Episodios

  • Jackson Erdos - Climbing the Mountain Takes Years: American Ninja Warrior on Depression, Identity, and Resilience
    Feb 27 2026

    In this powerful episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, we sit down with American Ninja Warrior champion Jackson Erdos for one of the most honest conversations we’ve ever had.

    Jackson shares his journey from elite youth athlete to world-class competitor—while quietly battling depression, anxiety, substance use, and suicidal ideation as a teenager. He opens up about checking himself into residential treatment, losing close friends to suicide, and learning that success without identity and support can still feel empty.

    At just 18 years old, Jackson speaks with rare wisdom about:

    • Why your identity is not your performance
    • How mental toughness isn’t about being emotionless
    • The danger of tying self-worth to success
    • What rehab, therapy, and community truly changed for him
    • Why “climbing the mountain” takes years—not 30 seconds
    • How coaching kids and serving others saved his life
    • Navigating fame, pressure, and expectations as a young man
    • Bridging mental health conversations in sports and youth culture

    Jackson also talks about his “You Matter / 988 initiative, donating proceeds to suicide prevention, and why showing vulnerability—especially as an athlete—is not weakness, but leadership.

    This episode is for:

    • Athletes and coaches
    • Parents of teens
    • Young men struggling silently
    • Anyone who feels like they should be “doing better” but isn’t

    If you’ve ever felt stuck, overwhelmed, or afraid to ask for help—this conversation is proof that healing is possible and that you don’t have to climb alone.

    📍 If you or someone you love is struggling, call or text 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

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    41 m
  • Minh Nguyen - "I was ready to crash the car”: Losing Everything, Shame, and Choosing to Stay - HMIO 325
    Feb 20 2026

    In this deeply honest episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, hosts Sky Bridges and Ryan Heapy sit down with Minh Nguyen, a longtime friend, father, and entrepreneur, to share a raw conversation about shame, success, financial collapse, and choosing to stay alive.

    Minh opens up about his childhood growing up in a cult-like church, the pressure to perform and succeed, and how those early experiences shaped his identity as a man. He shares the staggering rise and fall of his career in the mortgage industry—including losing over $1.1 million—and the emotional toll that followed.

    At his lowest point, Minh found himself battling suicidal thoughts, overwhelmed by shame and the belief that he had failed his family. What followed was a turning point that changed how he defines success, fatherhood, and self-worth.

    In this episode, we talk about:

    • How shame quietly fuels depression in men
    • What happens when external success collapses
    • Navigating suicidal thoughts and asking for help
    • Escaping high-control belief systems
    • The pressure of social media and comparison
    • Breaking generational cycles as a parent
    • Redefining success, masculinity, and legacy
    • Learning self-compassion after failure

    This conversation is for men who feel like they’re carrying everything alone, who’ve tied their worth to performance, or who are silently struggling behind the appearance of “having it together.”

    If you’re in a hard season, you’re not broken—and you’re not alone.

    Because here, it’s ok to not be ok.

    ⏱️ Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction and Guest Welcome

    01:02 Growing Up in a High-Control Church

    02:06 Rise and Pressure in the Mortgage Industry

    04:05 Success, Shame, and Identity

    05:05 Financial Collapse and Emotional Fallout

    06:43 Suicidal Thoughts and the Turning Point

    08:34 Rebuilding Life and Finding Purpose

    16:18 Stability, Healing, and Future Goals

    18:39 Breaking Cycles Through Fatherhood

    19:25 Parenting in a Social Media World

    20:05 Social Media, Comparison, and Pressure

    21:32 Leadership, Resilience, and Teams

    23:29 Perfectionism and Authenticity

    5:16 Life Reflections and Growth

    26:41 Self-Love and Men’s Mental Health

    31:01 Legacy, Healing, and What’s Next

    34:04 Final Thoughts

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    35 m
  • Zander Keig -  Bridge Building in a Divided World: Men, Mental Health, and Being Pro-Human - HMIO 324
    Feb 13 2026

    In this thought-provoking episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, Sky Bridges and licensed marriage and family therapist Ryan Heapy sit down with Zander Keig—a veteran, licensed social worker, author, and bridge-builder—to explore how men can protect their mental health in an increasingly polarized and divided world.

