The Mad Shrink

The Mad Shrink Podcast is where psychiatry meets real conversation. Hosted by Dr. G, a board-certified psychiatrist, the show breaks down complex mental health topics with clarity, credibility, and a dose of straight talk. Each episode challenges common misconceptions, unpacks the science behind psychiatric diagnoses, and offers practical, evidence-based insights you can actually use. From ADHD and anxiety to mood disorders, trauma, and the cultural conversations shaping mental health today, Dr. G goes beyond surface-level advice to explore what’s really happening in the brain,  and in our lives. Whether you’re a clinician, a curious learner, or someone navigating your own mental health journey, The Mad Shrink Podcast delivers thoughtful, accessible conversations designed to inform, empower, and challenge what you think you know. Subscribe for grounded, science-backed mental health content, without the fluff. This show is produced by Rainbow Creative with Matthew "MoJo" Jones and Executive Producer, Omar Foaud as Editor and Mohamed Naser as Graphic Designer. For Sponsorship Opportunities email podcasts@rainbowcreative.co

Episodes

  1. 8h ago

    Why Trying to "Get Over" Grief Can Make Depression Worse

    What if grief isn’t something to “fix,” but something you have to move through? In this episode, Dr. G unpacks one of the most misunderstood areas in mental health: the difference between grief and clinical depression. With clarity, nuance, and zero clichés, he explains why grief is not a disorder, why suppressing it often makes things worse, and how our culture’s obsession with “getting over it” can unintentionally deepen suffering. Dr. G breaks down what depression actually is from a psychiatric perspective, where antidepressants help, where they fall short, and why symptom suppression alone rarely creates lasting recovery. He explores the evidence behind Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), the role of distorted thinking patterns in maintaining depression, and how therapy helps retrain the mind instead of simply numbing emotional pain. The conversation also dives into functional psychiatry and the overlooked biological contributors that can quietly fuel depressive symptoms, including vitamin deficiencies, methylfolate issues, inflammation, sleep disruption, and gut health. Dr. G explains why mental health treatment should never be one-size-fits-all, and why lifestyle interventions like exercise, sleep regulation, and light therapy are far more powerful than most people realize. Rather than offering empty motivation or quick fixes, this episode focuses on understanding the mechanisms underneath emotional suffering, and the tools that actually help people heal. Key Highlights: The critical difference between grief and clinical depression Why grief is a natural healing process, not a pathology How suppressing grief can increase risk for depression and psychosomatic symptoms The real efficacy rates and limitations of antidepressants Common antidepressant side effects, including emotional blunting and sexual dysfunction Why CBT remains the gold-standard psychotherapy for depression How vitamin D deficiency, methylfolate deficiency, and gut health can impact mood Why exercise, sleep correction, and light therapy have strong clinical evidence for depression relief How resilience is built through active healing, not symptom avoidance Whether you’re navigating loss, struggling with depression, supporting someone who is, or simply trying to better understand how the mind works, this episode offers practical insight grounded in both psychiatry and real-world experience. This isn’t about avoiding pain. It’s about understanding the difference between healthy suffering and clinical illness, and knowing how to respond to both. Resources Mentioned:Feeling Good by David BurnsMethylfolate supplementation for MTHFR-related deficienciesLight therapy boxes for mood and sleep regulation This show is produced by Rainbow Creative with Matthew “MoJo” Jones and Executive Producer Omar Foaud, with editing by Omar Foaud and graphics by Mohamed Naser. For sponsorship opportunities, contact podcasts@rainbowcreative.co Chapters 0:00 Introduction 0:26 What Is Grief? Understanding Loss & Healing 3:14 How Grief Can Turn Into Depression 5:32 How Conventional Psychiatry Treats Depression 7:32 The Antidepressant Efficacy Problem 8:28 Antidepressant Side Effects 10:10 Why Antidepressants Don't Cure Depression 12:25 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Explained 14:48 Cognitive Distortions That Fuel Depression 20:48 Functional Psychiatry: Finding the Root Cause 24:29 Exercise & Sleep for Depression 25:57 Light Therapy for Depression Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    28 min
  2. May 22

