Chronicles of the Phoenix

You’ll Be Alright, Kid: The Anxiety Epidemic Facing American Youth

48 min · 3 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio You’ll Be Alright, Kid: The Anxiety Epidemic Facing American Youth

Descripción

This episode is a compassionate, honest look at what is really driving the anxiety crisis among children and adolescents in the United States, and why so many kids are struggling under the weight of pressure that was never meant for them to carry. Using Alex Warren’s song “You’ll Be Alright Kid” as a grounding thread, we explore how today’s kids are growing up inside multiple pressure systems at once. Academic performance, hyper‑competitive youth sports, social media validation loops, and well‑intentioned but conditional approval have quietly taught many kids that their worth is something they must earn. We examine what the data tells us about the rise in youth anxiety, unpack the role of ego and external validation, and discuss why social media has become such a powerful amplifier of identity collapse. We also break down a landmark legal verdict in which Meta and YouTube were found negligent for engineering addictive platforms targeted at children, confirming what many parents have sensed for years: this is not a willpower issue or a parenting failure. It is a systemic design problem. To offer hope, we look outside the U.S. to Norway, where a child‑centered approach to sports, development, and boundaries around technology has produced not only healthier kids, but extraordinary long‑term outcomes. The contrast reveals that protecting childhood is not about lowering standards. It is about redefining what success means. This episode closes with tangible ways parents, coaches, educators, and caring adults can shift the message kids are receiving every day and begin cultivating internal validation, emotional resilience, and unconditional belonging. At its core, this episode asks a simple but critical question: What if kids didn’t grow up believing they were only as good as their last result?

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Chronicles of the Phoenix!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

19 episodios

episode Mental Health, Stigma, and What Happens Between the Crises artwork

Mental Health, Stigma, and What Happens Between the Crises

During Mental Health Awareness Month, conversations about mental health are more visible than ever - but awareness alone doesn’t always translate into access, support, or meaningful change. In this episode, we explore the realities behind mental health stigma and the barriers that still exist when it comes to asking for and receiving help. We spend time talking specifically about boys and men, how they are often socialized away from emotional expression, and the impact that has on help‑seeking and mental health outcomes. We also look at how our systems are designed to respond to crisis -when things have already reached a breaking point -while often overlooking the quieter, less urgent space in between. This is where deeper work happens: work around childhood experiences, attachment patterns, trauma, identity, and values. While crisis care is essential, it is only part of the picture. Sustainable mental health is built in the space between those moments, through ongoing support, reflection, and intentional work. This conversation is an invitation to think differently about mental health. Not just as something to address when things fall apart, but as something to understand, invest in, and tend to over time.

29 de may de 202641 min
episode What Happens When You Give People Permission to Play artwork

What Happens When You Give People Permission to Play

What happens when you walk into a professional conference and everything signals that you don’t have to perform? In this episode, we share an experience from a recent conference where the theme was not just decorative, but intentional. A circus. Playful. Unexpected. And immediately, something shifted. People softened. Conversations felt different. Connection came easier. From that moment, we explore a deeper question: what happens when environments give people permission to be human? We discuss the role of connection in the workplace and beyond, why loneliness and disconnection were problems long before COVID, and how connection drives real outcomes like engagement, retention, and performance. We also reflect on moments of alignment with other organizations and what it means to truly “find your people.” Most importantly, we unpack why play is often misunderstood. It is not something you schedule or add on top of a demanding culture. It is something that emerges when people feel safe, seen, and allowed to show up more fully. We also explore the real tension leaders, parents, and individuals face. When pressure is high, play can feel optional. But its absence quietly impacts energy, creativity, connection, and sustainability over time. This episode is not just for leaders. It is for anyone who has felt the difference between environments that require performance and those that allow you to simply be.

15 de may de 202633 min
episode The Enneagram Goes on Spring Break: How Each Type Travels artwork

The Enneagram Goes on Spring Break: How Each Type Travels

Spring break travel has a way of revealing exactly who we are. What we need, what stresses us out, and where we thrive becomes much clearer when we leave our routines behind. In this episode, we take the Enneagram on the road and explore how each type tends to show up while traveling. We share Enneagram‑informed insights into how different types plan or avoid planning, handle stress, seek freedom or structure, and navigate group dynamics on trips. Along the way, we weave in personal stories from Erin’s recent Type 7 trip to New York with loose plans and lots of options, and Courtney’s upcoming Type 9 trip to Paris, where the desire to go with the flow meets anxiety and a familiar stress‑line pull toward Type 6 planning. This is a lighter, playful episode with real insight about why travel can feel regulating for some people and deeply overwhelming for others. We talk about how awareness of your Enneagram type can help you travel with more compassion for yourself and the people you’re with, and how naming needs ahead of time can make trips more enjoyable for everyone involved. Whether you love an itinerary or thrive on vibes, this episode invites you to understand your travel style a little better and maybe plan your next trip with less stress and more grace.

1 de may de 202653 min
episode Standing Where I Once Begged to Be artwork

Standing Where I Once Begged to Be

This episode is an invitation to slow down and notice the progress we so easily overlook. Inspired by a poem from Haley Grace that begins, “I might not be everything I want to be today, but I am everything I wanted to be two years ago,” we explore why healing often goes unnoticed and why acknowledging how far we’ve come matters just as much as envisioning where we’re going. We talk about the tendency to constantly move the goalpost, to live in future‑focused growth, and to miss the fact that many of us are already standing in a life we once begged for. This is not an episode about manifesting or striving. It’s about presence, perspective, and integration. Through stories from our own lives, our clinical work, and experiences with clients and kids, we reflect on how healing shows up quietly. We also unpack why our brains struggle to hold onto past progress and how intentional “lookbacks” help the nervous system register safety, change, and growth. This conversation is for anyone who feels behind, impatient with their healing, or disconnected from the evidence of who they’ve already become. You don’t have to be everything yet. But the fact that you’re here, that you stayed, that things that once felt unbearable are now just things - "that has to count for something."

17 de abr de 202638 min
episode You’ll Be Alright, Kid: The Anxiety Epidemic Facing American Youth artwork

You’ll Be Alright, Kid: The Anxiety Epidemic Facing American Youth

This episode is a compassionate, honest look at what is really driving the anxiety crisis among children and adolescents in the United States, and why so many kids are struggling under the weight of pressure that was never meant for them to carry. Using Alex Warren’s song “You’ll Be Alright Kid” as a grounding thread, we explore how today’s kids are growing up inside multiple pressure systems at once. Academic performance, hyper‑competitive youth sports, social media validation loops, and well‑intentioned but conditional approval have quietly taught many kids that their worth is something they must earn. We examine what the data tells us about the rise in youth anxiety, unpack the role of ego and external validation, and discuss why social media has become such a powerful amplifier of identity collapse. We also break down a landmark legal verdict in which Meta and YouTube were found negligent for engineering addictive platforms targeted at children, confirming what many parents have sensed for years: this is not a willpower issue or a parenting failure. It is a systemic design problem. To offer hope, we look outside the U.S. to Norway, where a child‑centered approach to sports, development, and boundaries around technology has produced not only healthier kids, but extraordinary long‑term outcomes. The contrast reveals that protecting childhood is not about lowering standards. It is about redefining what success means. This episode closes with tangible ways parents, coaches, educators, and caring adults can shift the message kids are receiving every day and begin cultivating internal validation, emotional resilience, and unconditional belonging. At its core, this episode asks a simple but critical question: What if kids didn’t grow up believing they were only as good as their last result?

3 de abr de 202648 min