The Brink - Making Sense of the Modern Mind

The Brink with Matt Hussey

The Brink is a weekly exploration into the hidden forces shaping our minds. Each week I take a deep dive into psychology, technology, and the emotional undercurrents of modern life — for listeners who want to make sense of how the world shapes how they feel. If you're drawn to the strange edges of the human psyche-where therapy meets power, and mental health meets mystery-this is where you'll want to be. Written, produced, and presented by Matt Hussey-therapist, journalist, and guide through the darker corridors of the mind.

  1. 6D AGO

    The Vibe Economy: How Feelings Replaced Facts and What It's Costing Us

    The economy is doing fine. Unemployment is near historic lows. GDP is growing. The stock market is up. So why does everything feel like it's falling apart? In this episode, we go deep on one of the most underexplored psychological shifts of our time - the quiet moment we stopped trusting data and started trusting the Feed. We call it the Vibe Economy. And once you see it, you can't unsee it. We'll walk through why 56% of Americans believed they were in a recession when they weren't, how a fringe far-right march of 800 people made an entire country feel like fascism was at the gates, and why an algorithm that was designed to connect us has instead learned that your outrage is worth more than your attention. But this isn't just about politics or economics. It's about you. About why you've started describing your bad week as trauma, your difficult boss as a narcissist, your anxious Tuesday as a disorder. About what happens when an entire generation learns to read themselves through a lens of pathology - and why the algorithm has every financial incentive to keep it that way. This is the story of how we traded the index for the impression, the news anchor for the For You page, and the white paper for the vibe check. And what liberal democracy looks like when the primary political product on offer isn't solutions - it's validation. The world is better than the algorithm wants you to believe. This episode is about why it needs to tell you otherwise.

    40 min
  2. FEB 13

    When Trust Breaks: Palantir, NHS Data, and Why Surveillance is Poisoning Mental-Health Care

    What happens when the architecture of war enters the sanctuary of vulnerability? In this episode, we take listeners deep into one of the most consequential and least understood debates in contemporary healthcare: the creeping installation of a surveillance-grade data system into the NHS - built by a company whose software was forged in battlefields, border enforcement, and counter-terrorism. We're talking about Palantir Technologies, the Denver-based tech giant whose platforms now sit at the core of the NHS Federated Data Platform - a central repository connecting patient records, clinical notes, prescriptions, and more across the UK's health service. On paper, this sounds like progress: better coordination, smarter resource allocation, and a clearer picture of public health. But real life is messier - and human trust is fragile. This episode unfolds the central argument of our Brink essay: mental health care doesn't run on algorithms - it runs on trust. We explore: • How Palantir's history - from military intelligence to immigration enforcement - reshapes the way clinicians and patients relate to data.• Why the mere presence of a surveillance-linked platform can create a "chilling effect," where patients censor themselves, clinicians hesitate, and honesty erodes.• Why this matters most in mental health - where real healing requires complete honesty, not half-truths dressed up as "clean data."• How data integrity isn't just technical - it's moral, emotional, and relational. Because in therapy, a withheld truth isn't just a missing data point - it's a silenced pain, untracked progress, and an invisible wound. This is not a simple privacy debate. It is a reckoning with what we expect care to be, and what it becomes when the logic of surveillance enters the room. If you've ever wondered how technology reshapes not just systems but human behaviour - and how the promise of "efficiency" can quietly hollow out dignity - this conversation is for you.

    31 min
  3. FEB 4

    How Britain Heals: Why Growth Isn't Enough-and What a Broken Country Actually Needs

