Shownotes
From addiction and bipolar disorder to building one of the most powerful Black male mental health movements in America — George P. Brooks has lived the full spectrum of survival and resurrection. He opens up about the insanity of addiction, the lack of compassion in recovery, and how accountability became his lifeline. This episode isn’t just about recovery — it’s about rebirth. It’s about death — death of denial, of blame, of old identities — and the courage to rebuild what survival once destroyed.
🎙️ What We Talk About:
- The real root of addiction: unresolved childhood trauma
- How the world’s “lack of compassion” keeps people stuck in shame
- Radical accountability and what it actually looks like
- The hidden cost of recovery: death of old identities, old friends, old lives
- Managing bipolar disorder while rebuilding a new one
- The cultural silence around Black men’s emotions
- Why healing requires both safe spaces and self-responsibility
- How the Meta Association is helping Black men heal through representation
🔑 Key Takeaways:
“Every time you pick up the drug, you’re really just picking up your pain.”
“Addiction isn’t about getting high — it’s about trying not to feel.”
“Accountability isn’t punishment. It’s power.”
“Healing requires a death before the rebirth — the death of blame, of excuses, of pretending.”
“Be patient with yourself. But keep moving.”
🙌 Why This Episode Matters:
Because healing in the Black community can’t happen without honesty — and honesty can’t happen without safety. George’s story is proof that survival mode doesn’t have to be your forever story. He’s redefining recovery, fatherhood, and masculinity by making vulnerability not a weakness, but a revolution. If you’ve ever loved an addict, battled mental illness, or carried trauma in silence — this episode will remind you that compassion heals what shame hides.
💬 Connect with George:
🌐 Website: www.mettaassociation.org
📱 Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn: Meta Association
💬 Public Speaking & Advocacy: Contact via website
🔗 Resources & Links: