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  • Episode Description

    In Episode 34 of Conversations for the End, I sit down with George from The Tin Men, whose evidence-based work has become one of the largest resources documenting the challenges facing men and boys today.

    We explore the current state of men's mental health, education, suicide, domestic abuse, and fatherlessness, while also discussing why these conversations have become so emotionally and politically charged. Together we examine the role of media narratives, algorithmic culture, the manosphere, Jordan Peterson, male friendship, initiation, therapy, and what meaningful support for boys and men might actually look like.

    Rather than framing these issues as a battle between men and women, this conversation argues for nuance, evidence, and the willingness to hold difficult truths without reducing them to simplistic binaries.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    03:06 The current landscape for boys and men

    05:38 Domestic violence statistics and media narratives

    08:52 Why nuance matters in emotionally charged conversations

    14:12 The Louis Theroux manosphere documentary

    17:10 Trauma, misogyny and the roots of harmful behaviour

    19:34 Jordan Peterson, role models and the vacuum left behind

    24:10 Algorithms and online radicalisation

    29:19 Trauma, resentment and understanding both sexes

    32:15 Holding the tension of opposites

    33:55 Modern initiation and why men need male spaces

    38:02 Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, ritual and emotional integration

    41:38 Why "men just need to talk" isn't enough

    46:37 Social prescribing and communities that actually help men

    47:36 Male suicide and the "symphony of sorrow"

    48:36 Suicide, symbolic death and psychological transformation

    50:30 Why men die by suicide and what society misses

    54:14 Structural problems versus personal responsibility

    57:40 Self-improvement, accountability and systemic change

    1:01:12 How do we have better conversations about men?

    1:07:34 Why George continues having difficult conversations

    1:08:13 Where to find The Tin Men

    If you enjoyed this conversation, please consider subscribing, leaving a review, and sharing the episode. You can also support the podcast via the link in my social media bios.

    Find George below.

    Instagram: @TheTinMen

    YouTube: ⁨@TheTinMenBlog⁩

    Connection with me at.

    Instagram/ TikTok : ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩

  • What happens when fashion becomes a vehicle for storytelling, identity, and self-discovery?In Episode 33 of Conversations for the End, I sit down with menswear designer and creative director Fred Castleberry, founder of FE Castleberry, to explore creativity, personal style, character, myth, and the forces that shape who we become.Fred shares his unconventional journey from banking and photography to Ralph Lauren and eventually building one of the most distinctive menswear brands operating today. Along the way, we discuss creative constraints, the role of narrative in culture, the importance of history, and why some of the most meaningful creative breakthroughs emerge from holding seemingly opposing ideas together.Whether you're interested in creativity, psychology, fashion, storytelling, or finding the courage to pursue the thing that keeps calling you, this conversation is packed with insight.Listen now on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.Follow Fred:Instagram: @fecastleberryWebsite: https://www.fecastleberry.comFollow Conversations for the End:Instagram: @conversationsfortheendTikTok: @conversationsfortheendTimestamps00:00 Introduction02:25 Meeting Fred Castleberry03:28 Fashion Kid to Menswear Designer08:34 Listening to the Inner Calling15:34 Action Creates Luck17:17 Uptown Opulence & Downtown Irreverence21:09 Why Storytelling Matters24:14 Building Worlds Through Style26:46 Being Dropped Into The Middle of Life29:15 The Perfectly Timed Midlife Crisis31:30 The Black Leather Jacket Experiment36:25 Creativity, Constraints & Freedom38:40 Character Building & Identity43:00 Learning The Rules Before Breaking Them44:06 Individuation, History & Personal Style47:19 The Magic Is In The Mix52:05 Holding Opposites Together55:07 Where To Find FredIf you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a rating, and share it with someone who might find it meaningful.#ConversationsForTheEnd #Creativity #PersonalMyth #Storytelling #Menswear

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  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I sit down once again with founder of Milk Bar Melbourne, Simon Agosta.What begins as a discussion about Kanye West, Virgil Abloh, fashion, and cultural gatekeeping quickly becomes something much deeper: a conversation about authenticity, social media, beauty, aspiration, and whether creativity can offer a way out of the algorithmic trance many of us find ourselves living in.Simon explores how figures like Kanye and Virgil helped collapse traditional taste hierarchies, allowing independent creators to build audiences without institutional gatekeepers. From there, we discuss the strange cultural moment we now inhabit: a world where everyone performs an identity online, where authenticity itself feels increasingly difficult to define, and where many people are beginning to feel a growing sense of disenchantment with digital life.We explore whether artists have a responsibility to create alternatives, how beauty and aspiration shape culture, why analogue experiences are returning, and what it might mean to use the internet to help people reconnect with reality rather than escape from it.A conversation about fashion, culture, mythology, creativity, and finding your way back to the real world.Timestamps00:00 Introduction to Simon Agosta and Milk Bar Melbourne03:02 Why people are nostalgic for 201605:04 Kanye West, Yeezus, and fashion as cultural change08:10 New money vs old money in creative industries11:51 Virgil Abloh and the collapse of taste hierarchies15:00 Kanye's vision for accessible and ethical fashion19:53 How Milk Bar was built from a sewing machine at home23:40 Social media, aspiration, and performing identity28:30 Why Simon stopped posting on his personal Instagram30:23 Democratizing Jungian ideas and breaking intellectual gatekeeping35:05 Baudrillard, Disneyland, and digital reality39:01 Phones as modern magical objects41:10 AI slop, disenchantment, and cultural exhaustion43:07 Why creatives feel cultural shifts first47:55 Using the algorithm to get people off the algorithm49:30 Analog nostalgia, Tumblr, and the internet before optimization54:16 The experiment: launching a collection without Instagram56:31 Beauty in the mundane and local mythologies58:30 Why vanity matters more than we admit01:00:19 Making real life feel more compelling than the screen01:01:43 Frank Ocean and the appeal of disappearance01:04:00 Jung's shadow and the desire to step away01:06:20 Can we make reality sexy again?01:08:00 Churches, beauty, and the power of aesthetics01:10:20 Are we entering a post-authenticity era?01:13:00 The antidote: listening to your own soul01:15:21 Bullshit, honesty, and genuine human encounters01:17:15 Self-reflection and recognizing your own performance01:18:00 Milk Bar's future and final reflections01:20:20 Where to find Milk Bar Melbournehttps://melbournerenaissance.substack.com/Instagram: @ConversationsForTheEnd TikTok: ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩ Spotify/Apple Podcast: ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩ Title Music: Vines

  • Episode 31 of Conversations for the End welcomes back friend of the show, Dr. Dylan Martinez Francisco, for a deep exploration of psychedelics, disenchantment, Jungian psychology, and the modern crisis of meaning.

    Together we explore how Western culture came to privilege thinking over feeling, intuition, and embodied experience, and what that has cost us psychologically, spiritually, and culturally. Dylan shares insights from depth psychology, animism, and indigenous perspectives to discuss why so many people feel uprooted in modern life and how reconnecting with the symbolic, emotional, and relational dimensions of existence may offer a path forward.

    We also dive into synchronicity, psychedelics and plant medicine, Jung’s suspicion of altered states, AI and technological consciousness, the return of the repressed in digital culture, and whether modern symptoms like anxiety, alienation, and meaninglessness might actually be signals pointing us back toward a more integrated way of being.

    A rich conversation on psyche, culture, consciousness, and what it means to feel alive in a disenchanted world.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introducing Dylan Francisco

    04:16 Why the West Privileges Thinking Over Feeling

    08:00 The Cost of Disenchantment

    12:35 Projection, Shadow, and Cultural Conflict

    13:15 Modern Neurosis and the Loss of Soul

    15:59 Relearning How to Feel

    18:44 When Feeling Becomes Inflation

    20:49 Holding the Tension of Opposites

    23:30 Psychedelics and Expanding Reality

    24:34 Psychedelics as Reconnection, Not Escape

    28:11 Set, Setting, and Reverence

    31:35 Experiences Beyond Words

    32:02 Jung’s Suspicion of Psychedelics

    43:17 Plant Medicines as Teachers

    44:14 Ayahuasca Tourism and Spiritual Consumerism

    45:11 Control vs Relationality

    46:50 The Plants Told Us

    50:49 Symbolising the Inner World

    53:38 The Outer World Has Depth Too

    56:07 The Feminine, Matter, and Meaning

    59:54 AI, Thinking, and the Return of Feeling

    1:02:26 Technology as the Return of the Repressed

    1:04:57 Neurotic Culture and Emotional Collapse

    1:05:55 Can Culture Rebalance Itself?

