102: Lockdown Productivity
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So how you doing?
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Myke, nothing in my world is different from the last time we spoke.
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Everything is the same. So let's just go straight into the show.
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Alright, so we said that we were going to talk about your Spaceship You video.
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I was initially, I think at the end of the last episode, I referenced it as like,
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"Oh, we're going to talk a lot about working from home," right?
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Yeah, this is Cortex-102.
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And I think in your initial pitch of we're over a hundred and four podcast numbers that are easy for you to remember when referencing stuff for people in the future.
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101 was like productivity 101 and then if we're following the college numbering structure, this would be course 102, working from home, I think was the was the rough idea.
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But the more I thought about it and the more that, because I've watched the video,
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I watched the director's commentary that you put out for your Patreon subscribers.
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And I kind of realized that this idea and the time that we're in
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right now, it's more than just working from home.
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It's bringing your work to home, but doing everything at home.
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And that's slightly different.
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So like, working from home will be a part of this episode, but it's also gonna have
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some quarantine working from home, which is a different thing.
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It's like an extra level.
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It's like level two of working from home.
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Because not only are you working from home, you also can't then go out afterwards.
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You just go to another part of the home.
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It's a very different beast.
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Yeah, it's working from home/working from home arrest.
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That's a little bit what it's like.
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Right, right. It's a house arrest type deal.
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Okay. I hadn't thought of it in those terms yet.
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I'm kind of pleased that you went with the spaceship metaphor rather than the prisoner metaphor for the video.
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Yeah, no, the spaceship metaphor is much better for a whole variety of reasons.
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No, I get what you mean that in the situation of doing everything from home is like a level of difficulty above
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simply a conversation about working from home.
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But one necessarily contains the other.
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And also the whole like circumstances around working from home right now
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is typically different to the before time of working from home
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which was that most people would choose it.
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and it was like, I have this great thing now, I've always wanted to work from home
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and stay in my pajamas and do my work. And so it was like, for a lot of people, like a success
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or a badge of honor or like a reward, but now it's like, you gotta do it whether you wanna do it or
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not. And there are people that do and there are people that don't and there are people that think
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that they can't, right, or people that actually can't. And it's a very different way of being
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put into this environment for a lot of people with no time to prepare.
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Yeah, I also think, because there are great challenges of working from home, which are
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non-obvious before you actually do it, for sure there has been a proportion of people
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who were always thinking, "God, I would just love to work from home," who are now going,
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I have been disabused of my fanciful idea about what it would be like to work at home
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and it's a time when you can recognize how helpful a lot of the structures in the world
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are that you may otherwise just take for granted.
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You're like, "Oh, working from home, it's going to be just like working in the office
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except minus all the annoying parts."
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It's like, "Oh no, that's not what it's like."
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about a different set of annoying parts? You can have that instead. So I actually think
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in, you know, looking at this in real time, like people listening in real time in May
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of 2020, this is probably a good time to do this episode, to have this discussion, because
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most people that have started working from home, the shine will have worn off by now.
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Yeah, for sure. So this is a good time to maybe you think you understand or have understood
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like the way that this is working for you, maybe we can help add some stuff in to make
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it a little bit more easy and more manageable. So SpaceshipU is the concept behind this video.
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Can you give a recap of the overall idea of what this concept means?
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Yeah, I think the way I would put it is if there's anything that I feel like I know
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about being productive and working is this important concept of the separation of spaces
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and to associate doing different activities in different areas.
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This for me is something that over the course of my life has been an idea that maybe is
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like the most persistent idea that has stuck with me in all the various iterations of how
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I work is always trying to be very strict about you do work in this area and you relax
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in this area and to separate those things out. So this has been a real background idea
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that I think once I talk about it in terms of Spaceship You, it becomes obvious like,
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"Oh, I've been discussing this idea in various different ways for years," is kind
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of like coming back to the same concept.
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Like going to the library to write.
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Yes, exactly.
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And the thing with SpaceshipU is there's now this great framing device, which is a global pandemic,
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which I think really highlights the need for structure in a person's life in ways that may not have been obvious before.
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And so I think that this is really this key concept of either working from home or just being in a self-isolation situation
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that there's this really key meta skill which is creating structure for yourself.
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And that can mean a lot of different things,
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But I think that one of the easiest ways to get started with this concept is with as much
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physical separation of the
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spaces that you possibly can do.
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And so, I think the four starter spaces that I have for if you're in an environment is like,
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you need a place to sleep,
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you need a place to work,
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you need a place to exercise,
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and you need a place to relax.
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And as much as you can distinguish those spaces from each other, you should do that.
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And so I think that's the overall idea of what's going on with Spaceship U.
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But you present it in a really nice way of like showing the isolation as being in space.
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Like it's just like a really clever way to create something softer than what's actually happening.
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I'm being a little delicate.
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And I think it was the right way to do it.
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I remember when you told me about this idea and
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Like I really pressed on you that I thought it was a good one to pursue
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Right because the framing device is so much better than if you just presented this video
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Even like the yearly themes
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Video that you did where you're like I have this idea that I think will be useful to you in the situation that we're in
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Go around your home and do this stuff
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It's way too real but showing it in this
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fictionalized world of like we're all going up in space because the world isn't habitable anymore, right?
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And we're gonna take care of it and then you can come back.
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It's a way nicer way to get this message across to me in
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an entertaining way rather than in a way where I have to face my reality while watching it.
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Right. You're just floating in a little spaceship. Yeah, you're not locked down in your home.
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Yeah. They're two fundamentally different things.
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And it allows for a nice like metaphorical separation for when you are trying to put these things into effect at home anyway
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You know like it helps you think like oh, I'm just priming the physical part of the core, right?
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Like that's what I'm doing right now and it's just nice. I think those I think humans like that type of stuff
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I I agree with that and it also sort of goes to the theme video that I made where there's a question of resonance
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And I think it's easier for these ideas to sometimes resonate with people in a particular form.
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And in talking to people, I could see that the spaceship idea was resonant with a lot of people.
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I'm like, "Oh, okay, good. This is on the right track."
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But part of the reason I was able to make the video so quickly is because it is also an idea
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that I've been trying to write and work on in various forms.
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Like, spoiler alert, you know, these aren't just good ideas for the pandemic.
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This is, you know, Spaceship U is life.
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But I'd never quite found the right way to pitch it.
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And so yeah, like the pandemic provided both the idea
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of the spaceship, which had never really crossed
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my mind before, and it is a nice framing device.
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I do have it in the back of my mind that maybe
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at some point in the future, I'd like to do like a,
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like a Spaceship U version two, if there's a way to do it
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and remove the framing of the pandemic, but you know,
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know, that'll be like at some point in the future maybe.
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- Yeah, I mean, well, 'cause that is the second part of it.
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That is almost the yearly themes idea part of it,
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of like, these are just good ideas
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that you can put into effect in your life always.
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- Yeah, yeah, and I'm really happy with the way it came out.
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I had this little bit of a conflict of,
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because I don't really like to do videos
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that are contemporary, I just had this little bit
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of a conflict of like, oh man, this is an idea
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I've been mulling over for like a decade,
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and I don't entirely want to spend it on a contemporary video,
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but I'm glad I did.
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Like, I'm glad I did this, and if I want to do a version two that more generalizes it,
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that's always an option, but I'm glad I did it this way.
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And it's been very positively received, so I've been pleased with the way it came out.
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But, you know, like, I think if this show has proved anything,
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the two of us always have various ideas about being productive.
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like, you know, you can incorporate these into another thing later on, right?
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Like they're not burned by being used here.
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But I think it was good to put this out there for now.
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This idea of there are like these four things, you've got to be physical,
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you've got to have somewhere to work, you've got to have somewhere to sleep,
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you've got to have somewhere to relax and that these spaces need to be defined in
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some way. It's really good. Like it is a very powerful message.
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But I actually want to jump ahead a little bit in what I prepared for today to
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talk about some of the practicalities of creating these spaces at home.
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Cause I know like I've been,
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I've been reading some of the feedback to the video and stuff.
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And I think that's something that a lot of people have struggled with,
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which is like, I live in a one bedroom apartment or I have children,
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you know, like there were like various reasons why I can't split up my home.
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Like I have one computer, how can, and it's fixed to a desk.
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like how am I supposed to do this?
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And I thought that maybe here we have a lot more time
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to expand than you do in the videos, right?
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So maybe we could dig into some of these practical things
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a little bit, so kind of the idea of if you wanna do this,
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how do you split up your living environment
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to give you these four things?
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So let's imagine, maybe we could do some scenarios here,
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Let's imagine someone who lives with other people, they live in a flat share, they have
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just a bedroom.
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They maybe have a desk, a small desk, which their laptop lives on, and that's all that
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Like a laptop, a desk, a chair, and a bed.
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Like how would you start thinking about, or even is there a way that you can start thinking
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about somebody being able to divide up those sections in their living space?
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- Yeah, well, it's an interesting thing
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because with this part of it,
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how do you adapt this to you in particular?
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There's a variety of things that are possible
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and you have to be looking for
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what are the things that work for you.
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And so, it's funny that you have this as the first one
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because I was thinking about when I lived in London
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and I was newly married,
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My wife and I shared a single room in a flat share.
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And it was like the two of us in one bedroom.
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And then there were, uh, some flatmates who had their own bedrooms.
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I wonder what it's like to be CGP Grey's flatmate.
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Perfectly fine.
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You know, but, but it's like, I think that's probably the most, I guess maybe
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aside from college and sharing a dorm room,
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maybe that was the most space constrained
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I've ever been in a living situation.
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- I've started you out on hard mode here.
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- Oh yeah, yeah. - I have particularly
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chosen hard mode, 'cause I know that this is a thing
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that a lot of our listeners will be dealing with
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if they live in big cities or if they're young.
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- Yeah, and so when I was writing this,
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I had in mind some of these kind of situations in life,
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or when I lived in a studio apartment or all the rest of it.
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So in this scenario, if you're living in a flat share,
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it is very probable that you do have a laptop, right?
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Like you probably don't have a big desktop computer.
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- Yeah, I'm assuming laptop is probably the thing
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for most people here.
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- And so how can you divide stuff?
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I think the biggest place to start
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is the recreation work division there.
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And on a computer, the thing that I would totally do
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is to have two different accounts on that computer
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to separate out the work from recreation.
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And so the way I used to do this
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is one of the accounts on my computer
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was everything is installed on this account.
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It was the kind of default account.
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And I had a separate account then
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that was for just writing.
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So that's the way I divided those two.
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- Different desktop backgrounds.
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- Yeah, so you have two accounts,
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you can change what programs are available to you
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in each of those accounts.
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Yeah, you wanna have different desktop backgrounds,
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for sure, that's something you wanna do.
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So it like visually looks as different as possible.
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I would probably say though, that for most people,
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if you're gonna do two accounts,
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You probably actually want to more clearly separate out like the recreation.
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So like the video game part of it.
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So if you got steam installed on your computer, I would probably say like if I don't know
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something about someone's work, you want to quarantine that part of it and you know, have
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the other account for sort of everything.
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The work account should be where everything is.
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And the recreation account can be where the games and stuff are.
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I think that is kind of counter to the way that we usually talk about things.
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We both, when we're looking at work stuff, try and pare it down.
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But again, like these situations are different.
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This is a very particular type of thing.
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Unless you're in a situation where you know that you have like one mission critical activity
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that is really high value and you want to cordon that off, I think the problem that
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most people are going to deal with is the reverse problem of especially in a lockdown
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situation that like recreation just kind of spreads everywhere and it's it's really easy
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to just start looking at YouTube or to like you know oh I'm just gonna take a quick 20
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minute factorial break which is like something that no human on earth has ever accomplished
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and you're trying to isolate that stuff.
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Again, this will depend differently on like different operating systems.
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But the nice thing about having separate accounts is you can also do things like
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having the websites blocked on one account but not the other.
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Like there's a lot of ways to play around with this.
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But for beginners starting for sure,
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pick out all the entertainment recreation stuff and put that into an account
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and make it live there, have a different desktop background,
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anything else that you can change about the way that account looks, you should totally do it,
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so that it seems as different as possible. And then, this is the dumbest thing in the world,
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but I did this when I lived in a studio and I just had one desk and a laptop, is sitting at that desk
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facing the wall, that was work mode, and then I would just move the chair around to the edge of
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the desk so that my I was like looking at the room that was like recreation mode and these things can
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be really dumb like that but I have really found that if you are consistent about it
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it trains your brain into this mode you're what you're trying to do at first is to just
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introduce these little moments of hesitation and I think that's a way that you start training up your
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brain. So, like, obviously you can flip over to the recreation account to watch YouTube
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at any moment, but it doesn't hurt to put up as many barriers as possible. And I also
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really like getting it in your mind that it's perfectly fine if you feel like, "I can't
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do work now, I want to take a break," but you're training yourself to be intentional
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about it. So you say, "Okay, I'm gonna do that, and I'm clearly deciding because I'm
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I'm just moving the chair 90 degrees around the desk and I'm like, I've decided to do
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that. And I'm not lying to myself sitting here at this computer, you know, looking at
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the work account.
