature of men's health. The conversation kicks off with one host detailing how traveling through Latin America temporarily derailed his fitness. However, joining a homeschool group served as the necessary catalyst to get back into the gym alongside other fathers in their thirties and forties. The hosts emphasize the distinct difficulty of maintaining a disciplined diet, noting the stark financial difference between quick, cheap meals and healthy, fulfilling food. The episode takes a poignant turn as the hosts boldly transition into discussing mental health. One speaker shares a profound personal breakthrough achieved simply by opening up to his wife, describing the immense relief of lifting a long-held burden. This leads to a crucial dialogue about replacing destructive vices with positive virtues. They stress the critical importance of true brotherhood and community to combat the dangerous, silent suffering that plagues so many men today. Jay Staff then bravely opens up about his own physical health wake-up call. After indulging in severe milkshake cravings, a routine doctor visit revealed his A1C levels indicated he was diabetic. He details his new routine of strict dietary boundaries, prioritizing simple meals like boiled eggs and spinach for breakfast, and habitually monitoring his blood sugar levels every few hours. The hosts also explore the powerful concept of reverse-engineering success. Using the intricate analogy of building an iPhone piece by piece, they firmly argue that anyone can reach their desired destination if they are truly willing to put in the calculated step-by-step sacrifice. Drawing direct parallels to the world of finance, Jay Staff compares this journey to carefully balancing risk and return in the market. Finally, the trio touches on spiritual health, identifying a massive, undeniable void in modern culture. One host deeply reflects on the mysterious but undeniable link between his marital harmony and his personal spiritual connection. They conclude by praising the unique, palpable energy of recording together in the podcast studio. The UncTalk crew proudly promises more insightful, genuine, and fun content as they continue their 12-week health series. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

19. touko 202636 min
jakson Ep 14. In Your 40s? Do the Scary Thing: Uncles Talk Layoffs, Pushups & Pivots kansikuva

Ep 14. In Your 40s? Do the Scary Thing: Uncles Talk Layoffs, Pushups & Pivots

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/fan_mail/new] 0:00  Cold Open — "Mr. Get-A-Job" Got Laid Off 0:25  Welcome to Unc Talk: Health & Wellness Series Begins 2:08  Live from Austin at Park House Studio 4:13  How the Podcast Has Changed Us 6:00  Brotherhood, Trust & Forced Accountability 11:25 Joe's Layoff & the "Do the Scary Thing" Pivot 15:20 Around the Horn: Joe's Health Update 17:01 Lowered Blood Pressure & "Learning to Be Hungry" 20:55 Aging, the Pool-Day Shirt & Quitting the Mental Battle 23:30 Food Addiction: Taco Bell, DoorDash & Spousal Support 29:30 Jared's Turn: Pops, Mortality & 30 Pushups 32:55 Homeschool Gym Crew & Diet Discipline at Home 35:04 Outro: Part 2 Preview & Community CTA Summary: In Part 1 of Unc Talk Podcast's Physical Health series, host Jay Stafford sits down in Austin with Joe and Jared for one of the most vulnerable conversations the show has had to date. The episode opens with a quiet bombshell — "Mr. Get-A-Job" Joe has been laid off — and instead of burying it, the brothers put it on the record and use it as the doorway into a real talk about health, mortality, and what it takes to keep showing up in your 40s. Recorded at Park House Studio in Austin as part of UTP's batch health and wellness arc, the conversation does what the show does best: turns a check-in among brothers into useful medicine for the listener. The uncles dig into how this podcast has become a form of forced accountability, why unconditional mentorship matters, and how community gives men the mirror they can't hold up alone. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2589304/support] Questions, Comments, Just Say Hi Uncle@unctalkpod.com

12. touko 202636 min