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Confessions of a Gen-X Mind

Confessions of a Gen-X Mind

Von: George Ten Eyck
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Confessions of a Gen-X Mind is a narrative podcast told from inside the modern media experiment. Hosted by a longtime media professional with academic foundations in journalism and ethics, the show explores culture, power, memory, and meaning through a distinctly Gen-X perspective. Raised analog. Adapted digital. Still skeptical.


Drawing on decades of experience across radio, streaming, voice acting, photography, blogging, and social media, the series traces the evolution of media from the inside out. These are first-person stories shaped by early journalistic values, industry proximity, and a front-row seat to how technology and incentives have reshaped storytelling and trust.


Episodes move between personal history and cultural analysis. Family mythology. Money and institutions. Grief and rebuilding. Neurodiversity. Identity. Some chapters examine systems and scandals. Others sit quietly with memory and self-reckoning. All of them ask the same question. What did this era do to us, and what do we do with that knowledge now?


Stylistically, the show draws from NPR-informed storytelling and This American Life-style narrative essays. Voice-driven. Reflective. Grounded in lived experience rather than hot takes or outrage for clicks.


If you grew up watching media evolve from dial tones to algorithms and felt both awe and unease along the way, this podcast is for you.

© 2025 Confessions of a Gen-X Mind
  • Never Meet Your Radio Heroes: The Gap Between On-Air Personas and Real Life
    Dec 30 2025

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    In this bonus episode of Confessions of a Gen-X Mind, I pull back the curtain on what it’s really like working behind the scenes in radio.

    Listeners hear a voice.
    A persona.
    A carefully crafted version of someone they think they know.

    But when you’re the person setting up the gear, fixing the signal, and making the show actually happen, you often meet a very different version of that same voice.

    Drawing from my years as a remote broadcast technician in Dallas radio, I reflect on the strange inversion I saw again and again:
    how some of the most beloved on-air personalities were the hardest to work with off mic, while the gruff, prickly “heel” types were often the most professional and respectful behind the scenes.

    This isn’t a takedown, and it’s not about naming names.
    It’s about understanding the difference between performance and personhood, and what working in media teaches you about ego, insecurity, and authenticity.

    If you’ve ever heard the phrase “never meet your heroes,” this episode explores why it’s sometimes true—and why, occasionally, it’s beautifully wrong.

    A thoughtful, insider look at radio, fandom, and the people who make the magic happen quietly, without applause.

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    5 Min.
  • Turning Fifty Isn’t a Crisis. It’s a Reckoning: Midlife, Neurodivergence, Love, and Loss
    Dec 28 2025

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    Turning fifty is not a crisis.
    It is a reckoning.
    And it changed how I see everything.

    In this year end episode of Confessions of a Gen-X Mind, I reflect on the moments that quietly reshaped my life at midlife. What began as recalibration became a year of closure, clarity, and unexpected forward motion.

    I talk honestly about starting the year single and how difficult it was to truly move on while a past marriage still lingered emotionally. When my ex finally moved away, that chapter closed in a real and lasting way. That closure changed how I dated, how I showed up, and why meeting Alice felt different from anything that came before.

    This episode also explores neurodivergence and self understanding at midlife. After years of therapy and reflection, I share why my upcoming formal ASD and ADHD assessments matter to me. Not as labels, but as medical documentation that brings clarity, protection, and the ability to advocate for accommodations in life and work. I do not experience neurodivergence as a disability. I experience it as a superpower once it is understood.

    I reflect on the generational shift that arrives faster than anyone prepares you for. Parents age. Roles reverse. Stories get shared around holiday tables about falls, injuries, and the quiet realization that we are now the adults in the room. I lost my father in 2022, and Alice lost both of her parents within the last year. Grief, responsibility, and gratitude now coexist.

    Love is part of this story too. This episode follows a midlife relationship built on steadiness rather than fantasy. We navigate real health challenges together, and we end the year engaged. On New Year’s Eve, we will be traveling to New Orleans to celebrate and mark this moment with an engagement photo shoot in the French Quarter.

    There is also a late arriving footnote. After avoiding COVID throughout the worst of the pandemic, Alice and I finally caught it together in Las Vegas. Not dramatic. Just fitting.

    This is not a highlight reel.
    It is a recalibration.

    If you are navigating midlife, relationships, neurodivergence, aging parents, or the sense that everything shifted while you were busy living, this episode is for you.

    Fifty does not feel like the end.
    It feels like standing exactly where I am, with clarity.

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    7 Min.
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