    1:08:54 The Internet as Trickster

    1:09:22 Final Reflections and Where to Find Dylan

    Instagram: @dylanmartinezfrancisco.phd

    Instagram: @conversationsfortheend

    TikTok: @conversationsfortheend

    Spotify: @conversationsfortheend

    Buymeacoffee.com/conversationsfortheend

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I’m joined by Elliott Morgan — depth psychology scholar, stand-up comedian, and cultural commentator — for a wide-ranging exploration of the trickster archetype and its grip on contemporary life.Elliott’s recent doctoral work examines modern American culture through a Jungian lens, with a particular focus on the trickster as a disruptive, shape-shifting force operating across media, politics, and identity.

    What emerges in our conversation is not just an analysis of the trickster as a mythological figure, but as a living psychological pattern shaping how we communicate, deceive, entertain, and even understand truth itself.We explore how the trickster moves between humour and destruction, insight and manipulation — from propaganda and digital culture to AI-generated “slop” and the strange collapse of meaning online. At times redemptive, at others destabilising, the trickster reveals both the fragility and necessity of holding tension in a world increasingly pulled toward extremes.

    This episode asks: are we witnessing the resurgence of an ancient archetypal force, or have we created the perfect conditions for it to run unchecked?Elliott Morgan is a scholar of depth psychology with a specialization in Jungian and archetypal studies.

    His dissertation analyzes contemporary events and cultural trends in the United States through the lens of the trickster archetype. He has been published in Psychological Perspectives and brings a unique voice that bridges academic insight with lived cultural critique through comedy and commentary.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    02:23 What Is the Trickster Archetype?

    04:50 The Trickster in Cultural Transition

    08:22 Trickster, Titans, and the Logic of Propaganda

    17:04 The Redemptive Face of the Trickster

    22:05 AI Slop and the Emergence of a New Archetype

    24:28 Holding the Tension of Opposites Today

    27:23 Past, Present, Future: A Culture Out of Time

    32:50 When the Joke Turns Back on Us

    37:00 America and the Burden of the Heroic Ideal

    41:00 Hermes and the Gods of Communication

    46:00 Self-Sabotage and the American Trickster

    47:50 Ecological Crisis Through the Trickster Lens

    54:00 The Psychological Landscape of Younger Generations

    58:00 Comedy and the Return of the Heroic Stance

    Subscribe on YouTube, and follow on Spotify and Apple Podcasts to support the show and join the wider conversation.

    Instagram ⁨@ElliottMorgan⁩

    Instagram / TikTok ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I sit down with transformational coach Adam Letica to explore the hidden psychological patterns that shape our relationships, our conflicts, and our capacity for growth.Adam works with self aware high performers who find themselves stuck in repeating cycles, particularly in love and identity.

    Drawing on his background in Neuroscience and Biopsychology from the University of Michigan, alongside depth psychology, Internal Family Systems, and polyvagal theory, he offers a grounded yet deeply symbolic approach to change.

    His work is not about surface level optimisation, but about identifying and transforming the underlying structures that organise our lives. Across the conversation, we examine why conflict so often feels like a threat to the self, how early relational dynamics shape the way we experience tension, and what it means to consciously rewrite the narratives we carry into our relationships.

    We explore the internal dialogue that precedes communication with others, the tendency to overindex on finding the right partner, and the often unexamined expectations that quietly give rise to resentment. The conversation moves into deeper terrain around marriage, ritual, and the symbolic life, asking what is lost when relationships are stripped of meaning and reduced to function.

    We also speak directly to the challenges many men face in confronting their wounds, relating to the feminine, and engaging in genuine psychological growth without collapsing into defensiveness or avoidance.This is a conversation about patterns, about responsibility, and about the possibility of real transformation when we are willing to face what moves beneath the surface.

    Adam’s work lives at adamletica.com.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    02:17 Conflict as a threat