00:18:18
◼
►
Yeah, I'm deciding to log out and log in. Like that, even that is like, yes, if you
00:18:23
◼
►
have the ability to make some physical movement, that is really great. Like that's the key.
00:18:28
◼
►
But if all you can do is change your account, great. Like add some friction in, as you say,
00:18:34
◼
►
so that it's to stop you.
00:18:36
◼
►
But it is just that when you do it,
00:18:38
◼
►
you know you've done it.
00:18:40
◼
►
For me, honestly, using the iPad
00:18:43
◼
►
is one of the big benefits for me.
00:18:46
◼
►
I have different work that I do on my iMac and on my iPad.
00:18:50
◼
►
And so when I'm sitting down on my iPad,
00:18:52
◼
►
it's like, right, I know what mode I'm in right now.
00:18:55
◼
►
I know the types of work that I'm gonna be doing here.
00:18:58
◼
►
When I sit down at my Mac,
00:19:00
◼
►
I know what I'm doing here as well.
00:19:02
◼
►
It's very rare for me to do non-recording
00:19:06
◼
►
or editing on my iMac.
00:19:08
◼
►
I just record and edit here.
00:19:10
◼
►
I don't sit and go through all my email.
00:19:12
◼
►
I don't sit and write my show notes, right?
00:19:14
◼
►
Like I don't deal with social media type stuff.
00:19:16
◼
►
Like all of that is done on my iPad.
00:19:19
◼
►
So I have the distinction there from devices.
00:19:22
◼
►
So I just wanted to throw this in there
00:19:24
◼
►
as like if you have an iPad,
00:19:26
◼
►
a lot of people have an iPad,
00:19:28
◼
►
now might be a really good time
00:19:31
◼
►
to get to know iPadOS.
00:19:32
◼
►
- Yeah, I'll back that.
00:19:36
◼
►
And again, this is where long-time listeners of the show
00:19:39
◼
►
will know, many years ago we were talking
00:19:41
◼
►
about the multi-pad lifestyle.
00:19:43
◼
►
And this is part of the reason why
00:19:45
◼
►
I was such a proponent of this.
00:19:47
◼
►
It's great to have multiple devices,
00:19:50
◼
►
because iOS, just by the mere fact
00:19:54
◼
►
that it works differently than your computer does,
00:19:57
◼
►
is another way that differentiates
00:19:59
◼
►
these spaces from each other. And like, I think that's that's a really good way to have
00:20:06
◼
►
this distinction between two different things like, oh, your brain associates over time.
00:20:12
◼
►
iOS is for email and for administration or however you decide to divide that up and then
00:20:18
◼
►
like, oh, Mac OS on this account that feels this way for this other kind of activity.
00:20:23
◼
►
And if you don't want to work on your iPad, your iPad is a really great tool to do all
00:20:28
◼
►
of the relaxation stuff on.
00:20:30
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, I think iPad for most people leans more towards the chillaxing side of the spectrum
00:20:38
◼
►
which is great to the working side of the spectrum.
00:20:41
◼
►
Those devices are way better, right, like at watching video and like, right, and like
00:20:46
◼
►
social media than Macs are, like that's just the thing about it. If that's all you
00:20:50
◼
►
want to use it for then go for it, but if all you have is like a MacBook Air, like that's
00:20:55
◼
►
awesome too. You just got to set them up and set them up right and observe that and pay
00:21:00
◼
►
attention to that. This is one of those things where it's easy to watch the video and be
00:21:05
◼
►
like, "Well, I don't have the space." We're already in conceptual town because we're in
00:21:08
◼
►
a spaceship, right? So think of it conceptually. So like for me, I don't have enough space
00:21:16
◼
►
in my home to define a fixed exercise point. I could give up my office, but my office is
00:21:24
◼
►
more important for me than the exercise area. What I do have though is a yoga mat. And the
00:21:30
◼
►
yoga mat goes on the ground, the exercise happens on the yoga mat. So when the yoga
00:21:36
◼
►
mat's down, exercise is occurring. It happens in the big green rectangle of this yoga mat.
00:21:43
◼
►
Yeah, you are creating a new space. The yoga mat is like a magic carpet that you're exercising
00:21:49
◼
►
on top of. And that is the space in which this occurs.
00:21:52
◼
►
Honestly, the video has been very helpful to me to be more active.
00:21:56
◼
►
That's the thing I've taken away from it, because really that was the one that I
00:22:00
◼
►
needed the most help with for myself.
00:22:01
◼
►
The rest of it I've mostly worked out, but it has really locked into me.
00:22:05
◼
►
Like you saying about like exercise is non-optional.
00:22:09
◼
►
Whilst I hate to hear that so much, I have taken it on board and I'm exercising
00:22:16
◼
►
more now than I was before.
00:22:18
◼
►
That's a message that is part of my own realizing the seriousness of the situation.
00:22:23
◼
►
Exercise is non-optional.
00:22:27
◼
►
It has had the same effect on me of re-contextualizing exercise in my brain
00:22:32
◼
►
and realizing how necessary it is.
00:22:35
◼
►
I don't have my own dedicated space for exercise.
00:22:39
◼
►
I do the same thing where I am borrowing some of my wife's space for exercise.
00:22:43
◼
►
It's always a little bit like, "Oh, are you going to use it?"
00:22:45
◼
►
Like, "No. Okay, great."
00:22:47
◼
►
it's the same thing about like, okay, it doesn't need to be, oh, I have a home gym and this home
00:22:53
◼
►
gym is a physically separate room that has floor-to-ceiling mirrors on it so I can check
00:22:58
◼
►
my form as I'm working out. Like that doesn't need to be what it is. I also think exercise is a great
00:23:05
◼
►
place to talk about the kind of psychological separation that can happen between spaces.
00:23:12
◼
►
So many people will have an exercise playlist.
00:23:17
◼
►
Like, this is the playlist I'm listening to to pump myself up to exercise.
00:23:22
◼
►
And one of the really key things about doing something like that is,
00:23:29
◼
►
if you decide, "I'm gonna have an exercise playlist."
00:23:32
◼
►
This is now becoming part of the, like, the virtual space that is the exercise room.
00:23:37
◼
►
Is this playlist?
00:23:40
◼
►
You have to pick songs that you're perfectly fine with not listening to under other circumstances.
00:23:49
◼
►
So if you have an exercise playlist, don't listen to those songs when you're not exercising.
00:23:55
◼
►
And I do the same thing with my work playlist. Like the songs that I listen to on
00:24:02
◼
►
repeat when I'm working, those songs are now forever removed from just the general rotation
00:24:09
◼
►
of music consumption.
00:24:11
◼
►
And if you do this with the exercise playlist
00:24:14
◼
►
and you do this with a working playlist,
00:24:16
◼
►
I think those are two prime areas
00:24:18
◼
►
where again you can create this sense
00:24:22
◼
►
of now this is a different space.
00:24:25
◼
►
Oh, because this- I'm at the gym
00:24:27
◼
►
and the gym music is playing
00:24:29
◼
►
and the only place that I ever hear the gym music
00:24:31
◼
►
is in my gym.
00:24:33
◼
►
Like, oh, I'm here working.
00:24:34
◼
►
My face is looking at the blank wall of my home
00:24:38
◼
►
But I have the working playlist on and like this is what I do now.
00:24:43
◼
►
This is like different acoustic environment.
00:24:45
◼
►
I do think like a key thing that people sometimes miss with this
00:24:49
◼
►
is it's not just about associating music with a place.
00:24:53
◼
►
It's about removing that association from other places.
00:24:58
◼
►
Like you cannot listen to that music in different circumstances.
00:25:01
◼
►
- Anybody that's ever set one of their favorite pop songs
00:25:04
◼
►
as their alarm knows what you're talking about, right?
00:25:07
◼
►
Yes, that's a great example.
00:25:08
◼
►
Like, "Oh, I have this song. I would love to hear it when I wake up."
00:25:11
◼
►
Yeah, that lasts for a couple of weeks.
00:25:14
◼
►
And then you never want to hear that song again.
00:25:17
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, no, for sure, for sure.
00:25:19
◼
►
I forget, I can't remember the name of it, but I still have like
00:25:22
◼
►
the opening bars of this one Sigur Rós song,
00:25:25
◼
►
which was my alarm when I was going to work as a teacher.
00:25:29
◼
►
I still can't hear the first couple bars of that
00:25:32
◼
►
without having this like, "*GASP*", like I'm drowning feeling.
00:25:35
◼
►
It's terrible.
00:25:37
◼
►
Yeah, but it's a great example of how I think there's like, your brain has these hooks
00:25:43
◼
►
that are just there waiting to be used.
00:25:46
◼
►
And if you just pay a little bit of attention, you can take these things which are like,
00:25:51
◼
►
"Oh, isn't it funny that I feel like I'm drowning every time I hear the song that was my wake-up alarm?"
00:25:56
◼
►
And be like, "Can we turn this to be useful instead of just like an accidental thing that occurs?"
00:26:01
◼
►
occurs. And then you get the satisfactory feeling that you are in control of your own brain.
00:26:08
◼
►
Yeah. Because you've realized you've got one up on it, right?
00:26:12
◼
►
Yeah. Oh, for sure. For sure. Like the number of times that I don't feel like writing at first,
00:26:20
◼
►
you know, now having done this for years, if I'm feeling particularly resistant, there's a couple
00:26:26
◼
►
of the songs that are especially burned into my brain as like this is writing music and if I put
00:26:32
◼
►
those on and just kind of sit in front of the computer and wait it's like well more times than
00:26:39
◼
►
not like typing is gonna start because this is just what this music is for it's for physically
00:26:45
◼
►
moving your hands on on the keyboard. One of mine that I've recently started doing which is kind of
00:26:49
◼
►
follow up from a few episodes ago where I said that I was using like noise cancelling a lot more
00:26:55
◼
►
right, just to just create space in the home. And I was like, oh, I should try pairing this with the
00:27:00
◼
►
app Dark Noise that we spoke about in the State of the Apps episode. They have a sound in there,
00:27:05
◼
►
I think it's called "beach," and it's just the sound of waves crashing. And I've been using it
00:27:10
◼
►
when I am struggling to get some writing done, right? So I will just put that on,
00:27:16
◼
►
and then it's like a simple sound. It's not music, and I can just do it. So I've been really enjoying
00:27:22
◼
►
using that app because also it's got some fun stuff in it like coffee shop noises.
00:27:26
◼
►
Yeah. So it's like I'm outside, right? Uh, so yeah, more than just cause like the white noise,
00:27:33
◼
►
brown noise, those, I hate that. Can't stand it. Yeah. I don't, I don't use any of the pure
00:27:37
◼
►
sounds either. I don't like them. Yeah. I really hate like white noise in a white noise machine.
00:27:43
◼
►
I just want background sounds. So I've been using that a lot for, for trying to help me get
00:27:49
◼
►
through tasks that I've been struggling with.
00:27:52
◼
►
It's funny that you mention that because there's also like a time way that you can do these kind of
00:27:58
◼
►
associations that are not physical differences, but they're psychological differences and
00:28:03
◼
►
my wife and I have gotten into the habit on the weekends like,
00:28:07
◼
►
"Oh, weekend often is like sitting around and reading, you know, just relaxing kind of time."
00:28:12
◼
►
And I just happened to do it a few times to put on this foresty woods background kind of noise
00:28:19
◼
►
while we're reading in the afternoon.
00:28:21
◼
►
And it's like, man, three weekends in a row of doing that
00:28:24
◼
►
and now that is the, oh, this is the sound
00:28:26
◼
►
when we're reading sound, you know.
00:28:28
◼
►
And it's just interesting how fast your brain
00:28:30
◼
►
is willing to associate with that.
00:28:33
◼
►
And now it's very clearly like, oh no,
00:28:34
◼
►
this soundscape is just for the weekends.
00:28:37
◼
►
That's what this soundscape is.
00:28:39
◼
►
I know it's Sunday because it sounds like the forest.
00:28:42
◼
►
And like, yeah, it just works really well.
00:28:44
◼
►
- I'm just gonna say, I don't know if we're gonna talk
00:28:46
◼
►
about this later or not, but like Animal Crossing
00:28:48
◼
►
has been real great for me still with like,
00:28:50
◼
►
I know where I am in the week,
00:28:52
◼
►
I know where I am in the day,
00:28:53
◼
►
like having something which helps you with that,
00:28:55
◼
►
it's adding structure in the same way
00:28:58
◼
►
that like I do all of my show prep
00:29:00
◼
►
as my first task of the day.
