The Epstein case has caused worldwide horror. Particularly because of the crimes themselves, of course, but also because of the system behind them: a web of power, silence and men who have apparently learned that different rules apply to them.
In the new episode of Men in Crisis, I talk about why such escalations don’t come out of nowhere. How border crossings begin insidiously, how men issue themselves with inner free passes and why power doesn’t create anything new, but rather makes visible what is unresolved inside.
It’s about ego, impulse control and emotional decoupling. About how rationalization (“I can allow myself to do this”) replaces responsibility. And why the real price is not only paid legally or socially, but also internally: through emptiness, inability to relate and the loss of self-esteem.
This episode is not a judgment on individuals, but a look at patterns that can affect us all. On the question of where men look away even though they know that something is wrong: with themselves and in their environment.
New episode of “Men in Crisis”: What the Epstein case reveals about power and masculinity, why shifts in boundaries are rarely accidental and why inner clarity is often the only real alternative.
Listen to the new episode:
And with Apple Podcasts:
