Imagen de portada del programa The Mental Health Made Simple Podcast

The Mental Health Made Simple Podcast

Podcast de Dr. Mark Mayfield | Jonathan Collier

inglés

Desarrollo personal y salud

Empieza 7 días de prueba

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

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

Acerca de The Mental Health Made Simple Podcast

Think of caring for your mind like training your body—you need clear guidance and simple steps. On The Mental Health Made Simple Podcast, we cut through the noise—no jargon, no hype—and bring you research-backed insights and real stories from clinicians, coaches, and everyday people. Tune in for practical tips and honest conversations that help you invest in yourself, support others, and make mental wellness clear, accessible, and doable

Todos los episodios

29 episodios

episode Mental Health Awareness Month Is Making People Feel Worse artwork

Mental Health Awareness Month Is Making People Feel Worse

If you've felt more alone during May than you did in April, you're not imagining it. Every May, the internet floods with mental health content. Infographics, stats, recovery stories, and a thousand variations of "you are enough." And somehow, the people who actually need help end up feeling worse. Jonathan and Dr. Mark say the quiet part out loud. Awareness without action isn't help. It's noise. And for someone already struggling, it can make things measurably worse. The 30-Day Challenge Pick one. Do it this month. 1. Have one real conversation with one person you've been thinking about. 2. Take one real step for your own mental health you've been putting off. Don't post about it. Just do it. What You'll Hear (00:00) The unpopular opinion that opens the episode (05:00) Why awareness without action does damage (10:00) The cruise ship analogy and the life ring with no rope (16:30) Why "just reach out" puts the burden on the wrong person (22:00) When stats and recovery stories backfire (30:00) Reframing May as an invitation (38:00) What to do if you're the one struggling (41:00) The 30-day challenge Five Things This Episode Says Out Loud 1. If checking in on people isn't something you normally do, don't start now. Forced check-ins feel worse than nothing. 2. "Let me know if you need anything" is not help. The person in crisis doesn't know what they need. Showing up is the help. 3. Stats and recovery stories can hurt more than they help if you're in the middle of it. 4. You don't owe anyone your story. Muting hashtags is a legitimate response, not avoidance. 5. The most useful thing this month won't come from a post. It will come from one conversation you've been avoiding. "A post without a next step is a life ring with no rope." FAQ How do I help someone struggling without making it worse? Show up without an agenda. Don't try to fix it. Try: "I've been thinking about you. How are you actually doing?" Then be okay if they don't open up. What do you say to someone struggling with mental health? Skip the platitudes. "You are enough" lands flat when someone is in it. Say something specific. "I noticed you've been quiet and wanted to check in." Then listen. Is Mental Health Awareness Month actually helpful? It depends what you do with it. Awareness alone can make struggling people feel more alone. The month works when it becomes an invitation to do one real thing. Should I get off social media this month? If the content is making you feel worse, yes. Protecting your bandwidth is not the same as avoiding help. How do I know if I need therapy? If you've been thinking about it, that's usually answer enough. Most people find the right fit in four to six sessions. If the first counselor doesn't work, find a different one. One Last Thing Maybe this month isn't about raising awareness. Maybe it's an invitation. To have one conversation you've been putting off. To take one real step you've been avoiding. Not because it's May. Because you're ready. Progress over perfection. What's the next right step? Help Us Normalize This Leave a rating and review wherever you listen. It's how more people find conversations like this. And if someone came to mind while you were listening, send them this episode. More tools and resources at mentalhealthmadesimple.life [mentalhealthmadesimple.life]. Disclaimer Mental Health Made Simple is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional counseling, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are struggling, please speak with a licensed mental health professional. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number.

8 de may de 2026 - 42 min
episode The Friendship Recession Is Quietly Wrecking Our Mental Health: Why connection is breaking down, and how to fix it artwork

The Friendship Recession Is Quietly Wrecking Our Mental Health: Why connection is breaking down, and how to fix it

