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The MannaLife Podcast

The MannaLife Podcast

Von: by Michael Turner M.D. John A. King THD Ryan Nordell
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Are you looking for world-class health and wellness advice, combined with a dose of inspiration and spiritual encouragement? You’ve come to the right place. This is nourishment for body and soul. This is the MannaLife podcast.

drturner.substack.comMichael Turner M.D.
Alternative & Komplementäre Medizin Hygiene & gesundes Leben
  • The Shame Men Carry in Silence
    Jan 18 2026

    Before you read this: if this topic hits close to home, I’m running a FREE masterclass on Trauma Recovery + Performance Mindset.Register here now: https://rise.phoenixcollective.app/event-page(And yes—bookmark it, then start reading.)Register here: https://rise.phoenixcollective.app/event-page

    I was embarrassed as a man that at the age of four I couldn’t stand up for myself.

    And then at ten, eleven, twelve, I still didn’t have the wherewithal to fight back.

    That sentence alone explains why so many men never talk about sexual abuse. Not because it didn’t happen. Not because it didn’t wreck them. But because it collides with something deep in male identity: the belief that you should have been able to protect yourself.

    So the pain becomes a private courtroom.

    You replay it.You prosecute yourself.You convict yourself.And you carry the sentence into adulthood.

    And then society adds a second layer of shame.

    We can talk, at least more openly, about the abuse of women and girls. We should. That matters.

    But the moment a man brings up his own experience, I’ve watched conversations shut down. I’ve watched friendships go cold. Not because people are evil, but because they’re uncomfortable. Embarrassed. They do not know what to do with it, so they avoid it. They disappear.

    I’ve had people excited to read my book, and then I never hear from them again.

    Not because they hate me.Because my story embarrasses them.Because it makes them feel something they don’t want to feel.Because it forces a reality they’d rather pretend isn’t real.

    That’s how silence gets enforced.

    And here’s the brutal part. Silence isn’t just emotional. It’s structural.

    When I started my recovery 20 years ago, there wasn’t a single book on male sexual abuse that I could find. There were no support groups. No clear pathways. No map.

    So you go looking for help, and you keep hearing “no.”

    You keep getting told, directly or indirectly, that “those sorts of things don’t happen to men.”

    Except they do.

    And when a man has to heal in isolation, he often does it the only ways he knows how: numb it, outrun it, bury it, or turn it into anger. Then he wonders why his sleep is wrecked, why he’s hypervigilant, why his relationships keep snapping under pressure, why success still feels hollow.

    This is one of the reasons I built what I built.

    Because recovery should not be reserved for the lucky few who find the right therapist, the right book, the right mentor, the right moment, after losing a decade to “trying to cope.”

    Free Masterclass: Trauma Recovery + Performance Mindset

    If you’re a man carrying shame that was never yours to carry, I want you in this.

    Not for pity. Not for confession. For traction.

    We’re going to talk about what actually helps men move from:

    * silent shameto grounded strength

    * copingto recovery

    * survivingto training your mind and nervous system on purpose

    Sign up here: https://rise.phoenixcollective.app/event-page

    If you need to think about it, fine. But don’t disappear on yourself.

    Register here: https://rise.phoenixcollective.app/event-page

    And if you know a man who won’t say it out loud but you can see it on him, send this to him.

    Follow me on Substack and social: Dr. John A. King (Th.D.)



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit drturner.substack.com/subscribe
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    1 Min.
  • Five People God Warns You Not to Help (and Nobody Preaches About This)
    Jan 15 2026
    Before you read: If you want to be part of these conversations live, register for Man Church atwww.manchurch.online.And if this hits home, connect with me on Substack and social: @drjohnaking (Instagram, X, YouTube).Most Christians are taught, “Say yes. Help everyone. Never refuse.”But when you actually read the Word carefully, you discover something that makes people uncomfortable:Sometimes what we call “help” is not help at all.Sometimes it’s enabling.Sometimes it’s sponsoring sin.Sometimes it’s shielding someone from consequences God is using to wake them up.Three big thoughts before we get into the five* Help can become harm.You can step in with a good heart and end up reinforcing the very pattern God is confronting.* Not all people are good people for you.You’re responsible to obey God and do what you’re called to do. You are not responsible for carrying other people’s refusal to change.* Help is not the same as enable.Enabling feels like compassion in the moment, but it often delays repentance, growth, and responsibility.And before anyone panics: this is not “people you shouldn’t love.”Jesus commands us to love one another (John 13). But loving like Jesus means we don’t confuse love with being a doormat. Real love is purposeful goodwill, even when it costs you. Sometimes it costs you the comfort of rescuing someone.Now, here are five types of people Scripture warns us not to help in the enabling sense.1) Do Not Help the ManipulatorKey idea: If you reward deception, you strengthen deception.Proverbs says, “Lying lips are an abomination…” (Bible Gateway)Manipulation is often lying wearing a suit. It drags you into roles you were never meant to carry.Jesus refused this kind of trap. When someone tried to pull Him into an inheritance dispute, He basically said, “That’s not my job” (Luke 12).Signs you’re dealing with manipulation:* They only contact you when they need something* They use guilt as a crowbar (“If you were a real Christian…”)* You feel cornered, pressured, responsible, obligatedBoundary: Love is not saying yes to emotional blackmail.2) Do Not Enable the Lazy and UnwillingThis one stings, so read it carefully.2 Thessalonians says: if someone is not willing to work, they should not eat. (Bible Gateway)That’s not talking about the man crushed by illness, disability, or a hard season. That person deserves support.This is about someone who is not willing. They want life to move forward while they refuse to move.And if you keep stepping in, you don’t “save” them. You train them.Here’s the principle: you can rescue someone into dependency.And dependency feels holy until you realize you’ve become the substitute for responsibility.Line worth remembering:Sometimes the fall you keep rescuing them from is the push God is using to wake them up.3) Do Not Help the Repeat FoolProverbs is blunt: “Like a dog that returns to his vomit is a fool who repeats his folly.” (Proverbs 26:11)This person wears you out because nothing changes. Same crisis, same tears, same promises, same cycle.They don’t want transformation. They want relief.Proverbs also says: don’t waste your words on a fool, because they’ll despise the wisdom of what you’re saying.(Bible Hub)Reality: Your time, energy, and attention are finite.If you spend it on someone committed to repeating the same destruction, you lose capacity to help someone who actually wants to grow.4) Do Not Help the ProudJames says: God opposes the proud and gives grace to the humble. (James 4:6)If the repeat fool drains you by repetition, the proud drains you by resistance.They argue. They deflect. They “already know.” They want solutions without repentance. They want outcomes without humility.And here’s the part people miss: if God is actively resisting pride, why would you build your life around propping it up?Invest in the humble.The humble can be corrected. The humble can grow. The humble can learn.5) Do Not Rescue the QuarrelsomeProverbs 19:19 says a man of great wrath will pay the penalty, and if you deliver him, you’ll just have to do it again.This is the person who stirs conflict everywhere:* work* traffic* family* church* onlineThey’re never wrong. Always the victim. Always “misunderstood.”And you, with your good heart, keep trying to play peacemaker. But Proverbs is warning you: if you keep cleaning up what they keep lighting on fire, you become part of the pattern.Sometimes what they need is not a hug. It’s consequences.Quick recap: The five types* The Manipulator: controls through guilt and deception* The Lazy (unwilling): refuses effort, expects rescue* The Repeat Fool: repeats the same cycle, wants relief not change* The Proud: resists correction, argues, refuses humility* The Quarrelsome: breeds conflict, feeds on attention, repeats wrathLast thought: Loving like JesusJesus commands us to love one another. But loving like Jesus does not mean enabling what God is ...
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    22 Min.
  • Man Church - Stop Asking Jesus Into Your Heart
    Jan 10 2026
    Thank you Colleen, Carol, Heinz Lycklama, and many others for tuning into my live video! Follow me Dr. John A. King (Th.D.) or on Social Security@drjohnaking.Stop Asking Jesus Into Your HeartBusiness for TodayI encourage you all to register at manchurch.online for monthly reminders.Follow on social media and Substack Dr. John A. King (Th.D.) .Phoenix Collective Free Master Class on Redefining Normal:https://rise.phoenixcollective.app/event-pageMy StoryI remember when I first responded to an altar call to give my life to Christ. I was probably 11 and had just spent the afternoon smoking cigarettes I’d stolen from a local store before Bible study at the Friday Club at our local church, Calvinistic Methodist.It was a real encounter.I mean, the world stood still.My soul came alive.They gave me a little Gideons Bible.For me back then, life was rough. Abusive at home, physically and sexually. I was made to do a lot of things I never wanted to do. I assumed I was the bad person because I was doing these things. I assumed I needed to get saved again, because obviously I wasn’t saved, or bad things wouldn’t happen to me.So I went to a Presbyterian church. They had a youth program, and I prayed again. I was 13. I went back home and life was still bad.A couple of years later I went to an Anglican church. They took communion every week. I went back the following week and the minister told me I couldn’t take communion again because I wasn’t confirmed. I went home and read the whole New Testament and came back, excited to tell him that I’d discovered I didn’t need to be an Anglican to take communion. I just needed to have asked Jesus and be trying to be a real Christian, and I’d done the “into my heart” thing a couple of years before.He said I was wrong. I told him to go…jump in a lake. I got kicked out of church. I was 16.When I turned 18, and I could drive, my moron mate Ray Fuggle and I would hop in his orange Kombi van and every Sunday we’d look up churches in the Australian equivalent of a Mapsco and randomly pick one. We’d take neckties with us and a packet of biscuits (cookies, in your vernacular) and go looking for pretty girls, a free feed, and Jesus.I got saved again in a Spanish-speaking church, sitting at the back, not knowing what was going on, but I knew I needed something. My heart ached for my life to be different, so I walked the aisle.I spent the next six years fighting and shagging my way through college. Every night I would read my little Gideons Bible and slur-pray, asking for forgiveness, before I went to sleep. I ended up on another altar call at a new starter church called Hillsong and wondered if this time it would take.In my early 20s I ended up in ministry at Hillsong Church, and my compulsory altar-call-attending didn’t stop. I went to the altar most Sundays because I didn’t feel good enough. I didn’t think God loved me. I didn’t think I was good enough to make the grade. I look back at my last week and thought, If I died tonight, I’m screwed.At some point, probably late 30s, early 40s, I realized this wasn’t about me needing to be saved. It was about me understanding what salvation meant.And I am sure many of you here today have faced, or are facing, the same dilemma. So I want to give you some basic theology, explain one scripture, ask you three questions, then have a chat.Theology Without the Eye-RollNow, when it comes to theology, I will not treat you like morons if you don’t pretend to be idiots. We are all grown-ups, and we can understand big words and new terms if someone takes the time to explain them.There is nothing hard about theology. What is hard is accepting the truth of its simplicity.Humans always want to screw things up, particularly when it comes to the nature and character of God, by making it more complicated than it is so they look smarter than you. They are not.So when I say theology, don’t roll your eyes. That’s why we keep the cameras on.Theology is simple, beautiful, and obtainable. It is the study of who God is, what He has said about us, and what He has done for us.Let me read you a statement, then I’ll break it down:Salvation is God’s free, sovereign grace rescuing sinners by uniting them to Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit’s work, so that they are justified (forgiven and counted righteous), then sanctified (changed), preserved (kept), and finally glorified (made whole), all received by faith alone, not earned.Break It Into Two PartsPart OneSalvation is God’s free, sovereign grace rescuing sinners by uniting them to Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit’s work, so that they are justified (forgiven and counted righteous).Salvation is God’s free and gracious gift of rescuing sinners (you and me) from the consequences of life choices and actions that He does not approve of.Jesus rescued and saved us by what He did on the cross when He died for us.How do we earn salvation? We don’t. It is a gift of grace....
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    27 Min.
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