Manage episode 522820829 series 3677500
A firefighter sits down and opens up about the story most men avoid: how quick decisions, hidden anxiety, and a distorted sense of duty can slowly pull a family apart. Matt’s journey begins with easy credit at eighteen and the adrenaline of dodging consequences, moves through bailiffs at the door and a marriage strained by inconsistency, and eventually ends up in a quiet room where an ADHD diagnosis finally connects the dots.
We dive into the fine line between serving and avoiding, how being “needed” at work can become a shield from being present at home, and why a leadership coach’s blunt warning—“passionate but inconsistent”—hit harder than any siren. Matt resisted medication for two years, relying on discipline, gym sessions, and sleep routines. His breakthrough was simple but profound: fewer mental tabs open, a calm conversation in the car, and a dog walk that felt like peace instead of pressure. The real shift came in a small moment—his daughter asking to play cricket and Matt saying yes without a battle inside. That quiet yes rewired everything.
We explore ADHD beyond the clichés—its overlap with anxiety and low mood, the chemistry behind hyperfocused kitchen renovations and abandoned skirting boards, and the emotional cost of living life in a loop of good intentions and disappointment. There’s no hero arc here, just real steps forward: honest check-ins, simpler routines, water and protein, medication when willpower ran dry, and the courage to be radically honest at home. Alongside Matt’s story, I share the shock of losing an online partnership, rebuilding identity in public, and staying committed to the work you love when everyone has an opinion.
If you’ve ever felt unreliable despite trying your best, or guilty for missing the moments that matter most, this conversation gives you language, insight, and practical tools to reset and begin again.
What we cover:
• how impulsive money decisions spiralled into long-term pressure
• how COVID blurred the line between service and avoidance
• where trust cracked in marriage—and the cost of inconsistency
• what ADHD looked like in real daily life
• why private diagnosis changed everything
• how stimulants improved focus, patience, and presence
• the guilt of missed moments—and the path to repair
• reframing “passionate but inconsistent” at work and home
• hyperfocus wins vs dopamine droughts
• identity, loss, and rebuilding confidence after going public
If this resonates, follow the show, share it with someone who needs to hear it, and leave a quick review—your words help the next person find theirs.
Get yourself a quote. What have you got to lose?
24 episodes