    05:54 When conflict arises

    11:34 Rewriting the story around conflict

    16:11 Communicating with ourselves

    18:30 Overindexing for the right partner

    22:30 Marriage

    29:00 The importance of ritual and the symbolic

    38:00 Expectation and resentments

    45:33 Men and growth

    54:22 Men, the feminine and the inability to face their wounds

    Instagram ⁨@adamletica⁩

    Instagram ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I’m joined by Jungian analyst Dr. Robert Tyminski to explore the psychological structures shaping boys and men today.We discuss the influence of what Tyminski calls the “heroic code”, a cultural script that encourages endurance and strength while often leaving little room for vulnerability or the acknowledgement of wounds. When pain cannot be symbolised or spoken about, it often becomes acted out instead.Our conversation explores masculinity, adolescence, emotional vocabulary, symbolisation, and the psychological effects of growing up in an online world. We also look at how symbolic spaces — whether in therapy, creative life, or even physical practices like the MMA mat — can allow men to metabolise experience and transform suffering into meaning.Timestamps00:00 Introduction03:30 The Heroic Code04:58 Pain, Psyche and the Skin as Armour09:00 Men and Boys Difficulty Acknowledging Wounds14:00 The Difficulty of Symbolisation19:00 Barriers from a Lack of Symbolisation24:30 Symbolism and Playing with Our Life Narratives30:00 The Importance of an Emotional Vocabulary35:30 The Black Sun and Weakness as Strength44:00 Symbolisation Outside of a Clinical Setting49:00 Jared Black and the MMA Mat as Sacred Space52:00 Adolescence, Identity and the Internet60:00 Social Media as the Town Square60:02 Where to Find Dr. Tyminskiwww.roberttyminski.comInstagram/ TikTok : @ConversationsForTheEnd Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, we move from psychedelic experience to artificial intelligence, from the sacred to the algorithm, asking one central question: what is happening to the human soul in a world of impersonal systems?

    Beginning with a psychedelic memoir and the phenomenology of transcendence, the conversation explores the pull of the sacred, the symbolic dimension of experience, and the problem of the ineffable. From there, we turn toward death not as annihilation, but as reevaluation. A confrontation with finitude that forces clarity.

    The second half widens into culture. Dystopia not as spectacle, but as creeping normality. AI not as neutral tool, but as a mirror of impersonal systems. Drawing on Jung’s Answer to Job, we consider whether the internet itself functions as a new kind of archetypal field. A hall of mirrors. A performance driven domain where being collapses into having. Smartphones, limbic capitalism, AI slop, and engines of bullshit are examined not simply as technologies, but as forces that reveal a particular way the world now discloses itself.

    And yet, the episode closes with something else. A call to reengage the sacred. Not as regression. Not as nostalgia. But as necessity.

    If you are trying to think clearly about AI, spirituality, modernity, Jungian psychology, or the future of meaning in a technological age, this conversation is for you.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    03:43 A Psychedelic Memoir

    09:56 Examining the transcendent

    11:30 The Pull of the Sacred

    17:30 Symbolic and phenomenology

    19:50 The ineffable

    21:13 Death as reevaluation

    30:58 Dystopia and creeping normality

    39:00 Impersonal Systems and AI

    42:48 Answer to Job and the Internet

    44:20 The need for friction

    51:00 The Hall of Mirrors

    57:30 Performance driven domains

    58:50 Being and Having Modes

    60:02 Smart Phones and limbic capitalism

    60:06 AI Slop and the revealing of the world

    60:13 AI as Engines of Bullshit

    60:15 Reengaging with the Sacred

    Subscribe for more conversations exploring depth psychology, culture, technology, and the symbolic life.

    Find Tiago and his work:

    www.tiagovf.com

    Instagram: @ TiagoBooks

    Instagram/tiktok: @ Conversationsfortheend

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I’m joined by story healer Rick Diamond for a wide ranging conversation on personal myth, somatic knowing, and the often unseen stories shaping our lives.

    We explore how personal myths form, how they repeat with subtle differences across a lifetime, and how the body often knows long before the mind is ready to understand. Rick speaks about healing ruptures that arrive unexpectedly, the dangers of spiritual bypassing, and the importance of recognising the psyche as fundamentally polytheistic rather than unified or linear.

    Together, we examine what it means to live inside a myth, how archetypal figures and gods continue to move through modern lives, and why the hero’s journey is less about triumph and more about the courage to say yes to what is already calling.

    The conversation also turns toward creativity, imagination, and story as essential tools for integration rather than aesthetic luxuries, culminating in a discussion of Rick’s Story Workbook and the practical work of engaging myth consciously rather than being unconsciously lived by it.

    This episode is an invitation to listen differently to your own story, to notice where repetition is asking for transformation, and to approach healing not as correction but as deepening relationship with the psyche.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    02:42 Rick’s personal myth

    06:58 The joy of waking up

    11:15 Somatic healing

    15:19 Unexpected healing ruptures

    18:00 The polytheistic psyche

    21:00 Eastern spirituality and spiritual beggars

    23:00 Recognising our personal myth

    31:19 Repetition with a difference

    38:40 Living inside a myth and somatic reaction

    43:30 Archetypal figures and the gods

    44:30 The hero says yes to the journey4

    7:50 Confronting the hero’s call

    48:40 Unconditional love and the relief of realisation

    54:00 Common stories we need to heal

    60:02 The importance of creativity and imagination

    60:08 The Story Workbook

    Listen to Episode 26 of Conversations for the End on YouTube and all podcast platforms.

