Confessions of a Gen-X Mind: Culture, Media Literacy, and Personal Growth
Confessions of a Gen-X Mind is a podcast about media, culture, identity, mental health, and personal growth told through the perspective of someone who grew up analog and now lives in the algorithm age.
Hosted by George Ten Eyck, the show blends personal storytelling with cultural commentary to explore how family systems, media narratives, religion, technology, and generational experience shape the way we understand ourselves and the world around us.
Episodes often examine topics like media literacy, inherited roles within families, neurodivergence, boundaries, worldview shifts, and the long process of seeing our lives more clearly as we move into adulthood and midlife.
Rather than offering quick fixes or motivational clichés, Confessions of a Gen-X Mind focuses on awareness, perspective, and integration. It is about recognizing patterns without bitterness, honoring what was good, accepting what never was, and building forward with clarity.
This is a podcast for thoughtful listeners navigating identity, relationships, cultural change, and the strange transition from an analog childhood into a digital world shaped by algorithms.
New episodes explore ongoing themes through personal reflection, media analysis, and generational perspective. The goal is simple: slow down, think clearly, and make sense of a complicated world.
Confessions of a Gen-X Mind: Culture, Media Literacy, and Personal Growth
What Happened to Us? When Your Friends Become Strangers
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I’ve been noticing something strange happening to the people I grew up with.
Guys who once defined themselves by rebellion, skepticism, and pushing boundaries are now living completely different lives. Not just older. Not just more responsible. Different. Like something fundamental shifted along the way.
In this episode, I take a closer look at that midlife identity flip. From a high school skinhead who now posts baptism photos… to a lifelong atheist who found religion after real loss… to one of my closest friends, who went from tattoos, nightclubs, and chaos to a version of himself I barely recognize today.
This isn’t about politics. It’s about change. About what happens to identity over time. And about the quiet realization that sometimes, the people you once knew best… become strangers.
This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings