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The Alarm Next Door — Show Notes
Episode summary
A snooze alarm through a hotel wall. Roughly every ten minutes, on holiday, surrounded by friends half my age. By any reasonable measure, a small thing. So why was I lying there rigid with a fifty-year-old feeling?
In this episode I read my essay The Alarm Next Door and follow a single morning's irritation all the way down — past the woman next door, past my father, past my mother, to a wound older than any of them. It's a piece about the job I was handed before I was old enough to refuse it, about the difference between an explosion I'd never have and the silent resentment I always carry, and about the third door most of us are never shown: that you can feel a trigger fully, do the work on where it comes from, and still make a clean, loving request for what you need.
Spoiler: I did make the request. It came out clumsier than the version in my head. I'm leaving that in.
What this episode is about
Lines worth sitting with
Read the original essay
The full written piece lives here: https://adrianmelrose.com/the-alarm-next-door/
Where to go next
Want to do this kind of work in a room with other people? My group spaces at 8Notes are built for exactly that — honest conversation, the Enneagram, and the questions worth sitting with, in good company. → https://8notes.co.uk
Want to do it one to one? I coach individuals, men, and couples through my practice, Plain Talk Matters. The whole thing runs on a single conviction: clarity is kindness. → https://plaintalk.co.uk
Want the writing in your inbox? New essays, readings, and the occasional unfinished question — no flatline living. Sign up to the newsletter here: → https://adrianmelrose.com/#/portal/signup
About Adrian Melrose
I write and coach about the inner lives of men, the cost of the masks we're handed young, and how clarity becomes a form of love rather than a weapon. I'm completing certification in Terry Real's Relational Life Therapy, draw heavily on bell hooks and don Miguel Ruiz, and have a book on the way — Silence Is Not Peace.
The work shows up in a few places, depending on how you like to meet it:
Same person, four front doors. Come in whichever one suits you.
By Adrian MelroseThe Alarm Next Door — Show Notes
Episode summary
A snooze alarm through a hotel wall. Roughly every ten minutes, on holiday, surrounded by friends half my age. By any reasonable measure, a small thing. So why was I lying there rigid with a fifty-year-old feeling?
In this episode I read my essay The Alarm Next Door and follow a single morning's irritation all the way down — past the woman next door, past my father, past my mother, to a wound older than any of them. It's a piece about the job I was handed before I was old enough to refuse it, about the difference between an explosion I'd never have and the silent resentment I always carry, and about the third door most of us are never shown: that you can feel a trigger fully, do the work on where it comes from, and still make a clean, loving request for what you need.
Spoiler: I did make the request. It came out clumsier than the version in my head. I'm leaving that in.
What this episode is about
Lines worth sitting with
Read the original essay
The full written piece lives here: https://adrianmelrose.com/the-alarm-next-door/
Where to go next
Want to do this kind of work in a room with other people? My group spaces at 8Notes are built for exactly that — honest conversation, the Enneagram, and the questions worth sitting with, in good company. → https://8notes.co.uk
Want to do it one to one? I coach individuals, men, and couples through my practice, Plain Talk Matters. The whole thing runs on a single conviction: clarity is kindness. → https://plaintalk.co.uk
Want the writing in your inbox? New essays, readings, and the occasional unfinished question — no flatline living. Sign up to the newsletter here: → https://adrianmelrose.com/#/portal/signup
About Adrian Melrose
I write and coach about the inner lives of men, the cost of the masks we're handed young, and how clarity becomes a form of love rather than a weapon. I'm completing certification in Terry Real's Relational Life Therapy, draw heavily on bell hooks and don Miguel Ruiz, and have a book on the way — Silence Is Not Peace.
The work shows up in a few places, depending on how you like to meet it:
Same person, four front doors. Come in whichever one suits you.