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ELDER X — KISELJAK, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA

KISELJAK

If something is weighing on you in Kiseljak, reach out. Every reply is personal.

If your calendar is empty, that is worth looking at. If it is full of things that do not matter to you, that is worth looking at too.

8K
Population
#47
In Bosnia and Herzegovina
$250
Per Week
24/7
Text Access

Not therapy. Advice. $250/week — 1 hour phone/Zoom + unlimited texts.

EASTERN EUROPE: THE LANDSCAPE FOR MEN

CULTURAL CONTEXT

Post-Soviet and post-communist transitions left Eastern European men navigating collapsed industrial economies and disrupted social contracts. Polish, Czech, Hungarian, and Romanian masculinity norms emphasize toughness, alcohol tolerance, and provider obligation. The rapid westernization of economies created winners and losers along generational and urban-rural divides, with older working-class men most affected.

MENTAL HEALTH LANDSCAPE

Mental health infrastructure varies widely — the Czech Republic and Poland have modernizing systems while Romania and Bulgaria face severe psychiatrist shortages. Soviet-era stigma around psychiatric treatment persists, with many men viewing therapy as a sign of weakness or insanity. EU funding has supported community mental health pilots, but coverage remains patchy outside capital cities.

KEY CHALLENGE

Soviet-era psychiatric stigma continues to prevent men from seeking help, compounded by underfunded mental health systems still transitioning from institutional to community care.

Poland: 116 123 (Telefon Zaufania). Czech Republic: 116 123 (Linka důvěry). Hungary: 116 123 (LESZ). Romania: 0800 801 200 (Telefonul Sufletului).

SURVIVING WITHOUT A SAFETY NET — ELDER X KNOWS THAT WEIGHT

The Informal Economy Trap — But Not a Life Sentence

In Kiseljak, roughly 60% of working men earn their living outside any formal employment structure. There is no contract, no pension contribution, no workers' compensation. A motorcycle taxi driver in Bosnia and Herzegovina might clear the equivalent of $8 on a good day, and nothing on a bad one. When the monsoon season floods the roads — as it does for weeks at a time across much of Bosnia and Herzegovina — that income drops to zero. There is no unemployment insurance to file, no HR department to call. The family eats if the man works, and the man works if the weather permits. This is not poverty as an abstract concept. It is poverty as a scheduling conflict between rain and rent. Elder X has been the man with no safety net. No insurance. No backup plan. No one to call when the money ran out. He knows the quiet terror of waking up and doing the math and realizing the math doesn't work. But he also knows this: the trap is only permanent if you believe it is. Ask AI what skills pay in Kiseljak right now. Even from a phone. Even with bad signal. One new skill can change the entire equation. Stop settling for survival. Fight for a life. If AI is confusing, say what you tried and what broke. He uses tools daily and hates gatekeeping.

Migration as the Only Plan — Elder X Understands Leaving Everything

For many men in Kiseljak, the calculus is straightforward: stay and starve slowly, or leave and send money home. Migration corridors pull men from Bosnia and Herzegovina toward construction sites, plantations, and service jobs in wealthier regions. They build highways in countries where they have no legal standing. They share dormitory rooms with twelve strangers and wire 70% of their wages back to families they see once a year if they're lucky. The psychological toll is staggering — studies of migrant labor populations show depression rates exceeding 40%. These men are simultaneously the primary financial support for their households and completely absent from them. Their children grow up with a father who is a monthly bank transfer and a voice on a phone. Elder X knows about leaving everything behind. He's been the man who had to walk away from his entire life and start over with nothing. He knows the loneliness of living for someone else's survival while your own soul is starving. But he's still here. Still standing. And his message is this: your sacrifice matters, but you matter too. Don't let the distance erase you. Call your family. Tell them the truth — not the performance. Use AI to find community organizations for men from Bosnia and Herzegovina wherever you are. You are who you hang out with. Find your people. If you want permission to rest, you will not get it. If you want permission to fight, you might.