    Instagram : ⁨@drrickdiamond⁩ www.drrickdiamond.com

    Instagram / TikTok : ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩

    Title Music: Vines

  • Episode Description

    In this episode of Conversations for the End, I sit down with Jared Fekete to explore wrestling not just as a sport, but as a profound symbolic practice of inner work, containment, and transformation.Beginning with Jared’s personal story, we trace how the wrestling mat becomes a space where force, vulnerability, brotherhood, and discipline meet. We explore wrestling as a container that constricts and reveals, mirroring the psychological pressures that shape character and maturity.

    From somatic healing and bodily intelligence to yoga, reflection, and working consciously with force, this conversation moves between the physical and the symbolic with depth and care.We also touch on plant medicine, encounters with the feminine, and what it means to wrestle with God, the Mother archetype, and the demands of a symbolic life.

    Throughout, initiation emerges not as a single event, but as a relational process that unfolds through embodied practice, mythic encounter, and responsibility to self and others.This is a conversation about masculinity, embodiment, and meaning that refuses abstraction, grounding psychological insight in lived, physical experience.

    Subscribe on YouTube for full episodes, and follow Conversations for the End for more conversations at the intersection of depth psychology, culture, and the symbolic life.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    02:36 Jared’s Story

    11:35 Wrestling as Container and Constriction

    12:59 The Importance of Brotherhood

    18:21 Wrestling as a Symbol for Inner Work

    22:00 Somatic Healing on the Mat

    27:50 Yoga and Reflection

    31:50 Working with Force

    36:22 Plant Medicine and the Feminine

    41:55 Wrestling with God

    44:45 The Mother Archetype

    48:40 The Symbolic Life

    51:00 Initiation

    55:40 The Relational Feminine

    Instagram: @feketejj

    Instagram/TikTok: Conversationsfortheend

    Title Music: Vines

  • For the first time on Conversations for the End, I sit alone to answer questions sent in by listeners and viewers, and to take stock of what this project has been, what it’s becoming, and how it has changed me in the process.

    This episode moves between the personal and the psychological. I speak openly about my own background, how I first encountered Carl Jung, and why Jungian psychology continues to feel urgently relevant at a time when so many people experience alienation, disconnection, and a crisis of meaning.We explore the shadow side of modern men’s self-development spaces, where genuine longing for growth can quietly slip into domination, repression, or spiritual bypassing. I reflect on the idea of the “spiritually sick father” and what it might mean to redeem that image rather than simply reject it.

    I also answer questions about my own experiences of synchronicity, Jung’s concept of enantiodromia, and how psychological extremes inevitably turn into their opposites when they are lived unconsciously.

    Finally, I look back on what has shifted in me across 24 episodes. Not just intellectually, but emotionally and symbolically. What it means to speak publicly about meaning, suffering, and depth in a culture that often resists all three.

    This episode is less about offering answers and more about tracing a conversation in motion, one that continues to unfold between psyche, culture, and lived experience.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    02:07 About me

    05:00 The Shadow self of Mens Self Development Space

    12:40 Redeeming the Spiritually Sick Father

    22:30 How I Became Interested in Carl Jung.

    25:30 What are my own Syncroncity experiences?

    31:00 Jung and people feeling disconnected from society

    37:00 Enantiodromia

    41:30 How Have I grown in 24 episodes

    The full episode is available now on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

    Instagram/Tiktok/YouTube @ConversationsfortheEnd

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, we explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping not only culture and technology, but our symbolic relationship with the world itself.

    Rather than asking whether AI is good or bad, this conversation holds the deeper psychological tension it introduces. Between matter and meaning. Object and soul. Past myth and future imagination.

    We move through questions of de-spiritualisation, animism, indigenous worldviews, sex robots, and the way modern technology subtly reorganises how we perceive reality. AI appears here not just as a tool, but as a psychological and mythic object that reflects something unfinished in the modern psyche.