00:29:03
◼
►
I only do it in the mornings,
00:29:05
◼
►
it will all be done by 12, after 12,
00:29:08
◼
►
I don't do prep for shows anymore.
00:29:10
◼
►
I will do other work because that is the work
00:29:13
◼
►
that takes the most from me.
00:29:15
◼
►
it's the work I have to work on the hardest.
00:29:17
◼
►
So I do it first, I do it because it could take
00:29:21
◼
►
middle longest, I also need the most caffeine, right?
00:29:24
◼
►
Like you said, that is when I would do that.
00:29:26
◼
►
Like that is sitting down, writing out lines,
00:29:28
◼
►
doing research, all that stuff.
00:29:29
◼
►
That is my first task of the day, every day, always,
00:29:33
◼
►
before I start doing anything else.
00:29:35
◼
►
But that is me adding structure in, right?
00:29:38
◼
►
Like all of these things, all of this,
00:29:40
◼
►
the whole thing, right, Spaceship U, structure.
00:29:44
◼
►
You've got to put structure in your life,
00:29:46
◼
►
and you can do it in so many ways.
00:29:48
◼
►
You can do it by tricking your brain with music.
00:29:51
◼
►
You can do it by saying,
00:29:52
◼
►
I will only do these tasks in the morning.
00:29:54
◼
►
Like you only write in the mornings, right?
00:29:58
◼
►
- Right, so you like write morning time is writing time.
00:30:00
◼
►
Or like forest sounds means reading time.
00:30:03
◼
►
It's Sunday, right?
00:30:05
◼
►
- And then it's like, oh that yoga mat,
00:30:07
◼
►
that's where the workouts happen.
00:30:09
◼
►
They don't happen anywhere else.
00:30:10
◼
►
That soft thing in the corner,
00:30:11
◼
►
that's where sleeping happens.
00:30:13
◼
►
Nothing else happens there, right?
00:30:14
◼
►
Like this side of the desk, this is where work is.
00:30:17
◼
►
This side of the desk, I got the window, I can relax.
00:30:20
◼
►
Finding structure is so important
00:30:25
◼
►
and it's always been important for working at home
00:30:27
◼
►
but it's even more important when home is all there is.
00:30:31
◼
►
- There are a bunch of meta skills in life
00:30:34
◼
►
that are really key in accomplishing
00:30:38
◼
►
whatever it is you wanna do.
00:30:40
◼
►
One of those incredibly important meta skills
00:30:42
◼
►
It's just like time management, being aware of how you're spending your time.
00:30:46
◼
►
And one of those other skills is this self structure and it can express itself in a lot
00:30:53
◼
►
And I think part of the lockdown situation is that many people are like forced to become
00:31:03
◼
►
aware in a very visceral way how much work the structure of the external world was doing
00:31:12
◼
►
in getting them to do what they need to do when that's been removed. And so it's like,
00:31:18
◼
►
you can just suddenly realize like, oh God, I have to create some structure here. Otherwise,
00:31:24
◼
►
I'm just gonna drift forever. One of the ones I'll mention, which it doesn't work great for me now,
00:31:30
◼
►
but I did use to do it in the beginning is also just clothing. So, you know, you have like
00:31:37
◼
►
shirts that you would wear when you're working or when you're not working. Like some people really
00:31:42
◼
►
like to do this. If like they'll have a work shirt and I did do this in the beginning. I eventually
00:31:48
◼
►
found like I didn't really need to after a while but for some people this is another way to do this
00:31:54
◼
►
of like I have put on the work shirt or one of my comments that was "Oh that's genius" was someone
00:32:00
◼
►
said they have a work necklace and so they're like when I put this necklace on like this is work time
00:32:05
◼
►
and then I take the necklace off and it is not work time. I thought like oh that's that's another
00:32:09
◼
►
great kind of token to do this but even as I say like oh I don't really use the clothing one
00:32:15
◼
►
anymore there is a little way in which again it kind of snuck into my life now which is have a
00:32:21
◼
►
pair of slippers that I've made this decision about like only wearing the slippers on the
00:32:26
◼
►
weekend and so again it it weirdly gives the weekend a particular feeling of like oh it's
00:32:31
◼
►
obviously sunday because i'm wearing the slippers and there's the forest sound like how sunday does
00:32:37
◼
►
this feel maximum sunday that's how it feels various levels of pajamas
00:32:42
◼
►
yeah you have your casual pajamas and you have your formal pajamas and you know what that's not
00:32:50
◼
►
even a joke like that's perfectly fine if you have casual and formal pajamas like yeah your brain will
00:32:54
◼
►
just start latching onto it.
00:32:56
◼
►
Maybe it's just t-shirts and basketball shorts in the week and silk on the weekends.
00:33:00
◼
►
You do you, right?
00:33:01
◼
►
Whatever makes you comfortable.
00:33:03
◼
►
I want to go back to some other practical things.
00:33:07
◼
►
I know I've seen this one a lot.
00:33:09
◼
►
I have children.
00:33:10
◼
►
How can I follow any of this?
00:33:13
◼
►
Children are chaos balls in your house.
00:33:16
◼
►
Kids make it harder and there's nothing that people with children like more than hearing
00:33:21
◼
►
advice from someone who doesn't have children. So I'm not really gonna have a lot of specific
00:33:28
◼
►
tips to say here except that you can't tell me that even with children it wouldn't be
00:33:34
◼
►
a good idea to have a dedicated workspace in your house.
00:33:38
◼
►
Because I assume people that have children that have to work from home now are still
00:33:44
◼
►
expected to work, right? Yeah.
00:33:46
◼
►
I know it's significantly more difficult
00:33:49
◼
►
because you also have to be a teacher, I guess,
00:33:52
◼
►
in a lot of instances, but I'm assuming at the same time
00:33:57
◼
►
that your work is expecting you to work.
00:33:59
◼
►
So maybe you're working at weird hours,
00:34:02
◼
►
and if that's the case, maybe you need more of this stuff
00:34:06
◼
►
of like putting on this T-shirt means that it's work time
00:34:10
◼
►
or this music because you will be working at times
00:34:13
◼
►
that you're not used to normally working at.
00:34:15
◼
►
because you haven't been able to work at all
00:34:18
◼
►
when the children are awake, right?
