The Graft Podcast
Matt Cowell's relationship with gambling began with a Simpsons fruit machine in a hotel games room in Newquay, aged ten or eleven. He'd saved up fifty pounds from his paper round. By the end of the holiday, he had £2.56 left - and already knew he needed to hide it. What followed was twenty-five years. By eighteen he was thousands in debt through Fixed Odds Betting Terminals. By twenty-five, bankrupt with £68,000 of unsecured debt - every penny from gambling, nothing to show for it. He was suspended from his bank job for cycling money between accounts to fund his habit, and spent the weeks afterwards putting on his suit every morning, driving to the high street to gamble, so his family wouldn't know. But this episode isn't just Matt's story. Ben comes into it too - discovering mid-conversation that he'd staked nearly £21,000 on betting apps in twelve months. Technically up £900. No idea. That moment is the heart of why this conversation matters: gambling has become so frictionless, so invisible, that most people don't know where "casual" ends and "problem" begins - and the 16–24 generation are being targeted harder than anyone. 🎧 Listen as we discuss… (01:15) The Simpsons machine: where it started - and the shame that came with it (07:18) FOBTs, debt at eighteen, and the logic that kept him going back (14:37) "Just to play, just to play" - the core loop of addiction (15:02) Bankrupt at 25: £68,000 with nothing to show (17:24) The suit he wore every day to nowhere (20:31) Ben's reveal: £21,000 staked in twelve months without knowing (23:23) The invisible addiction: why no one sees it coming (24:36) More betting shops in the UK than Tesco, Sainsbury's and Morrisons combined (26:41) "One in every group is hiding it": the crisis targeting teenagers (35:44) No clocks in casinos - the psychology of keeping you in (39:35) Day one of 508: the panic attacks that finally broke the cycle (42:13) Addicted to Growth: starting a recovery platform from a Tesco car park (47:49) The "crack in the dam": how to help someone who won't admit they have a problem KEY TAKEAWAYS The Invisible Addiction: No smell, no visible change - you can do it from anywhere, at any time. That invisibility is precisely what makes it escalate, and why the people closest to a problem gambler are often the last to find out. Abstinence is not recovery: Matt spent almost four years not gambling and still relapsed. The shift came when he accepted - out loud, to everyone - that he is a compulsive gambler and life becomes unmanageable when he plays. That acceptance ends the wrestling. The crack in the dam: Accusations close the door. Matt's advice for anyone worried about a loved one: find a softer entry point, share content, ask a question. People accept help more readily when they feel like it was their decision to ask for it. GUEST Matt Cowell - Recovering compulsive gambler and founder of Addicted to Growth (@addictedtogrowth).
30 episodios
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