    This is not a technical discussion about machines.It is a conversation about meaning, perception, and the kinds of worlds we are unconsciously building.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction

    02:22 AI and Modern Culture

    07:23 De-Spiritualisation, the Feminine as Matter, and Eve

    10:00 Material World Locker Room Talk

    11:30 AI and Animism

    15:09 Holding the Tension of Past and Future

    19:03 AI as the Magical Object

    24:00 Prepositions and Perception

    27:00 How Should We Talk About AI

    32:00 Holding the Tension of Opposites in Thought

    34:00 Questioning Our Worldviews

    36:00 Indigenous Traditions, AI, and the Psychology of Land

    41:00 Sex Robots and AI Romance

    47:00 Technology and Perception

    If you’re interested in depth psychology, culture, and the symbolic consequences of modern technology, this episode is an invitation to slow down and think more carefully about what we’re actually relating to when we say “AI.”

    Instagram: @dylanmartinezfranciisco.phd

    Instagram/Tiktok: ⁨@ConversationsForTheEnd⁩

    Title Music: Vines

  • Episode Description

    In this conversation, Neo Jungian sociologist and analyst Stefano Carpani explores why peace may never have been humanity’s natural state and what this means for a world moving toward new forms of conflict. We examine the democratisation of Jungian ideas, the psychological conditions of our time, and why understanding the wish for war is essential if we hope to avoid repeating the catastrophes of the past.

    Carpani reflects on modern desensitisation, how we have become subtly anaesthetised, and how these shifts shape our everyday reality settings. We look at the constellation of archetypes in contemporary culture, from Greta Thunberg to collective anxieties of the 21st century, and how psychosocial Jungian thinking can help us navigate the forces moving through society today.

    This episode asks a difficult but necessary question
    If peace is not in our nature, what must we understand about ourselves to prevent history from repeating itself

    Stefano closes with a reflective exercise and an invitation to deepen our psychological literacy in a rapidly changing world.

    00:00 Introduction
    01:05 Neo Jungians
    07:20 Analytical psychology and the current times
    12:00 Democratisation of Jungian ideas
    18:30 War as rest
    26:00 Jungian antidotes to war
    32:15 Peace is not in our nature
    37:15 Modern desensitised and anaesthetised
    39:00 The transformation of desensitisation
    42:00 Reality settings
    48:00 Greta Thunberg and the constellation of an archetype
    50:00 Psychosocial Jungian thinking
    60:03 Where to find Stefano and an exercise in reflection

    Website: https://www.stefanocarpani.com
    Jungianeum: https://jungianeum.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stefanocarpani
    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@stefanocarpani

    YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/@conversationsfortheend

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/conversationsfortheendpodcast

    TikTok
    https://www.tiktok.com/@conversationsfortheendpodcast

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I sit down with Jared Ray Gilmore—coach, content creator, and musician—for a deep exploration of personal myth, shadow work, addiction, and the symbolic forces shaping our inner lives.

    Across this hour-long conversation, we unpack how emotion, initiation, and complexes reveal the hidden architecture of your psyche; how Jungian psychology, phenomenology, and archetypal patterns help explain the stories we unconsciously perform; and why confronting the Sol Niger, the Black Sun, and the darker turns in our personal myths can open the door to genuine transformation.

    Jared shares candid reflections on his own journey—through addiction, dreamwork, active imagination, mentorship, creativity, and rebuilding a foundation for growth—offering a grounded and authentic look at what real inner work feels like.

    If you're interested in Jung, mythology, self-development, or the lived reality of confronting the unconscious, this episode offers a rich and honest entry point.

    00:00 Intro

    02:30 Jared’s Personal Myth

    08:26 Emotion, Initiation and Your Myth

    10:56 Carl Jung and Phenomenology

    11:53 Complex’s reveal the world

    14:20 Your myth and unlocking your potential

    17:35 Unconscious development.

    19:55 Addiction and Archetypal Possession

    27:27 Personal Myths and Tragic ends

    31:20 Sol Niger and The Black Sun

    36:12 Osiris myth and transformation

    38:06 Helping others as antidote

    44:06 The importance of mentorship

    50:30 Active Imagination

    51:00 Shadow work

    54:30 Find a Foundation before exploring the depths

    59:00 IFS, Jung and & Romanticism

    60:00 Engaging with a dream (example)