You’ve got 800 followers on Instagram. Maybe more. And when something actually goes wrong at 9 PM on a Tuesday, you can’t think of a single person to call. That’s not a you problem. It’s a proximity problem. And a repetition problem. In this episode, Jonathan and Dr. Mark get honest about the growing friendship recession—and why it’s hitting men especially hard. No clinical jargon. Just a real conversation about how we end up isolated, the stories we tell ourselves to justify it, and what it actually takes to fix it. In This Episode Why about 1 in 6 men report having zero close friends—and what’s driving it The collapse of the “middle tier” of adult relationships Why “busy” is fool’s gold—and what it’s actually covering up How men tend to build relationships differently—and why that’s working against us right now Why your spouse can be your best friend but cannot be your only friend What loneliness actually looks like in the body How to lower the bar in a way that actually works Key Takeaways You don’t have a friendship problem. You have a proximity and repetition problem. You’re likable. People do want to know you. What’s missing is showing up to the same place, around the same people, on repeat. That’s where friendship happens—as a byproduct, not a goal. Stop outsourcing your friendship to your partner. Your spouse should be your best friend—not your only friend. When they’re carrying everything, nobody wins. That’s not closeness—that’s codependency. Pick a shape, not a person. Don’t try to “make a friend.” Find something you’ll show up to consistently—a class, a league, a coffee shop—and let what happens happen. The deepest hurts happen in relationship. So do the deepest healings. Protecting yourself by staying isolated feels safe. It isn’t. Frequently Asked Questions Why is male loneliness getting worse? Men tend to build relationships through shared activity, not conversation. COVID disrupted a lot of those environments. Add screens, remote work, and the pressure to appear self-sufficient, and you get a growing number of men who are isolated—and don’t have language for it. How do I make friends as an adult? Lower your expectations for how it starts. Text the person you thought of three weeks ago. Show up somewhere consistently. Don’t go looking for a best friend—go looking for five minutes of regular contact with another human. The rest can grow from there. Is it bad if my partner is my only friend? Yes. It creates codependency, puts pressure on the relationship it can’t sustain, and leaves both of you carrying something you weren’t built to carry alone. Closing Thought Who have you thought of in the last month that you didn’t reach out to? Why? If something happened tonight at 9 PM, who would you actually call? You already know what to do. What’s one space you could show up to on repeat this week—where friendship could just happen? Resources Find more episodes, tools, and practical mental health resources at: https://www.mentalhealthmadesimple.life Disclaimer Mental Health Made Simple is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional counseling, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are struggling with your mental health, please speak with a licensed mental health professional. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number.

30 de abr de 2026 - 38 min
episode Half of Adults Are Using AI as a Therapist. Here's the Problem. artwork

Half of Adults Are Using AI as a Therapist. Here's the Problem.

It's 11pm. You've had a hard day. And instead of calling someone or sitting with it, you open ChatGPT and start typing. About half of adults have done this in the past year. And most of them have no idea if it actually helped or if they just convinced themselves it did. This episode isn't about whether AI is good or bad. Jonathan and Dr. Mark both use it. But there's a difference between using AI as a tool and using it as a way to avoid the harder thing. That line is blurry for a lot of people right now. In This Episode * Why AI gives you relief but not growth * How processing conflict through AI puts you in a one-sided story without realizing it * What AI genuinely cannot do that a real person can * When AI use crosses into avoidance * Jonathan's personal story about trying to figure things out alone and what it cost him * A practical self-check for your relationship with AI Key Takeaways Relief and growth aren't the same thing. AI is good at making you feel better in the moment. It's not good at actually changing anything. If it's the only place you're processing hard stuff, you're looping, not growing. You're only feeding it your side of the story. It's going to validate you. It's not going to push back. Dr. Mark calls that functional narcissism and it's worth sitting with. Getting more aware without support can make things worse. Jonathan learned this the hard way. The more he uncovered on his own without anyone to help him process it, the worse things got. AI can speed that up. Frequently Asked Questions Can AI replace therapy? * No. It can't see what you're not saying. It can't pick up on body language or hold you accountable. It loses context. And it only knows what you tell it, which means it can't challenge a distortion the way a real person can. How do I know if my AI use has become a problem? * Jonathan puts it simply: if your therapist could see your last 30 days of chat history, would you be comfortable with that? If not, that's your answer. Closing Thought It's a tool. Use it like one. You pick up a tool, you use it, you put it down. If you're reaching for it every time something gets hard, that's worth paying attention to. Resources Find more episodes, tools, and resources at mentalhealthmadesimple.life Disclaimer Mental Health Made Simple is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional counseling, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are struggling with your mental health, please speak with a licensed mental health professional. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number.