    Zander shares insights from his life growing up in a Mexican Catholic family in Los Angeles, his time working with veterans at the VA, and his work with organizations like Braver Angels and the Prohuman Foundation (http://www.prohumanfoundation.org/) . Together, the conversation digs into depolarization, empathy, identity, and why learning to see the human behind opposing beliefs is essential for personal wellbeing and societal healing.

    In this episode, we explore:

    • Why polarization is destroying families, relationships, and mental health
    • How men can engage in difficult conversations without losing themselves
    • The difference between activism and bridge building
    • Why social media amplifies division—and what happens when you step away
    • How identity, belief systems, and lived experience shape conflict
    • What it really means to be “pro-human”
    • Why time, place, and language matter in hard conversations
    • How prioritizing your own wellbeing makes you a better ally and leader

    Zander also talks about his book The Third Space: A Non-Conformist Guide to the Universe, his podcasts The Third Space and The Umbrella Hour, and leaves listeners with a powerful call to action: invest in your own mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual wellbeing—because change starts with you.

    This episode is for men who:

    • Feel exhausted by political and cultural conflict
    • Want to stay connected without losing their values
    • Are navigating family tension, identity, or burnout
    • Believe empathy is strength—not weakness

    Because it’s ok to not be ok —and it’s okay to choose humanity over division.

    Más Menos
    25 m
  • Corey Corpodian - Emotional Fitness: Building Resilience and Overcoming Depression - HMIO 323
    Jan 30 2026

    In this powerful episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, hosts Sky Bridges and Ryan Heapy, LMFT sit down with Corey Corpodian—a board-certified orthodontist, entrepreneur, and mental health advocate—to explore the hidden cost of high achievement and the life-changing power of emotional fitness.

    Corey shares his deeply personal story of success on paper and depression behind the scenes. After graduating early, building a prestigious career, and checking every box of the traditional “American Dream,” Corey found himself burned out, unfulfilled, and struggling with severe depression. A turning point came through physical fitness, a melanoma diagnosis, and a radical shift in mindset that led him to redefine mental health as something that must be trained daily—just like the body.

    In this conversation, Corey breaks down:

    • What emotional fitness really means and how to build it
    • Why information alone doesn’t change mental health—action does
    • How daily habits, discipline, and mindset rewiring create lasting change
    • The role of pain, discomfort, and responsibility in personal growth
    • Why leadership starts with leading yourself—especially as men, fathers, and entrepreneurs
    • How screen time, comfort, and avoidance quietly sabotage fulfillment

    This episode is packed with actionable mental health tools, honest reflections on depression and burnout, and a refreshing take on leadership, purpose, and fulfillment. If you’re feeling stuck, overwhelmed, or successful but empty, this conversation will challenge you to take ownership of your life and build resilience from the inside out.

    🎙️ Because success without fulfillment isn’t success at all.

    Episode Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction and Hosts

    00:20 Meet Corey Corpodian: From Orthodontist to Mental Health Advocate

    01:01 Early Success, Burnout, and Depression

    03:28 Physical Fitness as a Turning Point

    04:59 Melanoma Diagnosis and Mortality Wake-Up Call

    06:22 Discovering Emotional Fitness

    07:54 Tony Robbins and Mindset Shifts

    12:39 Rewiring the Mind and Overcoming Depression 1

    7:24 Why Action Creates Change

    20:40 Reinvention After Life’s Roadblocks

    23:42 Breathwork, the Nervous System, and Resilience

    25:23 Pain vs. Pleasure as Motivation

    26:16 Escaping Comfort Zones and Mediocrity

    26:55 Screen Time, Dopamine, and Mental Health

    28:12 Using Future Pain to Drive Growth

    31:06 Discipline, Identity, and Daily Habits

    32:43 Cold Showers and Mental Toughness

    36:05 Balancing Ambition, Family, and Purpose

    38:01 Rethinking Mental Health and Leadership

    46:36 Final Reflections and Emotional Fitness Resources

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    48 m
  • Esther Perry - Rewriting Survival: Men's Path to Mental Wellbeing HMIO 322
    Jan 23 2026

    In this powerful episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, hosts Sky Bridges and licensed therapist Ryan Heapy sit down with Esther Perry, EMDR consultant and author of When Survival Is Killing You, to unpack what men are rarely taught about mental health, trauma, and emotional expression.