    The Problem With Modern Therapy | Coping vs Actually Healing w/ Dr. G

    What if therapy isn’t helping because no one ever defined what “better” was supposed to look like? In this episode, Dr. G takes a hard look at modern therapy culture and challenges many of the assumptions people have been taught to accept. From endless sessions with no measurable progress to the overemphasis on insight and coping, he explains why therapy that feels productive isn’t always producing real change. Drawing from more than five decades of clinical experience, Dr. G breaks down what effective therapy should actually look like: goal-oriented, accountable, challenging, and focused on resolution rather than indefinite management. He explains why understanding your problems is not the same as solving them, why discomfort in therapy is often necessary for growth, and how patients can better evaluate whether their treatment is truly working. This conversation is direct, evidence-based, and deeply empowering for anyone currently in therapy, considering therapy, or questioning whether the process they’re in is actually helping them move forward. Key Highlights: Why the length of therapy says nothing about its effectiveness The myth that insight alone creates change Why some of the most powerful breakthroughs happen in only a few sessions The importance of having a clear therapeutic contract and measurable goals Why therapy without accountability can drift endlessly The difference between coping with a problem and actually resolving it Why being challenged, uncomfortable, or frustrated in therapy can be a positive sign Common therapist boundary violations and how to address them directly The danger of “interminable therapy” with no evidence of progress How to recognize when you may be protecting your therapist’s assumptions instead of solving your own problems Dr. G, also known as “The Mad Shrink,” is a board-certified psychiatrist and author of The Healing Paradox known for his candid, no-nonsense approach to psychotherapy and behavioral change. Through decades of clinical work and his Mad Shrink platform, he challenges conventional mental health narratives and gives people practical, evidence-based ways to think differently about healing. Whether you’ve spent years in therapy, are just beginning the process, or have quietly wondered why nothing seems to change, this episode offers a radically honest perspective on what good therapy should actually do. This isn’t about feeling understood for an hour a week. It’s about creating meaningful change. This show is Produced by Rainbow Creative with Executive Producer Matthew "MoJo" Jones and Editor Omar Foaud. 00:00 Introduction 00:33 Not All Therapists Are Equal 01:26 Longer Therapy Is NOT Better 03:09 Insight Is Overrated 05:25 Point 1: Therapeutic Contract 08:30 Point 2: Solving vs. Just Coping 09:15 Point 3: Beware Medication Pushers 11:38 Point 4: Does Your Therapist Listen? 12:30 Point 5: Are You Being Challenged? 13:20 Point 6: Healthy Frustration in Therapy 14:05 Point 7: Does Your Therapist Genuinely Care? 14:45 Point 8: Boundary & Frame Requirements 19:00 Point 9: Are You Making Progress? 20:30 Point 10: The Fallacy of Interminable Therapy 19:40 Point 11: Avoid Psychiatrists Under 65 23:00 How to Find the Right Therapist Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    25 min
  3. May 6

    Breathing and Thinking Your Way Out of Anxiety

    What if anxiety isn’t something you “have”, but something you’re doing? In this episode, Dr. G breaks down anxiety with clarity, precision, and zero fluff. He unpacks what’s actually happening in your brain and body when anxiety hits, why it spirals the way it does, and, most importantly, how to interrupt it in real time. From the physiology of breathing to the psychology of thought patterns, this conversation cuts through the noise and gives you tools that are both simple and clinically grounded. Dr. G walks through two of the most effective, evidence-based approaches for managing anxiety: breathwork that directly regulates your nervous system, and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) techniques that target the distorted thinking fueling the cycle. He also reframes anxiety in a way most people never consider, not as a condition to fear, but as a dysfunctional pattern you can retrain, and in some cases, even redirect as excitement. Key Highlights: What anxiety actually is (and why it always comes back to a sense of safety) The role of the autonomic nervous system and vagus nerve How your breathing changes under stress — and why it makes anxiety worse Simple breathing techniques that activate a calming physiological response Why nasal breathing and extended exhales signal safety to the brain The four core cognitive distortions driving anxiety (fortune telling, mind reading, shoulding, labeling) How CBT works to challenge and rewire anxious thinking Why performance anxiety is often just misinterpreted excitement The shift from “having anxiety” to understanding it as a changeable dysfunction Whether you’re dealing with panic attacks, social anxiety, OCD, or chronic overthinking, this episode gives you practical tools you can start using immediately. This isn’t about quick fixes. It’s about understanding the mechanism so you can actually change it.This show is produced by Rainbow Creative with Matthew “MoJo” Jones and Executive Producer Omar Foaud, with editing by Omar Foaud and graphics by Mohamed Naser. For sponsorship opportunities, contact podcasts@rainbowcreative.co Chapters 0:00 Introduction 0:40 What Is Anxiety? 2:18 The Parasympathetic Nervous System & Feeling Safe 5:46 Breathing Techniques for Anxiety 10:04 The Role of Thoughts in Anxiety 12:12 Cognitive Distortions That Drive Anxiety 15:55 Anxiety as Disguised Excitement 18:17 Anxiety as Dysfunction, Not a Thing Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    21 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

The Mad Shrink Podcast is where psychiatry meets real conversation. Hosted by Dr. G, a board-certified psychiatrist, the show breaks down complex mental health topics with clarity, credibility, and a dose of straight talk. Each episode challenges common misconceptions, unpacks the science behind psychiatric diagnoses, and offers practical, evidence-based insights you can actually use. From ADHD and anxiety to mood disorders, trauma, and the cultural conversations shaping mental health today, Dr. G goes beyond surface-level advice to explore what’s really happening in the brain,  and in our lives. Whether you’re a clinician, a curious learner, or someone navigating your own mental health journey, The Mad Shrink Podcast delivers thoughtful, accessible conversations designed to inform, empower, and challenge what you think you know. Subscribe for grounded, science-backed mental health content, without the fluff. This show is produced by Rainbow Creative with Matthew "MoJo" Jones and Executive Producer, Omar Foaud as Editor and Mohamed Naser as Graphic Designer. For Sponsorship Opportunities email podcasts@rainbowcreative.co

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