The Men's Roundtable Series
What if the hardest part of becoming yourself is admitting you were never given the tools to know who you were in the first place? We pull up a chair with licensed therapist and author Johnzelle Anderson for a raw, thoughtful conversation about men’s mental health, identity, and the quiet damage that happens when a child grows up surrounded by miseducation, abuse, neglect, and racism. Johnzelle shares what it was like being mixed race in Southwest Virginia as a Black person “raised in whiteness,” including the confusion of learning hatred from the very people meant to protect you. We dig into how he holds boundaries as a therapist while still staying fully human, why storytelling can build real rapport, and how more Black men are embracing therapy since 2020. Along the way, we talk anxiety, relationships, parenting, employment stress, and the real-life weight that shows up behind closed doors when men finally decide they’re done surviving. We also explore his memoir, Mixtape and Memoir, and the idea of unlearning as an ongoing process rather than a neat ending. Johnzell takes us to West Africa, from Ghana to Sierra Leone, and explains how reclaiming roots and legacy can heal places a father never tended. The episode lands on a simple practice that’s tougher than it sounds: “Be kind to yourself, and I’ll do the same.” Subscribe for more honest conversations on restoration, share this with a man who needs it, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you’re still thinking about. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/theycallmemistayu]
30 episodios
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