    Esther helps explain the why behind common mental health tools — from EMDR and mindfulness to nervous system regulation — and why many men struggle to connect with approaches that don’t feel safe or practical. Together, they explore how trauma lives in the body, the overlooked “fight” response in fight-or-flight, and how cultural expectations around masculinity make vulnerability feel uncomfortable — or even threatening.

    The conversation also dives into Esther’s unconventional path to becoming a therapist, her work in juvenile detention facilities, and her unique experience providing therapy while living and traveling in an RV. Throughout the episode, the focus stays grounded in compassion, science, and the reality of what men face when they’re told to “open up” without ever being shown how.

    This episode is an honest, accessible conversation for men navigating emotional growth, healing from trauma, and learning how to feel without shame.

    Episode Chapters

    00:00 – Introduction 00:47 – Esther Perry’s background and book inspiration 02:58 – Trauma, survival, and coping mechanisms 05:34 – Men’s mental health and the fight-or-flight response 09:57 – EMDR and creating emotional safety 12:29 – From juvenile detention to therapy work 15:49 – Challenges in correctional mental health 18:00 – Gender differences in emotional processing 23:57 – Why expressing emotions is so difficult for men 26:13 – Science, emotions, and nervous system regulation 29:50 – Life as a traveling “nomad therapist” 34:47 – Writing and publishing When Survival Is Killing You 37:12 – Practical therapeutic advice for men 41:57 – Final reflections

    If you want, I can also:

    • Write a short YouTube description version
    • Create a Spotify-optimized summary (slightly different SEO rules)
    • Pull quote-based timestamps for Shorts & Reels

    Just tell me where this is going live first.

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    44 m
  • Dr. Eric Arzubi - When Anxiety Hits Hard: A Doctor’s Journey from Wall Street to Frontier Psychiatry - HMIO 321
    Jan 16 2026

    In this episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, Ryan and I sit down with Dr. Eric Arzubi, CEO and co-founder of Frontier Psychiatry, for a conversation that goes far beyond credentials and titles.

    Before he was leading a telehealth psychiatric practice serving rural communities across Montana, Alaska, Wyoming, and Idaho, Eric lived an entirely different life — as a Wall Street bond trader. What followed was a radical pivot, shaped by his own lived experience with anxiety, burnout, and the realization that success on paper doesn’t guarantee peace of mind.

    Eric opens up about what it’s really like to struggle with anxiety as a doctor, why the fear of anxiety itself can be the hardest part, and how learning to recognize early warning signs changed everything. We talk honestly about medication, therapy, self-care, and why waiting to “feel motivated” is often the wrong move.

    We also dig into the bigger picture: Why access to mental health care is still broken, especially in rural America. Why telehealth isn’t a downgrade — it’s often the only option. And why this isn’t just a mental health crisis, but a systemic failure we’ve learned to live with.

    This episode is about reaching out when it feels impossible, about connection across distance, and about reminding men that asking for help doesn’t make you weak — it makes you human.

    If anxiety has ever made you feel alone, this conversation is for you.

    ⏱️ Episode Chapters:

    00:00 Introduction & Guest Welcome

    00:53 Eric’s Background & Frontier Psychiatry

    02:10 Telehealth Before and After COVID

    03:59 From Wall Street to Psychiatry

    06:27 Personal Anxiety & Hitting a Wall

    10:28 Choosing Psychiatry & Helping Others

    14:57 Managing Anxiety & Self-Care Tools

    19:37 Understanding Patients Through Lived Experience

    20:49 Sharing Mental Health Skills on LinkedIn

    22:46 Mental Health & Social Media

    25:58 Men’s Mental Health & Cultural Pressure

    32:08 Parenting, Perspective, and What Really Matters

    36:55 Final Thoughts & Call to Action

    25:58 Men's Mental Health Issues

    32:08 Personal Reflections and Parenting

    36:55 Concluding Thoughts and Call to Action

    Más Menos
    42 m
  • Dr. Ryan Dix - No One Cares Alone: The Journey of Mental Health in Healthcare - HMIO 320
    Jan 9 2026

    In this powerful episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, hosts Sky Bridges and licensed therapist Ryan Heapy sit down with Dr. Ryan Dix, a clinical psychologist with 16+ years of experience and the leader of Providence’s groundbreaking “No One Cares Alone” program.

