MENTAL HEALTH & STORYTELLING
Why Mental Health Matters
Stories have the power to change lives. But it isn't usually until we face our own mental health struggles that we truly understand how profound that change could be.
Men, in particular, spend years carrying emotional weight in silence. They often experienced the particular loneliness that comes from being surrounded by people yet feeling fundamentally unseen. So many of us have watched friendships fade into polite distance when life got difficult. Yet we feel the ache of wanting deeper connection but lacking the tools—or permission—to create it.
Like many men, these experiences also shape me as a person and they transformed me as a storyteller. I realised that the stories we tell about masculinity, friendship, and emotional expression literally shape how men navigate their inner lives. And too often, those stories leave men isolated, ashamed, and struggling alone.
In a landscape where male friendship on film is often reduced to comedy or action-buddy dynamics, we need to create stories that feel honest, raw and genuine so we can play a real part in shifting the culture.
The Crisis We're Not Talking About
The statistics around male mental health are staggering:
But behind every statistic is a human story. A man who couldn't find the words. A friendship that withered in silence. A moment when reaching out felt impossible.
These aren't just numbers—they're fathers, brothers, sons, and friends. They're men who needed permission to be vulnerable, and a culture that gave them everything except that permission.
The Power of Authentic Representation
Traditional mental health campaigns often tell men to "speak up" or "get help," but they rarely show what that actually looks like. They offer solutions without recognition, guidance or understanding.
We are committed to creating content that meets men where they are—in the messy, complicated reality of their emotional lives. Stories that don't lecture or preach, but simply reflect the truth of what it means to struggle, to reach out, and to find your way back to connection.
Authentic representation matters because:
For partnership inquiries or mental health collaboration opportunities, please contact: andrew@karooskyent.com
Current MH Projects
- Off Track (2025) -
Feature Film & Stage Play
"Off Track" is a feature film and play that explores male friendship breakdown and recovery through the story of two estranged friends forced to confront their emotional distance during a long train journey.
This isn't a "mental health film" in the traditional sense. It's a narrative story about friendship, shame, silence, and the radical act of choosing connection even when it's difficult. It's designed to reach men who would never engage with traditional mental health campaigns, meeting them in the cinema with a story that feels true to their lived experience.
The goal: To spark conversations that men desperately need to have but rarely know how to start.
Current MH Projects
- Mindshift (2025) -
Feature Film
Building on the mental health themes of "Off Track," we are developing "Mindshift" - a psychological sci-fi thriller that explores male isolation and the dangerous lengths men will go to in pursuit of success and connection.
The story follows David Rivera, a successful but profoundly lonely entrepreneur who undergoes an experimental procedure to "optimise" his life. What he discovers is that the company hasn't improved his reality - they've moved him to an alternate timeline where he achieved his ambitions, but at the cost of every meaningful relationship he ever had.
Mental health themes addressed:
Why this story matters: "Mindshift" uses the sci-fi premise to explore very real psychological territory - the way modern life can leave successful men feeling completely isolated despite their achievements. It's a story about a man who literally trades his authentic life for a "better" version, only to discover that success without connection is a beautiful prison.
The film serves as both entertainment and intervention, showing audiences the devastating cost of prioritising achievement over relationship, while demonstrating that it's never too late to choose authenticity over optimisation.
Like "Off Track," this project is designed to reach men who might never engage with traditional mental health resources, using compelling storytelling to start conversations that could genuinely save lives.
Current status: Script complete, seeking development partnerships with mental health organisations and production companies aligned with meaningful storytelling.
Future Projects
We're committed to continuing this work beyond "Off Track" and "Mindshift". Future projects will explore:
Resources & Support
If you or someone you know is struggling with mental health challenges, please know that help is available:
UK Crisis Support:
Male-Specific Support:
Remember: Reaching out isn't weakness. It's the most courageous thing you can do.
Partnership & Collaboration
I'm always interested in collaborating with mental health organisations, charities, and advocates who share the vision of using authentic storytelling to create positive change.
Whether you're interested in:
- Supporting current projects
- Developing new content together
- Educational screening programs
- Community outreach initiatives
- Research collaboration
I'd welcome the conversation.
For partnership inquiries or mental health collaboration opportunities, please contact: andrew@karooskyent.com
The Conversation Continues
Mental health isn't a single story or a simple solution. It's an ongoing conversation that requires courage, compassion, and community.
Through our work, we hope to contribute to that conversation—creating space for men to see themselves reflected honestly on screen, and permission to reach out when they need support.
Because everyone deserves to be seen, understood, and connected. Everyone deserves stories that help them find their way home to themselves and each other.
The silence doesn't have to be permanent. The story can change.
