Integral

From cultural confusion to political shifts, men today are caught in the crossfire of conflicting expectations. Are they supposed to be strong and assertive or soft and sensitive? Should they embrace traditional masculinity or rewrite the script entirely? And why are so many turning to right wing politics for answers? In this provocative first episode of The Integral Edge, Keith Martin-Smith sits down with Jason Lange and Raymond Fismer to break down what’s really happening to men in the modern world. They explore why so many are feeling lost, how social, cultural, and economic changes have reshaped masculinity, and what a truly evolved man looks like in today’s world. 🔥 Are men being asked to hold an impossible polarity?

🔥 Is the rise of “strongman” leaders a reaction to cultural instability?

🔥 And what’s the real alternative to outdated standards of masculinity? This isn’t just another surface-level discussion — this is an integral look at the deeper forces shaping modern manhood. Buckle up. Do you have comments or questions?

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! Welcome to a world on the edge. AI is rewriting the rules. Politics are more polarized than ever, with the far right and left in an endless clash. The metacrisis looms, late-stage capitalism is unraveling, DEI is evolving, and strongmen are rising once more. But that’s just the beginning. This podcast takes an integral look at the forces shaping our reality—from cutting-edge neuroscience and biohacking to cryptocurrency, global economics, and the ancient wisdom of awakening, mindfulness, and embodiment. Keith Martin-Smith brings a deep, multi-perspective lens to the chaos, cutting through the noise to find what actually matters. This isn’t just another commentary on the world. It’s a guide to seeing—and living—beyond the divide. New episodes of Integral Edge

every second and fourth Wednesday of the month at 10 AM PT. See our events calendar

to join the live discussion!

Men’s pain is real — and it’s being weaponized.

Many men feel unheard and unvalued in the current cultural landscape, leading some to turn to figures like Andrew Tate who acknowledge their pain but offer destructive prescriptions. The real solution isn’t denial or shame — it’s helping men integrate their strength and vulnerability in a way that serves them and the world.

We need to cultivate a masculinity that isn’t about choosing between “strong” and “sensitive” — but about integrating both.

Men are being asked to embody seemingly opposite qualities: strong but empathetic, confident but vulnerable, protective but collaborative. Instead of collapsing into one side of the polarity, the next stage of masculinity transcends and includes both.

A man disconnected from his emotions is a man disconnected from his power.

Society often conditions men to suppress emotions like sadness and fear, but these feelings don’t disappear — they just get expressed in destructive ways (rage, addiction, withdrawal). The strongest men aren’t the ones who feel nothing; they’re the ones who can feel deeply without being ruled by those feelings.

Real men’s work isn’t about “fixing” men — it’s about freeing them.

Many men assume personal development is about softening or weakening them. In reality, it’s about removing the unconscious limitations placed on them by culture, trauma, and outdated social scripts so they can be more powerful, more present, and more fulfilled.