00:34:20
◼
►
So you've got to work when they're asleep.
00:34:22
◼
►
So maybe you need more structure that way.
00:34:24
◼
►
But like it is, this stuff is more difficult
00:34:28
◼
►
than for some or the other.
00:34:30
◼
►
But that's why like what I wanted to explore
00:34:32
◼
►
is that you don't have to lift this wholesale, right?
00:34:36
◼
►
Like there is a type of person that does need to do
00:34:39
◼
►
literally everything that you've told them
00:34:41
◼
►
in the exact order that you've told them.
00:34:44
◼
►
but not everybody does and not everybody can,
00:34:47
◼
►
but there are definitely parts of it
00:34:49
◼
►
that anybody can use even a little bit.
00:34:53
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, and like having a different space for work,
00:34:56
◼
►
especially when those children eating
00:35:00
◼
►
perhaps depends on the work,
00:35:01
◼
►
like you might wanna do that.
00:35:04
◼
►
You might wanna make sure that you're able to get done
00:35:06
◼
►
what needs to be done.
00:35:07
◼
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But yeah, kids make it harder for sure.
00:35:10
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Flatmates make it harder for sure.
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Can we talk about Creation Station?
00:38:10
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►
Creation Station.
00:38:11
◼
►
I know from the way you say it, you're saying it, Myke.
00:38:15
◼
►
Like you're getting right at the heart of something with this video for me.
00:38:20
◼
►
Didn't like that.
00:38:21
◼
►
I didn't like Creation Station.
00:38:23
◼
►
Why didn't you like Creation Station?
00:38:24
◼
►
I think it was unnecessarily abstract as a phrase to use.
00:38:29
◼
►
Like it could have just been called workstation.
00:38:32
◼
►
'Cause like I've noticed throughout this entire episode,
00:38:34
◼
►
you've been referring to it as work.
00:38:36
◼
►
- Yeah, 'cause it is work.
00:38:37
◼
►
- Yeah. - It's totally work.
00:38:38
◼
►
- So why did you call it creation station?
00:38:40
◼
►
So this being the idea of like you have your place
00:38:45
◼
►
where you're sleeping, you have your place
00:38:47
◼
►
where you're exercising, your place where you're relaxing,
00:38:50
◼
►
and then the place where you're doing the other stuff,
00:38:52
◼
►
which you called Creation Station.
00:38:54
◼
►
- Creation Station. (laughs)
00:38:56
◼
►
- Which sounds really lovely, right?
00:38:58
◼
►
It rolls off the tongue,
00:39:00
◼
►
but I think doesn't actually sum up, in my mind,
00:39:04
◼
►
what is being done here.
00:39:05
◼
►
- Yeah, no, it's very, you know,
00:39:07
◼
►
conjunction, junction, what's your function?
00:39:10
◼
►
For the behind-the-scenes part of it,
00:39:11
◼
►
this is where, for the video,
00:39:14
◼
►
mostly, once we get past the first minute,
00:39:18
◼
►
and if you ignore the last 10 seconds,
00:39:21
◼
►
the pandemic framing is basically completely absent.
00:39:24
◼
►
It's like, "Pandemic?
00:39:26
◼
►
Oh, I never heard of it.
00:39:27
◼
►
This is just a great way to live."
00:39:29
◼
►
That's sort of what the "Spaceship U" video is like
00:39:31
◼
►
in the middle part of it.
00:39:33
◼
►
But this is the one place where
00:39:37
◼
►
if I was making a "Spaceship U" version too
00:39:41
◼
►
that didn't have the pandemic background,
00:39:43
◼
►
I'd be much more likely to call it the workstation.
00:39:47
◼
►
- But the reason I called it the creation station
00:39:49
◼
►
is because I did want to emphasize the point that this is not just about work. Because if you say
00:40:02
◼
►
the word work, most people are going to associate that with a job. And then like, I know that
00:40:10
◼
►
there's going to be a lot of people who are watching this that are either students or who
00:40:14
◼
►
are unemployed, or employed, but unable to do their jobs, right? Like,
00:40:19
◼
►
the furloughing, right?
00:40:20
◼
►
Yeah, people who are on furlough.
00:40:22
◼
►
And so I'm being a little facetious, like I know why you didn't call it that.
00:40:26
◼
►
Yeah, but it's like, but you're also hitting on the one, you know, whenever you make something,
00:40:30
◼
►
there's this funny difference between the audience and the creator where the audience watches a thing
00:40:37
◼
►
and sort of comes always to the conclusion that the creator was completely confident in every
00:40:46
◼
►
single part of this in every single sentence, right? And it's like, no, no, the person who
00:40:52
◼
►
created it can be uncertain with some parts of it as well. And this is one of those moments
00:40:57
◼
►
where I'm like, no, it's totally legit. Like, why didn't you call it the workstation? It's
00:41:01
◼
►
a thing I went back and forth with a lot. But because of the context in which the video
00:41:07
◼
►
is being made, I did want to go broader, even if I agree that it's probably too broad. But
00:41:15
◼
►
But I just figured there's like a way higher proportion of people who are watching this
00:41:19
◼
►
video at this time are not going to have a clear job that they can perform.
00:41:27
◼
►
So like I wanted to have it be broader here.
00:41:31
◼
►
And then this is also the part where whenever I look at the final videos I can see all of
00:41:36
◼
►
these little pieces that are left over from different versions of the script.
00:41:41
◼
►
And this is one of these places where I originally wanted to have a much broader discussion about
00:41:47
◼
►
what does creation mean?
00:41:50
◼
►
And very quickly realized, like, don't get into this, man, right?
00:41:53
◼
►
Like, it's too much.
00:41:55
◼
►
It's too much of a diversion.
00:41:56
◼
►
You're gonna have to make a decision that's not completely comfortable either way.
00:42:00
◼
►
Like you don't want to call it the workstation.
00:42:03
◼
►
Creation Station is the next best name, but including too much of a description about
00:42:07
◼
►
what exactly you mean by this is too much.
00:42:10
◼
►
So it's got to go and you're kind of left with this in between place.
00:42:13
◼
►
Do you want to talk about that here though?
00:42:15
◼
►
I mean, we have the time, right?
00:42:16
◼
►
Like that's the beauty of the show is right.
00:42:18
◼
►
Like, yeah, let's get into this part of it.
00:42:21
◼
►
So I mean, let's talk about what humans do for each other, Myke, which is hopefully create
00:42:28
◼
►
things that they themselves or other people value.
00:42:34
◼
►
And that that's sort of the idea of the creation station here is what you want to kind of have
00:42:42
◼
►
is like a like a compass point that directs you to like, what activities should I do?
00:42:48
◼
►
And I think particularly like, when you're younger, it can often seem like, what should
00:42:58
◼
►
I don't I don't know what I should do.
00:42:59
◼
►
Everything is boring and awful, right?
00:43:02
◼
►
And a useful compass point is just this idea of, hey, the world's a really big place.
00:43:09
◼
►
Not everybody can be an expert in everything.
00:43:13
◼
►
And the way that the modern world works is people learn skills.
00:43:19
◼
►
And then you feel like we all trade these skills with each other.
00:43:23
◼
►
And so you want to be looking at things that you can learn to do, which are valuable to
00:43:30
◼
►
other people.
00:43:31
◼
►
This is what we generally call work in the world.
00:43:34
◼
►
It's like, you have a skill that another person doesn't have, and the two of you trade with
00:43:41
◼
►
And so at Creation Station, one of the things you can think of if like you're sort of drifting
00:43:47
◼
►
is just kind of thinking about, even in the vaguest possible ways, what things pique your
00:43:54
◼
►
interest just a little bit that might also be useful to other people.
00:44:00
◼
►
And like, that's a good thing to investigate as,
00:44:04
◼
►
"Let me explore this."
00:44:06
◼
►
You know, "Oh, I like spreadsheets.
00:44:08
◼
►
Let me learn about pivot tables."
00:44:11
◼
►
You know, or "Cooking catches my interest.
00:44:13
◼
►
Like, let me explore this as a skill."
00:44:16
◼
►
And it's a place to get started with that stuff.
00:44:20
◼
►
If that's not necessarily obvious to you,
00:44:23
◼
►
you can also start out with like,
00:44:25
◼
►
humans can create things that they themselves value.
00:44:29
◼
►
So like, what do you do that you enjoy?
00:44:33
◼
►
Right, like, you're tending your garden.
00:44:35
◼
►
And no one else in the whole world sees the garden but you,
00:44:38
◼
►
but it makes you happy.
00:44:40
◼
►
Like, that is creating a kind of value in the world,
00:44:43
◼
►
even if it's just a value for yourself.
00:44:46
◼
►
So that's why I wanted to go a little bit broad with Creation Station,
00:44:49
◼
►
because this idea of value,
00:44:52
◼
►
it is generally applicable, but it's much more applicable in this time,
00:44:57
◼
►
because like you have way more leeway here about what it is that you want to do.
00:45:02
◼
►
There's also there's also a part of it which again, it wouldn't really fit in the video,
00:45:06
◼
►
but I think it's also useful.
00:45:08
◼
►
So for people who are working remotely at jobs, maybe they don't love, it can be sometimes
00:45:16
◼
►
helpful to understand that this is still part of like the creation of value.
00:45:24
◼
►
of you don't love this job, you are still creating something, you know, whether it's
00:45:31
◼
►
like organized emails, right, or replies in a knowledge base, right, or whatever it is
00:45:40
◼
►
that is of value to your employer.
00:45:42
◼
►
And like that's the reason that they pay you because the thing that you're doing is creating
00:45:46
◼
►
value to them.
00:45:48
◼
►
And I just think from reading comments online, a common situation can be that sometimes people
00:45:54
◼
►
will feel like a job that they don't like can seem extra sort of why in a time like
00:46:03
◼
►
this when they're home on their own.
00:46:07
◼
►
And so I just think it's useful to point that out.
00:46:10
◼
►
Like this is part of creation.
00:46:13
◼
►
Like this is part of the tapestry of the world.
00:46:16
◼
►
There is a really strong "we're all in this together" vibe at the moment. Everyone
00:46:23
◼
►
is in the same boat here, right? Around the world. We're all in this. So anything that
00:46:31
◼
►
you are doing, no matter what it is, is adding some value back into society at the moment.
00:46:40
◼
►
If you are tech support for an energy company, you're helping other people who have problems
00:46:48
◼
►
with their energy right now, which means a lot more to people than it typically would
00:46:53
◼
►
have otherwise.
00:46:55
◼
►
So not necessarily we all need to start putting flowers in our hair and value our jobs, but
00:47:03
◼
►
it's at least a more helpful framing device as to why you do what you do even if you don't
00:47:09
◼
►
a little paragraph that got cut where it was something like if you're able to work digitally
00:47:14
◼
►
on the spaceship no matter what you're doing it's another hand on the like on the wheel like
00:47:19
◼
►
keeping things turning right like something along those lines of like we gotta keep this wheel of
00:47:26
◼
►
the economy needs to spin and everyone who can do anything no matter what it is is an additional
00:47:34
◼
►
turning force on this wheel and and like that is that is part of this concept of like the
00:47:39
◼
►
creation of something that is valued like an additional positive force on something
00:47:45
◼
►
that needs to keep moving.
00:47:47
◼
►
Because if you're a if you're doing something right now it means something to someone.
00:47:52
◼
►
Otherwise it wouldn't be happening.
00:47:54
◼
►
And if you're not then you are in a interesting position of being able to find something else
00:48:02
◼
►
of interest to do.
00:48:04
◼
►
A hobby that you've always wanted to undertake.
00:48:07
◼
►
Like you have the world given excuse right now to do it.
00:48:13
◼
►
That is the gift that you have, right?
00:48:17
◼
►
You may have a bit more time in your life to learn to cook, to read that book, to write a book, right?
00:48:26
◼
►
Whatever. This is a time in which you can do it, right?
00:48:30
◼
►
And I know that's why Creation Station is named Creation Station.
00:48:33
◼
►
But I think the word creation now is too heavily tied into being a content creator for a lot of
00:48:39
◼
►
people. Yeah, I can see that.
00:48:41
◼
►
And I think that's where maybe a lot of people get stuck up, because creation now seems like
00:48:47
◼
►
a barrier, like it's this big thing that you have to do.
00:48:50
◼
►
That's why the real name of the station is, open parentheses, the, close parentheses, creation,
00:48:59
◼
►
open parentheses, of value, close parentheses, station.
00:49:03
◼
►
Right? Like, that's the name of the station.
00:49:06
◼
►
- It's very awkward though.
00:49:07
◼
►
Perhaps like the closest second call that I came to was like crafting station?
00:49:16
◼
►
- That's worse.
