Article Focusing On Touring And Mental Health Gains Support From Members Of Crowbar, Hatebreed, And Type O Negative

This Tour Life have shared a new article focusing on how touring can negatively effect the mental health of artists. Notably, Matt Byrne (Hatebreed), Johnny Kelly (Quiet Riot, Type O Negative), and Kirk Windstein (Crowbar) have all backed the piece, while also sharing their own commentary.

The article said the following:

“The Raw Truth About Touring and Mental Health

Touring breaks people in ways that most don’t talk about—and the industry rarely admits.

At its core, touring is chronic displacement. You’re always somewhere else. No routine, no grounding, no permanence. Your nervous system never lands. You live in fight-or-flight: travel delays, high-pressure shows, interpersonal tension, constant overstimulation. There’s no decompression. No off switch.

And emotionally? Touring swings between extremes. One night it’s 15,000 people screaming. The next, it’s a silent hotel room. You go from deep connection to total isolation, over and over again. That kind of cycle burns out even the most resilient people.

But the culture of touring rewards stoicism and punishes vulnerability. You’re expected to power through. Joke about it. Drink through it. Avoid it. And the deeper you go, the harder it becomes to admit you’re unraveling—because your whole identity is tied to the road. Your worth becomes about being needed, useful, reliable. So when your body screams “I can’t,” your mind says “you have to.”

There’s no roadmap for recovery. No built-in support. No decompression protocol. And when you finally make it home, you don’t feel home. You feel disoriented. Numb. Out of place. No one around you quite understands what you’ve just been through—and honestly, you don’t either.

The truth is, touring can be beautiful. But it can also dismantle you.

And pretending it doesn’t is why so many are suffering in silence.

Admitting the toll doesn’t make you weak—it makes you honest.

And that honesty is where real change begins.”

You can read Byrne, Kelly, and Windstein’s thoughts on the piece below:

Byrne:

“Over 25+ years in and I wouldn’t trade it for the world. But this is definitely truth. Doing some gigs is one thing…it’s safe. But Road-Doggin’ it can god-damn mess with you.”

Kelly:

“My buddy Matt Byrne posted this. It hit home.”

Windstein:

“I SHARED THIS FROM Johnny Kelly WHO SHARED IT FROM MATT BYRNE….I’m very lucky, I get to tour with my Wife Robin. When you’re young and single , with no children , etc, it is fun, but this all hits home when you’re on a long Tour, and this goes for crew, bus drivers , etc .And by the way , I love Touring !!!”

[via The PRP]