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Owned by Joseph

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BROTHERHOOD OF GROUNDED MEN

1 member • $10/month

Men don’t struggle because they’re weak, they struggle alone. This brotherhood changes that. Real conversations, do the work.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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34 contributions to BROTHERHOOD OF GROUNDED MEN
The hardest thing for a strong man to do is admit he needs something.
Not because he’s weak. Because he’s spent years being the one everyone else leans on. Being needed feels safe. Being the one who needs something — that feels exposed. But here’s the truth: the men who grow the fastest aren’t the ones who figure everything out alone. They’re the ones who got uncomfortable enough to ask. This community exists for that. What’s something you’re working through right now that you haven’t said out loud yet? 👇
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What happens to a man when he finally gets everything he worked for — and still feels empty?
Nobody talks about this one. You hit the goal. The income. The title. The milestone. And the feeling lasts maybe a week. Then it’s gone and you’re already chasing the next thing. That’s not ingratitude. That’s what happens when a man builds his identity around achieving instead of around who he actually is. The grounded man knows the difference between what he’s accomplished and who he is. What’s one thing you’re chasing right now — and why does it actually matter to you? 👇
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Most men weren’t taught to feel anger. They were taught to store it.
Swallow it. Push through it. Don’t let it show. And then they wonder why it comes out sideways — at the people they love, at random moments, over things that “shouldn’t” bother them. Anger isn’t the problem. Unexpressed anger with nowhere to go — that’s the problem. A grounded man doesn’t suppress it and doesn’t explode. He learns what it’s telling him and decides what to do with it. What does your anger usually be trying to say? 👇
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Week 2 Question Post
Be honest — when’s the last time someone asked how YOU were doing and actually meant it? Not small talk. Not a quick “you good?” on the way to something else. Someone who sat with the question and actually wanted to know. For a lot of men in here, the answer is either a long time ago — or never. We’re built to check on everyone else. The job. The family. The people who depend on us. But somewhere along the way, we stopped expecting anyone to check on us. And then we stopped expecting it from ourselves. So I’m asking right now — no performance, no highlight reel: 👉 How are you actually doing this week? Drop it below. This is the room where the real answer is welcome. 👇
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WEEK 2 The Emotions Living in Your Wallet
Last week you started reading your money story — where it came from, who wrote it, and what rules it handed you. This week we go deeper. Here is what most financial advice completely misses: money decisions are emotional decisions. Almost always. Even when they look logical on the surface. The person who knows they need to save but cannot stop spending — that is not a math problem. That is an emotional one. The person who has savings but still lies awake at 3am convinced they are going to lose everything — that is not a logic problem. That is an emotional one. Until we name what we are feeling, we cannot make different choices. We just keep reacting. The Six Core Money Emotions In financial therapy, we see six emotions come up more than any others. Most people are dominated by one or two — though all six may visit at different times. 1. Shame Shame says: There is something fundamentally wrong with me when it comes to money. It is the voice that says you should know better. That you have made too many mistakes to recover. That other adults have figured this out and you are the only one who has not. Shame is the most paralyzing of all the money emotions because it attacks your identity, not just your behavior. When you feel shame around money you avoid looking at it. You do not open the statements. You do not check the balance. You spend impulsively because the temporary relief feels better than the constant weight. 2. Fear Fear says: Something bad is coming and I will not be okay. Fear can look like hypervigilance — obsessively checking accounts, extreme hoarding of money, inability to spend even when it is reasonable. Or it can look like avoidance — refusing to look at finances because knowing the number feels worse than not knowing. Fear usually has a specific origin. A financial crisis you lived through. A parent who lost everything. An experience of sudden instability that taught you the ground can fall out from under you at any moment. 3. Anger Anger says: This is not fair. I have worked hard and it is never enough.
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Joseph Amoroso
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5points to level up
@joseph-amoroso-5211
Health and Wellness, Making money with AI, Life Hacks all Updated Multiple times a week.

Active 2d ago
Joined Apr 30, 2026
United States