    Together, they unpack the mental health crisis facing healthcare workers, intensified by COVID-19—and still affecting caregivers today. From burnout and compassion fatigue to psychological safety at work, this conversation goes deep into what it actually takes to support the people who support everyone else.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Why burnout in healthcare is at an all-time high
    • The hidden cost of compassion fatigue
    • How to recognize burnout before it breaks you
    • Creating psychologically safe workplaces
    • The power of peer support & human connection
    • Simple, accessible coping tools that actually help
    • Why talking about emotions at work isn’t weakness—it’s survival

    If you’re a healthcare worker, caregiver, therapist, leader, or someone feeling stretched too thin, this episode is for you.

    Mental health doesn’t get better in silence—and no one should care alone.

    👇 Drop a comment if this resonates, and share with someone who needs to hear this.

    🕒 Chapters

    00:00 Introduction & Welcome

    00:20 Meet Dr. Ryan Dix — Helping the Helpers 01:41 Burnout & Mental Health in Healthcare

    03:35 Coping During COVID

    07:00 How to Identify Burnout

    11:44 Creating Safe Spaces for Real Conversations

    15:59 Organizational Responsibility & Mental Health

    31:23 Integrated Primary Care Explained

    35:33 Personal Motivation & Coping Tools

    42:52 Final Thoughts & Takeaways

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    43 m
  • Deborah Weed - When the Mask Falls Off: Radical Acceptance, Creativity, and Finding Your Way Back to Yourself - Episode 319
    Dec 19 2025

    What happens when the identity you’ve worn for decades disappears? When the job, the role, the mask — all of it — gets stripped away by pain, loss, or life itself?

    In this deeply human episode of Hey Man; It’s Ok, Sky Bridges and Ryan Heapy sit down with artist, musician, and creative visionary Deborah Weed, founder of Paisley’s Fashion Forest, for a conversation about radical acceptance, healing through creativity, and rediscovering joy when everything familiar feels gone.

    Deborah shares how creativity — the thing you were meant to do — can become a bridge back to life, even in moments of isolation, doubt, and worthlessness. Together, we explore what it means to live with chronic pain, release rigid professional identities, and ask the vulnerable question so many of us avoid: Who am I when the mask comes off?

    This episode dives into:

    • Radical acceptance as a pathway through trauma and self-doubt
    • Why creativity isn’t optional — it’s often essential to healing
    • The danger of tying our worth to productivity and professional identity
    • Reclaiming fun, joy, and authenticity as adults
    • Overcoming fear of judgment and leaning into your passions
    • Deborah’s journey as a musician and the birth of Paisley’s Fashion Forest, a global creative collaboration

    This is a conversation about compassion, purpose, and remembering that you are more than what you produce — and that your creative spark might be the very thing that brings you home to yourself.

    If you’ve ever felt lost, burned out, or unsure of who you are anymore — this episode is for you.

    Episode Timeline

    00:00 Understanding Emotions and Healing 16:12 Radical Acceptance and Self-Worth 18:48 The Power of Compassion 22:35 Embracing Authenticity and Fun 25:03 Love and Healing 27:03 Dealing with Disappointment 31:48 Rediscovering Fun in Relationships 33:08 Incorporating Creativity to Overcome Disappointment 34:22 Embracing Your Creative Gifts 35:01 The Healing Power of Creativity 37:27 Overcoming Fear of Judgment 39:42 Leaning into Your Passions 40:54 Deborah’s Musical Journey 44:24 Final Thoughts and Farewell

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    48 m