    Britain may be stabilising economically-but emotionally, something is still badly wrong. In this episode, we step beyond GDP, inflation figures, and policy soundbites to ask a more difficult question: why does the country still feel so fractured, lonely, and brittle-even when the numbers improve? This conversation explores Britain's crisis not as a failure of growth, but as a failure of connection. We look at how decades of treating social life as a by-product of economic success have left the country richer on paper but poorer in trust, belonging, and shared meaning. From the quiet disappearance of libraries, pubs, and community spaces, to a welfare system that processes people rather than knows them, to the growing evidence that loneliness is not just a personal tragedy but a political and economic risk-this is an argument for a different kind of national renewal. Drawing on research, policy experiments, and lived reality across the UK, the episode outlines what a relational economy might look like in practice:- why social infrastructure is as vital as railways- why wellbeing should be a Treasury metric, not a side project- why emotional literacy belongs at the heart of education- and why rebuilding Britain may depend less on growth, and more on care This is not a call for nostalgia, and not a rejection of prosperity. It is a blueprint for a country that understands that people do not thrive in isolation-and that no society heals unless it learns to take connection seriously. At its heart, this episode asks what patriotism could mean in the 21st century. Not louder symbols. Not harder edges. But a renewed commitment to ensuring that no one is left to worry alone.

    28 min
  4. JAN 14

    The Men Who Are Disappearing

    Men are disappearing-but not in the ways we're used to measuring. Not all at once. Not always through crisis. And not always in ways that trigger alarms. Instead, they are quietly withdrawing from everyday life: from work, from friendships, from family routines, from the social structures that once anchored them. In this episode, we explore what can only be described as a Masculinity Recession-a slow contraction of belonging, purpose, and connection among men. This is not a backlash against progress, nor an argument that men's struggles somehow outweigh women's. It's an examination of what happens when a society changes faster than large numbers of men are helped to adapt. Drawing on data, lived experience, and cultural analysis, this conversation looks beyond the usual panic about young men and asks a harder question: who is really carrying the heaviest load? The answer points not to viral villains or online caricatures, but to men in midlife and beyond-often outside major cities-whose identities were built around roles that quietly vanished, without replacement. This episode is part of an ongoing emotional weather report: an attempt to map the deeper conditions shaping how people are actually living, not just how they're performing online. We talk about loneliness that doesn't announce itself, work that once provided dignity, and why telling men to "open up" has failed to stop the bleeding. Most importantly, we ask what comes next.Because when large numbers of men fall out of participation, the consequences don't stay contained. They ripple outward-into families, workplaces, communities, and public life. This is not a men's issue.It's a societal one.

    26 min
  5. JAN 7

    How Britain Feels

    Britain isn't angry.It isn't collapsing.And it isn't fine. It's holding its breath. This podcast is an emotional weather report for the UK - a five-part series exploring what this country is really feeling beneath the headlines, the polling, and the endless noise. Because you can't understand Britain in 2026 through GDP charts or culture wars alone. You have to understand the emotional climate people are living inside: the exhaustion, the numbness, the quiet sense of unease that something isn't working anymore - even if no one quite knows how to say it. Across this series, we ask a simple but neglected question:What does life actually feel like right now - and what does that tell us about what comes next? Each episode focuses on a different pressure system shaping Britain's inner life: The Emotional State of Britain - why so many people feel flat, overwhelmed, and quietly on edge.The Masculinity Recession - the collapse of belonging, purpose, and connection among men, and why it affects everyone.Algorithmic Adolescence - how growing up online is reshaping identity, attention, and the nervous system of a generation.The AI Self - the emotional cost of a machine age that's making people feel replaceable.How Britain Heals - what genuine repair could look like, without slogans, optimism theatre, or false certainty. This isn't a campaign.It isn't a diagnosis.And it isn't about telling anyone how to feel. It's a map. A way of saying:Here's where we are.Here's why it feels like this.Here's what we need to pay attention to before the pressure breaks - or lifts. Britain's emotional world is shifting faster than its political one.It's time we treated that with the seriousness it deserves. New episodes drop throughout January.Everything begins at The Brink.

    35 min

About

The Brink is a weekly exploration into the hidden forces shaping our minds. Each week I take a deep dive into psychology, technology, and the emotional undercurrents of modern life — for listeners who want to make sense of how the world shapes how they feel. If you're drawn to the strange edges of the human psyche-where therapy meets power, and mental health meets mystery-this is where you'll want to be. Written, produced, and presented by Matt Hussey-therapist, journalist, and guide through the darker corridors of the mind.