When Family Is Your Only Insurance — Elder X Has Been the Load-Bearing Wall

In the absence of institutional support, family becomes the entire welfare system. An injury to a breadwinner in Kiseljak cascades through generations. A broken leg means a daughter pulled from school to work. A father's illness means a son abandoning his education at fourteen. Men internalize this: they are the load-bearing wall, and if they crack, the roof comes down on everyone. This weight produces a specific kind of silence — not stoicism by choice, but stoicism by necessity. Seeking help for depression or anxiety feels like an indulgence when the alternative to working through pain is watching your family go hungry. The men who build the roads, pour the concrete, and haul the materials that keep Kiseljak functioning do so knowing that their bodies are depreciating assets with no warranty and no replacement plan. Elder X has been the load-bearing wall. He held up everyone else while his own foundation was crumbling — bipolar episodes, broken marriage, religious trauma, every medication in the closet. He cracked. The roof didn't come down. It swayed, but it held. Because the truth is: you can ask for help and still hold your family together. In fact, you can't hold them together without asking for help. Do five pushups. Remind your body it's still yours. Use AI to find free health resources in Kiseljak. Your family needs you alive and whole, not just present and breaking. If you are young and numb, say what should have excited you this year and did not.

HELP THAT DOES NOT EXIST WHERE YOU LIVE — ELDER X WILL FIND ANOTHER WAY

The Four-Hour Drive — Elder X Says Help Is Closer Than You Think

A man in the rural areas around Kiseljak decides, after months or years of suffering, to see a mental health professional. He searches online — if he has broadband, which 22% of rural residents in Bosnia and Herzegovina do not. He finds a provider. The nearest one with availability is a four-hour drive away. The appointment is at 2 p.m. on a Tuesday. He works a job that does not offer personal days. He drives a truck that gets 15 miles to the gallon. The round trip will cost him a day's wages in lost income and $60 in fuel. He cancels the appointment. He does not reschedule. This is not a failure of willpower. It is a failure of infrastructure so complete that it functions as a denial of care. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, over 160 million people live in federally designated mental health professional shortage areas. For men — who already seek help at half the rate of women — these barriers are not speed bumps. They are walls. Elder X has hit those walls. Not the geographic kind — every other kind. The system that doesn't have room for you. The provider with a six-month wait. The medication that doesn't work. The program that costs more than you make. He hit every wall and kept going. Help is closer than you think — it's on your phone. Use AI to find crisis resources, telehealth, free counseling hotlines in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Drive to the library for signal if you have to. The wall is real, but so is your ability to go around it. Elder X has been where you are. If you are doing okay today, say okay — and what okay hides.

The Emergency Room Is Not a Therapist — Elder X Knows That Firsthand

When there is no psychiatrist, no psychologist, no counselor, and no social worker within a reasonable distance of Kiseljak, the emergency room becomes the default mental health provider. But emergency medicine is designed for acute intervention, not ongoing care. A man in a suicidal crisis arrives at the ER. He is stabilized, observed for 72 hours, and discharged with a referral to a provider who has a six-month wait list. The follow-up appointment is in a city he cannot afford to travel to. So he goes home. The cycle repeats until it doesn't — until the crisis becomes the final one. Emergency departments in rural Bosnia and Herzegovina report that mental health presentations have increased 50% in the past decade while the number of available downstream providers has decreased. The ER is catching men who fall, and then setting them back on the same ledge they fell from. Elder X has been stabilized, observed, and discharged. He's done the 72-hour hold. He's been given the referral to a provider with a wait list that stretches to the horizon. He knows the cycle. And he broke it — not because the system got better, but because he refused to let the system be his only option. Find a peer. Find a brother. Find a man who's been through it and will pick up the phone at 2 AM. That's not a replacement for professional care — but it's a lifeline while you wait for the system to remember you exist. Write to Elder X. He picks up. If you are in Bosnia and Herzegovina winter or Bosnia and Herzegovina heat, say if season messes with your head.

Telemedicine Requires a Signal — Elder X Requires Only Your Honesty

The promise of telemedicine — that geography would no longer determine access to care — depends on a prerequisite that policymakers in capital cities take for granted: a reliable internet connection. In the communities surrounding Kiseljak, broadband coverage is spotty at best and nonexistent at worst. A man trying to conduct a therapy session over a cellular connection that drops every three minutes is not receiving therapy. He is receiving frustration. And even where the connection holds, telemedicine encounters a cultural barrier: men in rural Bosnia and Herzegovina are significantly less likely to engage with a provider on a screen than in person. The technology solves the wrong problem. The issue was never that these men did not know help existed. The issue is that help exists in a form — digital, urban, appointment-based — that does not map onto the reality of their lives. They need someone who shows up, not someone who logs on. Elder X doesn't need a broadband connection to reach you. He needs your honesty. That's it. The bandwidth of a single honest sentence — "I'm not okay" — is more powerful than any telemedicine platform. He's been the man in the dead zone, physically and mentally. No signal. No connection. No one within reach. And he found a way through. Start with one honest conversation. With anyone. With him. Do five pushups and then write three sentences about how you actually feel. Not how you're supposed to feel. How you actually feel. That's the beginning. Elder X has filled a calendar empty enough to echo. If yours is empty or overstuffed with junk, say which.

THE TOWN THAT DIED WITH THE FACTORY — ELDER X KNOWS ABOUT REBUILDING FROM ZERO

Skills Without a Market — Until You Build a New One

The steel mill in your region near Kiseljak employed 3,000 men. It closed in a single announcement. The coal mine that sustained three generations shut its last shaft. The auto plant moved operations overseas. In each case, the economic loss is quantifiable — lost wages, lost tax base, lost businesses on Main Street. What's harder to measure is the identity obliteration that follows. A man who spent twenty years mastering a trade — welding, machining, underground extraction — possesses expertise that is simultaneously deep and, according to the labor market, worthless. Retraining programs in Bosnia and Herzegovina offer six-month certificates in medical coding or IT support. The implicit message: everything you learned doesn't count. Start over at forty-five, compete with twenty-two-year-olds, and be grateful for the opportunity. Elder X has been told everything he knew was worthless. He's been starting over at ages when other men were coasting. He knows the rage and the shame and the feeling that the ground opened up and swallowed everything you built. But he also knows this: you're not starting from zero. You're starting from experience. Use AI — right now, today — to find out which trades are in demand near Kiseljak. Welders are still needed. Electricians are still needed. Stop waiting for the factory to reopen and build something new. If you hate yourself, finish the sentence: I hate myself because ____.

Community Collapse as Male Crisis — Elder X Gets It

When the primary employer leaves a town near Kiseljak, the social fabric unravels along gendered lines. Women, research shows, are more likely to adapt — finding service-sector work, maintaining social networks, relocating. Men are more likely to stay, more likely to withdraw, and more likely to self-destruct. The town's bars stay open longer than its businesses. The opioid supply chain fills the economic vacuum the factory left. Fentanyl is not a coincidence in post-industrial Bosnia and Herzegovina. It arrived precisely where despair was deepest, where men had the fewest alternatives, and where the social infrastructure that might have caught them — unions, lodges, churches with active men's ministries — had already been gutted. The dealer isn't a predator exploiting weakness. He's the last employer in a town that the economy forgot. Elder X has seen what despair does to a man. He's been in that void — the bipolar episodes, the isolation, the moments where the only thing that seems to help is the thing that's killing you. He clawed his way out. Not with a government program. Not with a motivational poster. With raw, stubborn refusal to let the darkness win. You can do the same. Do five pushups. Call someone. Ask AI what jobs exist within driving distance of Kiseljak. Make money. Any amount. Forward motion is the only cure for despair. If you are closeted about anything, you do not have to out yourself — say "there is a closet" and why it matters.

Rebuilding Without Pretending — Elder X Doesn't Pretend

Honest recovery for post-industrial communities near Kiseljak starts by acknowledging that the old economy isn't coming back. No politician promising to reopen the mine is telling the truth. The question isn't how to restore what was lost — it's how to build something new without erasing the men who built what came before. Successful transitions in Bosnia and Herzegovina share common elements: investment in trades that can't be offshored (electrical, plumbing, renewable energy installation), small-business incubators that leverage existing skills, and mental health services embedded in workforce development rather than siloed in clinical settings. The man who lost his livelihood needs a new one. He also needs someone to acknowledge that what happened to him wasn't his fault and that starting over at fifty requires a different kind of courage than starting at twenty. Elder X doesn't pretend. He doesn't sugarcoat it. What happened to your town was a betrayal, and you have every right to be angry. But anger without action is just a slow death. Stop settling for rage and start channeling it. Prove to yourself that you can build something from nothing — because Elder X did, and he was carrying bipolar disorder, a broken marriage, and religious trauma while he did it. If he can rebuild, so can you. If you want Elder X to be harsh, write "be harsh" and why you need it.

HOW SOCIETY PUTS MEN DOWN

01

Men who are struggling often find that there are few spaces where they can be honest about what they are carrying without judgment.

