26/03/2026
“What this response taught me about people, pain, and why we’re all craving real conversations.”
Over the last few days, I’ve watched thousands of people respond to my Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere documentary post - not with arguments, not with outrage, but with relief.
Relief that someone finally said out loud what so many have been carrying quietly.
And reading through the comments taught me something important:
People aren’t just tired.
They’re tired of pretending.
Tired of acting like the pressure doesn’t get to them.
Tired of minimising their pain because “others have it worse.”
Tired of feeling like they have to hold everything together while no one really sees what’s going on underneath.
There was something else woven through those responses too - a quiet but unmistakable frustration. People are exhausted from pretending that toxic behaviour is somehow acceptable just because it’s common. The dismissiveness. The gaslighting. The subtle cruelty wrapped up as “just being honest,” “just how they are,” or “part of the culture.” So many have learned to tolerate what hurts them because calling it out feels harder than enduring it.
But the relief in those comments made one thing clear: people don’t want to normalise harm anymore. They want language for it. Boundaries around it. And permission to stop adapting themselves to environments that require them to shrink, stay silent, or betray their own nervous system to keep the peace.
What struck me most wasn’t the volume of comments - it was the honesty in them.
The rawness.
The willingness to say, “Yes… that’s me.”
There’s also a deeper responsibility here - one that sits squarely with men. Not to be louder, tougher, or more dominant, but to be steadier, more accountable, and more emotionally honest. Young men like my son are watching closely, learning what strength actually looks like. And young women like my daughters are watching too, looking for signs of safety, respect, and consistency in the men around them. When men are willing to model integrity, self‑reflection, and care - when they lead with boundaries instead of bravado - they become anchors. A quiet but powerful reminder that masculinity can be a source of safety rather than harm, and that hope doesn’t come from perfection, but from men who are willing to show up, own their impact, and do better.
I am not perfect - far from it. I am flawed, I get things wrong, and I’m still learning where my blind spots live. But I work hard every day to take responsibility for my impact, to listen when I fall short, and to keep choosing growth over defensiveness. I try to show up with integrity in my work, with presence in my relationships, and with honesty about my limitations. Being worthy of the respect I earn from my patients and the love I receive from my wife and children isn’t about being flawless - it’s about being consistent, accountable, and willing to do the work, even when it’s uncomfortable.
It reminds me of what I see every week my clinic:
Most people don’t need more motivation.
They need permission - permission to tell the truth about how they’re really feeling, physically and emotionally.
We’re not craving more information.
We’re craving real conversations.
The kind where you don’t have to perform.
The kind where you don’t have to be the strong one.
The kind where someone actually listens and helps you make sense of what your body has been trying to say.
If my post resonated with you, it’s probably because you’re ready for that kind of honesty - with yourself, and with someone who can help you unpack it.
And that’s the work Jo and I do every day in Willow&Saige. No quick fixes. Real conversations.
Real care.