No podcast has done more to normalise conversations about mental health than The Diary of a CEO. Steven Bartlett doesn't just ask surface-level questions — he goes deep, sharing his own struggles with anxiety, loneliness, and the emotional cost of ambition. The result is a library of episodes that have genuinely changed how millions of people understand their own minds.
We've ranked the most impactful mental health episodes based on depth of insight, practical applicability, and listener response. These aren't just good interviews — they're interventions.
If you listen to one episode on this list, make it this one. Dr. Gabor Maté, the world's foremost expert on trauma and addiction, delivers what many listeners have called "the most important two hours of audio on the internet." His central thesis — that trauma is not what happens to you, but what happens inside you as a result — reframes everything.
Maté explains how childhood emotional environments shape adult health outcomes, from autoimmune diseases to addiction. He distinguishes between "Big T" trauma (abuse, war, catastrophe) and "small t" trauma (emotional neglect, a parent who was physically present but emotionally absent), arguing that the latter is more common and equally damaging.
The conversation turns deeply personal when Bartlett opens up about his own childhood, and Maté gently unpacks patterns Steven hadn't fully recognised. It's a masterclass in compassionate honesty.
Stanford-trained psychiatrist Dr. Paul Conti brings clinical precision to a topic usually clouded by vague self-help advice. He introduces a structural model for understanding the mind — the "cupboards" metaphor — that gives listeners a practical framework for self-examination. Rather than chasing symptoms (anxiety, depression, anger), Conti teaches you to find the root drives underneath.
His explanation of how the unconscious mind runs 90% of our behaviour is both humbling and liberating. If the unconscious drives most of what we do, then self-awareness isn't about willpower — it's about making the unconscious conscious.
UC Berkeley neuroscientist Matthew Walker makes the case that sleep deprivation is the silent epidemic behind anxiety, depression, weight gain, and chronic disease. His data is staggering: getting less than six hours of sleep reduces natural killer cell activity by 70%, and one night of poor sleep increases emotional reactivity by 60%.
Walker provides a protocol that's simple but specific: consistent wake time (even on weekends), cool bedroom (18°C/65°F), no caffeine after 2pm, and no screens 60 minutes before bed. He argues that sleep isn't a luxury — it's the foundation on which every other mental health intervention depends.
Former Google X Chief Business Officer Mo Gawdat lost his son Ali during routine surgery. From that unimaginable grief, he built a mathematical model for happiness that has reached over 100 million people. His equation is disarmingly simple: happiness equals or exceeds your perception of events minus your expectations.
Gawdat argues that unhappiness isn't caused by circumstances — it's caused by the stories we tell ourselves about circumstances. He shares practical "thought interruption" techniques: when a negative thought spiral begins, treat it like a pop-up ad in your brain and consciously close it.
Jay Shetty brings his unique perspective as a former monk to the intersection of grief, heartbreak, and rebuilding. His framework for processing emotional pain — feel, deal, heal — gives structure to what usually feels like chaos. He explains why we often rush to "move on" when what we actually need is to sit with pain long enough to understand what it's teaching us.
Shetty's advice on journaling is particularly practical: write for eight minutes without stopping, don't censor, and burn the page if you want. The goal isn't to produce good writing — it's to get the thoughts out of your head and onto paper where they lose their power.
Clinical psychologist and author of Why Has Nobody Told Me This Before?, Dr. Julie Smith translates complex psychology into tools anyone can use immediately. She explains the "mood ladder" — how small daily actions compound into significant mental health changes — and why waiting for motivation is a trap. Action creates motivation, not the other way around.
Psychiatrist Steve Peters introduces his famous "Chimp Model" of the mind: the rational human brain vs. the emotional chimp brain vs. the programmed computer brain. Understanding which part of your brain is driving your behaviour at any given moment is transformational. Peters has used this model with Olympic athletes and elite performers — now he shares it with the DOAC audience.
Every expert on this list — from Maté to Shetty — makes the same point: trauma isn't reserved for extreme experiences. Emotional neglect, perfectionism, conditional love, chronic stress — these everyday experiences shape our mental health in profound ways. Recognising this removes the shame that prevents people from seeking help.
Conti, Peters, and Smith all emphasise that you cannot change patterns you don't see. Whether through therapy, journaling, or meditation, the first step is always the same: observe your own behaviour with curiosity rather than judgement.
Walker's sleep protocol, Gawdat's thought interruptions, Shetty's eight-minute journaling — the most effective interventions are small, daily, and boring. Mental health is built in minutes, not months.
Several other DOAC episodes deserve recognition for their mental health impact:
Explore the complete DOAC episode guide and listener resources at
diaryofceo.online