    Instagram/TikTok: Jaredraygilmore

    Instagram/Tiktok: ConversationsfortheEnd

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I am joined by friend of the show Emma Smithwick to explore the rich terrain of the psyche, culture, and creativity through a Jungian lens. We discuss how engaging with suffering, paradox, and the parts of ourselves often left unexplored can help us cultivate deeper meaning in life.We dive into topics including Carl Jung, the Kore, intuition, the underworld, death and creativity, and why suffering can be both a privilege and a doorway to personal growth.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Intro

    03:00 Carl Jung and The Return to Greece

    07:40 Understanding Parts of Ourselves

    09:15 The Kore

    15:30 The Underworld, Intuition, Culture

    26:00 Destruction, Death and Creativity

    36:00 Why Suffering Can Be Beautiful

    42:00 The Need for Paradox

    43:00 Suffering Is a Privilege

    45:00 Life Is Not Either or

    53:00 Cultivating Your Life Through Conflict

    Whether you are curious about Jungian psychology, personal growth, or simply how to navigate life’s complexities, this conversation offers insight, reflection, and practical ways to engage with your inner world.Listen, reflect, and explore with us.

    #Jung #EmmaSmithwick #ConversationsForTheEnd #Psychology #PersonalGrowth #Suffering #Creativity #Meaning #TheKore #Underworld #SelfDiscovery

  • In this episode, I sit down with Adam Letica — a coach who has worked with over 500 clients help transform where they have become stuck. Together we explore how to treat our fractured parts with curiosity and compassion (rather than shame or avoidance) and how shifting the narrative from “Why am I like this?” to “What is this part trying to do for me?” can open space for real transformation. Adam shows that growth isn’t just about fixing—you’re not broken and needing repair—but about integrating the characters inside you so you can show up more fully.Adam’s approach emphasises that true change happens when we work both our “inner world” (our feelings, stories, habits) and “outer world” (our energy, work, relationships) in harmony.

    00:00 Introduction

    00:42 Why People Stay Small

    05:29 Psychological Safety explained

    07:30 How Mythology Drives Personal Growth

    14:20 What are Fractures in the Psyche

    17:11 The Practical Pushback against Myth Making

    18:30 How to Notice Your Psychological Fractures

    20:40 Growing Inner Curiosity and Self Compassion

    21:00 Archetypes vs Behavioural Patterns in Real Life

    24:00 Common Shadow Work Mistakes

    25:30 Overthinking Self Help and Life Advice

    28:13 Living the Provisional Life explained

    29:46 The Reward is in Becoming, not the Goal

    30:33 How to Realign with Your Authentic Self

    35:42 Using a Compass not a Map in Life

    40:19 How to Navigate Self Doubt

    42:30 Feelings are Friends not Enemies

    42:40 Change “Why” to “What” for Better Growth

    48:00 Why Laziness is a Myth

    51:21 The Power of Language in Identity

    54:29 Cultural Challenges to Personal Growth in 2025

    59:00 Where to Find Adam Letica

    https://www.adamletica.com/

    Instagram/Tiktok : Conversationsfortheend

    Title Music: Vines

  • In this episode, I sit down with clinical psychologist and author Isabel Clarke to explore the deep waters where psychosis, mysticism, and spirituality meet. Drawing from her influential book Madness, Mystery and the Survival of God, Isabel invites us to reconsider what it means to be “mad” in a world that has lost touch with the numinous.

    ⏱️ Episode Timestamps

    00:00 Intro

    02:20 Isabel’s journey into spirituality and psychosis

    07:00 Mystical experiences and psychosis

    08:20 The transliminal and schizotypy

    11:00 Getting stuck in the transliminal

    12:30 Barriers to integrating transliminal experience

    15:00 Brain architecture and the numinous20:30 Understanding delusions in psychosis

    22:00 Does psychosis have a reality function?