23 de abr de 2026 - 44 min
episode Nobody’s Going to Fix You, And That’s ACTUALLY Good News artwork

Nobody’s Going to Fix You, And That’s ACTUALLY Good News

You finally made the appointment. You showed up. Sat down. Started talking to someone. And then — not much happened. Or it helped for a while and then stopped. And now you’re sitting there wondering whether therapy actually works, whether you found the wrong person, or whether you’re just one of those people who can’t be helped. None of those things are true. But the way most people walk into therapy almost guarantees they won’t get what they came for. In this episode, Jonathan and Dr. Mark dismantle the biggest myth in mental health — that a therapist’s job is to fix you. They talk about what therapy is actually supposed to do, why the most uncomfortable sessions are often the most important ones, and what it genuinely takes to move from going through the motions to doing the kind of work that changes things. If you’ve ever sat in a therapist’s office and thought “this isn’t working” — this one’s for you. In This Episode: * Why the “fix me” mindset is the #1 barrier to real progress in therapy * The disease model of mental health — and why it quietly works against you * What a therapist is actually supposed to do (and what they’re definitely not) * The difference between relief and growth — and why we keep choosing relief * How long it actually takes to build a working relationship with a therapist * Why the best sessions are the ones that feel the worst * Three barriers that get in the way of real progress * What separates a good therapy client from a great one * The postures that actually drive healing Key Takeaways The therapist is not there to fix you. A therapist’s job is to help you identify the behaviors and emotions driving your patterns, then help you decide what to do with them. The work is yours. That’s not a limitation — it’s actually the most empowering thing about the process. The “fix me” mindset creates two problems. It assumes something is innately broken in you, and it externalizes your ability to change it. Both of those things create shame and dependency instead of growth. Walking in with a collaborative mindset — “I need help uncovering what I already have” — changes everything. Relief and growth are not the same thing. Getting something off your chest feels good. It’s dopamine. But if you leave it there and don’t do anything with it, nothing changes. The sessions that feel like a gut punch are often the ones that matter most. Give it time before you decide it’s not working. It takes an average of 4.6 to 5.2 sessions just to build a working therapeutic relationship. Honesty is the whole game. If you’re holding back in session because you’re afraid of being judged or afraid of making it real by saying it out loud — that’s the exact thing getting in your way. Therapists have higher confidentiality than doctors or lawyers. Use it. Progress is not linear. Expect a spiral, not a straight line. You’ll revisit the same things — but with more tools, more awareness, and longer gaps between visits. That’s not regression. That’s how it works. You have to move the weight. If you’re frustrated with your results but not doing what your therapist is asking you to do between sessions, you already know why it’s not working. The work doesn’t happen in the hour. It happens in the days after. CLOSING THOUGHT Push the rock.Not down the hill. Not all the way. Just push it.Progress in therapy doesn’t require massive movement. It requires consistent, honest effort. Disclaimer Mental Health Made Simple is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional counseling, diagnosis, or treatment. Listening to this podcast does not create a counselor-client relationship. If you are struggling with your mental health, consider speaking with a licensed mental health professional. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number. Resources * Find more episodes, tools, and resources at mentalhealthmadesimple.life

15 de abr de 2026 - 47 min
episode The Relationship Filter Nobody Taught You artwork

The Relationship Filter Nobody Taught You

Most of us were never taught how friendships actually work. So we just let people in, hoped for the best, and then couldn't figure out why we felt constantly drained, disappointed, or like we were always the one showing up. Jonathan and Dr. Mark get into the relationship framework Jonathan built through counseling and real-life challenges— a three-degree filter that finally gives you language for something most people have felt but never been able to name. They also get into why the problem usually isn't other people. It's that we've never figured out where people actually fit, so we put everyone in the same place and then wonder why nothing works. If you've ever felt like you were giving more than you were getting, or like your closest relationships were getting your leftovers, this one's going to land. Download the free Relationship Dynamics Tool at mentalhealthmadesimple.life [https://mentalhealthmadesimple.life] Disclaimer Mental Health Made Simple is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional counseling, diagnosis, or treatment. Listening to this podcast does not create a counselor-client relationship. If you are struggling with your mental health, consider speaking with a licensed mental health professional. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number.

31 de mar de 2026 - 48 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

Elige tu suscripción

Más populares

Premium

20 horas de audiolibros

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo

  • Disfruta los shows de Podimo sin anuncios

  • Cancela cuando quieras

Empieza 7 días de prueba
Después $99 / mes

Prueba gratis

Sólo en Podimo

Audiolibros populares

Preguntas frecuentes

Más preguntas y respuestas
Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba. $99 / mes después de la prueba. Cancela cuando quieras.