02

Boys who struggle in school are more likely to receive discipline than empathy — and that early message about male pain being a behavior problem carries into adulthood.

03

Social media often rewards aggression and performance over vulnerability, making it harder for men to be honest about what they are actually feeling.

04

Fathers navigating custody situations can feel like the system was not designed with their involvement in mind — and that sense of powerlessness is real.

05

Men who experience domestic violence face real barriers to being believed and finding support, which makes an already difficult situation even harder.

06

Men who have been through the justice system face unique challenges in rebuilding their lives, and the support available often falls short of what is needed.

07

Men face disproportionate risks in physically demanding jobs, but conversations about workplace well-being rarely focus on them.

08

Men's health issues are historically underfunded and underresearched, which means many men face conditions without adequate resources or awareness.

ELDER X’S ADVICE FOR MEN IN KISELJAK

WRITE FROM THE HEART

Tell Elder X what is hurting you. No judgment. No scripts. A real person who has been where you are reads every message from Kiseljak.

REACH OUT TO ELDER X →

$250/WEEK

1 hour phone or Zoom call per week. Unlimited texting. Real advice from someone who has rebuilt his own life. Not therapy — advice.

GET STARTED →
Work With Elder X
$250/week
1 hour phone or Zoom call per week
Unlimited texting — I am always here
Real advice from someone who has been there
I will never let you down or abandon you

“I have been through it all and came out the other side. If you are willing to be honest about where you are, I can help you figure out what comes next.”

Write from the heart — tell me what you are going through. Be specific. Sometimes one honest email exchange is all it takes to see things differently.

Reach Out to Elder X

Not therapy. Personal advice and mentorship.

I spent every night replaying what went wrong. Elder X helped me start filling my calendar instead. Slowly the rumination gave way to a sense of progress.

David, 38 — software developer

Names and details have been composited for privacy. Stories reflect real experiences shared with Elder X.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Why $250?+

One hour of focused time plus unlimited texting is the container. If the number stops you, say so in the email — he has been broke.

Will Elder X tell me to leave my wife?+

He will not give you a script for someone else's life. He will ask what is true, what you want, and what you are willing to change. Advice, not orders.

Can I stay anonymous?+

Use your first name only if you prefer. Elder X cares about your situation, not your resume. Just be honest about what is going on — that is all he asks.

I'm not in crisis — is this still for me?+

Most men who contact Elder X are not in crisis. They just know something is off — they are going through the motions and sense they have more to give. If that sounds familiar, Elder X can help.

Is peyote or drugs part of the program?+

No. Elder X mentions his own past so you know he is not judging yours. Nothing on this site sells substances or replaces medical care.

Can my wife or partner be involved?+

Elder X works with men directly. However, many men find that when they start changing, their relationships change too. If your partner wants to understand what you are doing, Elder X can guide that conversation.

What does it cost?+

$250 per week. You get one hour on the phone or Zoom plus unlimited texts. Elder X responds personally. No assistants, no chatbots, no runaround.

What kind of advice does Elder X give?+

Practical, specific, and grounded in real experience. Structure your days. Move your body. Try an AI tool. Think about what you actually want. Elder X helps you find the next step that makes sense for your life.

ELDER X IS READY FOR YOU IN KISELJAK

If you have energy — even frustrated energy — that can be directed somewhere productive. Pick one thing tonight, then write what happened.

Write from the heart. Tell Elder X what is hurting you.

Not therapy. Advice. $250/week — 1 hour phone/Zoom + unlimited texts.

Explore More.

Every page here was built for the same reason — to help you find what you need. Start wherever feels right.

Reach Out.

Write from the heart. Tell Elder X what you are going through — be specific about your situation. Sometimes one honest email exchange is all it takes to start seeing things differently.

Write from the heart. Tell me what you are going through — be as specific as you can. The more I understand your situation, the better I can help. Sometimes one honest email exchange is all it takes to see things differently.

The more honest and specific you are, the better I can help. Share what matters — I read everything personally.

By submitting this form you agree that Rage 2 Rebuild may use the information you provide to respond to your request, provide support-related communications, and, where appropriate, connect you with the relevant Rage 2 Rebuild team member, local chapter, affiliate, sister company, or outside professional or support resource. We may share your information with affiliates or sister companies that service your booking or inquiry; their own privacy policies will apply after that handoff. See our Privacy Policy.

Men in Kiseljak — Personal Mentorship With Elder X | Rage 2 Rebuild