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Host Murray Stewart leads a powerful solo conversation about the rising tide of youth violence across Australia and the Western world, sharing a simple, practical proposal to begin restoring safety and hope within communities. In this episode Murray argues that change starts at home — at your dining table — and outlines a step-by-step family exercise designed to reveal and resolve the worries that drive young people toward violence.
Topics covered include the geographic scope of the problem (from Alice Springs to Sydney and Melbourne), the importance of parental leadership, and a concrete action plan: ask children to write down the three things that worry them, gain their consent to store that information, create a simple filing system, and promise to return with thoughtful solutions. Murray explains why gaining consent and offering follow-up solutions creates trust and empowers young people to face their problems constructively.
Key points and takeaways: the family dining table as a locus for honest conversation; practical steps parents can use immediately; how resolving problems within families can ripple outward through peer networks; and Murray’s belief that these small, scalable interventions can help reduce youth violence and make Australia — and the world — safer. The episode features Murray Stewart with on-air assistance from Hayley, is broadcast on 1436 AM, and is a Blind Magic Communications production.
By bridgeovermurrayHost Murray Stewart leads a powerful solo conversation about the rising tide of youth violence across Australia and the Western world, sharing a simple, practical proposal to begin restoring safety and hope within communities. In this episode Murray argues that change starts at home — at your dining table — and outlines a step-by-step family exercise designed to reveal and resolve the worries that drive young people toward violence.
Topics covered include the geographic scope of the problem (from Alice Springs to Sydney and Melbourne), the importance of parental leadership, and a concrete action plan: ask children to write down the three things that worry them, gain their consent to store that information, create a simple filing system, and promise to return with thoughtful solutions. Murray explains why gaining consent and offering follow-up solutions creates trust and empowers young people to face their problems constructively.
Key points and takeaways: the family dining table as a locus for honest conversation; practical steps parents can use immediately; how resolving problems within families can ripple outward through peer networks; and Murray’s belief that these small, scalable interventions can help reduce youth violence and make Australia — and the world — safer. The episode features Murray Stewart with on-air assistance from Hayley, is broadcast on 1436 AM, and is a Blind Magic Communications production.