    26:00 Pathology vs spirituality

    33:00 Acknowledging delusional beliefs

    40:00 The “Both–and” of spirituality and psychosis

    42:00 Cultural neurosis and disenchantment

    44:30 The Spiritual Crisis Network

    49:00 Medicine and the mystical

    56:00 Comprehend, Copy, and Connect

    01:02 Where to find Isabel Clarke

    Where to find Isabel Clarkehttps://www.isabelclarke.org/

    Instagram / Tik Tok : @ Conversationsfortheend

  • In this powerful episode of Conversations for the End, I sit down with Alexander Vesely, filmmaker, psychotherapist, and grandson of Viktor Frankl, to explore the timeless insights of Man’s Search for Meaning and the practice of Logotherapy.Together, they trace Frankl’s legacy and its relevance today, diving into the Will to Meaning, how we can find personal purpose, and ways to reframe our past to live more fully. The discussion moves through the role of suffering and resilience, the surprising place of humour in Logotherapy, and how to respond to injustice without losing one’s humanity.This conversation is not just about theory, it’s about how Frankl’s insights continue to shape how we navigate despair, understand suffering, and find the deeper “why” that allows us to endure.Timestamps00:00 Intro03:08 Man’s Search For Meaning06:44 Viktor Frankl and Logotherapy12:52 Will to Meaning19:44 Finding personal meaning24:20 Reframing your past28:34 Suffering and Resilience34:23 Understanding suffering and meaning40:00 Humour in Logotherapy46:40 Responding to injustice and suffering51:54 The “Why” in meaning54:00 Logotherapy in modern times

  • In this episode of Conversations for the End, I sit down with coach and thinker Brian O’Loughlin to explore masculinity, identity, success, and the search for meaning in today’s world.

    From working with pain and embracing vulnerability, to challenging our own limited narratives and recognising the dangers of chasing peak experiences, Brian brings a grounded yet challenging perspective on how we can break free from old stories and lean into growth, truth, and possibility.

    What we cover in this episode:How shifting perspective can reshape your identity

    Why questioning cultural narratives is essential for growth

    Working with pain, fear, and vulnerability

    Masculinity, culture, and success in modern society

    Challenging the limited narratives we live by

    Redefining success and trusting the unfolding of your path

    3 practical tools to help you change your life

    Whether you’re interested in psychology, self-development, spirituality, or rethinking what it means to live authentically, this conversation with Brian offers insights and practices for transformation.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Introduction: Why This Conversation Matters

    02:45 How Shifting Perspective Changes Your Identity

    05:17 Question the Stories You’ve Been Told

    08:55 Turning Pain Into Growth

    12:52 The Power of Vulnerability

    17:40 Masculinity, Culture, and Success Redefined

    20:34 The Fear of Looking Inward

    23:11 Why Embracing the Unknown Unlocks Growth

    25:37 Challenging Our Own Limited Narratives

    29:07 Choosing Being Over Endless Striving

    31:38 Escaping the Trap of the Provisional Life

    34:15 Trusting the Unfolding of Your Path

    35:25 Breaking Free From Old Narratives

    39:46 How to Lean Into Truth

    43:16 Foundation, Creation, and Exploration Explained

    47:00 The Hidden Dangers of Chasing Peak Experiences

    54:43 Redefining Success for a Meaningful Life

    59:00 3 Practical Things That Will Help You Change

    If you find value in this episode with Brian O’Loughlin, please like the video, subscribe to the channel, and share it with someone who’s on their own journey of growth.

    #BrianOLoughlin #Masculinity #SelfDevelopment #Podcast #PersonalGrowth #Spirituality #SuccessTitle Music: VinesInstagram / Tik Tok: @ Conversations For The End

    Find Brian at

    :Instagram: Brian_o_loughlin

    www.Kynesis.ie

    Subscribe to the channel for more.

  • In this episode, artist and writer Bethel Biru—better known as Bad Injera—joins the podcast for a deep conversation on creativity, culture, identity, and the challenges of making art in today’s world.We explore what it means to be a Black and immigrant woman breaking expectations, how culture shapes the process of becoming, and the role of art as both self-expression and community. Bethel also reflects on shadow work, creative blocks, the rise of AI in art, and the tensions between fear, judgment, and authenticity.Whether you’re an artist, writer, or simply someone navigating your own creative journey, this conversation offers insights on self-discovery, resilience, and the search for meaning through art.

    ⏱️ Timestamps

    00:00 Intro
    02:30 Breaking expectations: Black & immigrant women
    03:40 Becoming within cultures
    06:40 Creativity as cultural expression
    08:13 Cringe culture & suppression
    12:00 Shadow work through art
    12:30 Being vs becoming in art
    15:00 Expressing yourself creatively
    19:00 Art as community & connection
    22:00 On melancholia
    25:54 Finding your outlet
    30:05 Beating creative blocks
    34:50 AI in art
    37:54 The enchantment of AI
    40:55 AI: Struggle or convenience
    43:55 Fear of being judged
    46:00 “Clanker” – slur or something more?
    52:58 Humanity’s urge for the human

    Find Bethel on Instagram at: @ mitupls @ badinjera

    Instagram / Tik Tok: @ Conversationsfortheend

    Title Music: Vines