00:49:17
◼
►
- Yeah, that's why I didn't pick it.
00:49:18
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, that's worse.
00:49:19
◼
►
This is Minecraft.
00:49:21
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, crafting is gonna make people think of Animal Crossing.
00:49:25
◼
►
Is this where I'm supposed to play Animal Crossing?
00:49:27
◼
►
like no this is not where you're supposed to play Animal Crossing.
00:49:30
◼
►
Well you know I guess it depends if you're a streamer.
00:49:32
◼
►
Well no but see that's that's like this is actually I think an an interesting point here
00:49:38
◼
►
is when you talk about like things you value there is a little bit of of like bleed over into
00:49:45
◼
►
like the recreation part like what is the what is the difference between the two of these
00:49:50
◼
►
and so part of part of why I like Creation Station and talking about like making things of value is
00:49:57
◼
►
because like if you're just watching a movie right you're sitting there and you're watching a movie
00:50:01
◼
►
you can enjoy that that is recreation but if you are not doing anything with having watched that
00:50:09
◼
►
movie you are not able to create something that any other human would value right but if you like
00:50:16
◼
►
talk about that movie in an entertaining way on a podcast like look now you have created
00:50:21
◼
►
entertainment then it's the same thing with video games like there's a huge difference between
00:50:26
◼
►
I am playing a video game on my own and I am enjoying it.
00:50:30
◼
►
It's like, great! That is recreation, which we all need.
00:50:33
◼
►
But it is not creating anything that another human can conceivably value
00:50:39
◼
►
unless you switch it into this, "Oh, I'm broadcasting it."
00:50:42
◼
►
Right? And I'm hopefully talking about it in a way that people find interesting.
00:50:46
◼
►
So that's why I think Creation Station, like when you're focusing on learning skills,
00:50:52
◼
►
what I was trying to say before with this idea of the compass is like,
00:50:55
◼
►
Like, there should be some potential outward direction of these things.
00:51:02
◼
►
It doesn't even need to be extremely obvious, but that just like some sort of outward projection
00:51:09
◼
►
that another person could conceivably value some version of this in the future.
00:51:15
◼
►
And that's what distinguishes some activities from recreation, which is much more just internal
00:51:22
◼
►
than the working station, which is more externally directed.
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00:52:23
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com setapp dot com and go there now and see how setapp will fit in your workflow.
00:52:28
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A thanks to setapp for their support of this show and all of relay FM.
00:52:32
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Alright, now, no one's listening anymore, it's just me and you.
00:52:37
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Just the two of us.
00:52:38
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Can I stop the recording?
00:52:41
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Just in case we want to check this back later on.
00:52:44
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Just for funsies.
00:52:45
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But no one's here anymore, it's just me and you.
00:52:47
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Okay, so we're chilling out.
00:52:48
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We're just hanging out.
00:52:50
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Yeah, you can move your desk, do whatever nonsense it is you like to do.
00:52:51
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Great, thank you.
00:52:52
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I'll touch the microphone.
00:52:53
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Yeah, thanks.
00:52:54
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Yeah, yeah, this is just me and you time.
00:52:56
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I'll eat my yogurt.
00:52:57
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So we've explained, I think, the idea behind all of this, right?
00:53:00
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you know because it's just me and you here.
00:53:02
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Yeah, it's like why are you recapping what just happened before the ad break? I don't
00:53:07
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You know how I talk by now, this is what I do. How are you really doing with all of this?
00:53:11
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How are you like honestly faring with this separation?
00:53:15
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Okay, so I have a really hard time talking about this, which is why I'm glad it's just
00:53:21
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the two of us.
00:53:22
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Just with, it doesn't matter because it's just me and you now, so it's fine.
00:53:26
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Right, I mean the fact that you keep emphasizing it makes me a little bit suspicious.
00:53:29
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Again, this is how I always talk.
00:53:31
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I mean, in fairness, you do always talk a little bit, you know, like you're broadcasting
00:53:37
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because that's just your cadence now.
00:53:39
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Well, this, and also, like, especially when we're having these conversations,
00:53:43
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because I'm in this area.
00:53:48
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I've got the microphone in front of me, the headphones on,
00:53:50
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and I'm looking at the levels moving on the USB interface.
00:53:54
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Yeah, that's true.
00:53:55
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You do have a very difficult time separating out your socializing space from your working space.
00:54:02
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Like you're in a bad place there.
00:54:04
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►
The Zoom call socializing thing is like, it doesn't work so well for me right now because I only like to use my proper microphone.
00:54:12
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It's my, it's a thought of my own doing really.
00:54:15
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Yeah, no, it totally is.
00:54:16
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It's actually, normally I would do any FaceTime calls that I would do on my podcasting equipment as well.
00:54:23
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just like, so it sounds better for the other person and it's all ready to go.
00:54:26
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But I realized very quickly into the lockdown when catching up with family and
00:54:31
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friends, it was like, I can't do this.
00:54:33
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►
I can't do this in this room because I'm like,
00:54:36
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►
I'm being way more strict about these barriers.
00:54:39
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►
And I genuinely felt like it was kind of messing with my brain of,
00:54:43
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►
Oh, I'm taking my office super seriously,
00:54:47
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►
like more seriously than I ever have in my entire life.
00:54:51
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It's like a sanctified environment.
00:54:53
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But it's also where I could like kick back and put my feet up on the table
00:54:57
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►
and just chit chat with a friend.
00:54:59
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►
So like these two things don't line up.
00:55:01
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I think I've only really been sitting at the iMac for the zoom calls where there
00:55:05
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is also some element of professional to them.
00:55:08
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So like I might be hanging out with a friend, but we're also like colleagues.
00:55:14
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But I have been doing more like there's no pretense of work here on the sofa in
00:55:20
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the living room, like for family and friends.
00:55:22
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You've seen this.
00:55:23
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We did this.
00:55:23
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►
Yeah, yeah, and that's that's exactly what I made a decision really early on was oh no, wait a minute
00:55:31
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►
I'm changing this. I'm doing all of my FaceTime calls on the iPad on the couch. Like I'm just I'm redefining this
00:55:37
◼
►
I'm taking it out of this area. Like if I'm if I'm doing a podcast I'll do it on the equipment
00:55:43
◼
►
And if I'm not doing a podcast, I'm gonna do it on the iPad on my couch. But again, like we're just
00:55:49
◼
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Socializing between the two of us and staying on the equipment and recording for convenience factors. Yeah. Well, this is after the show
00:55:56
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►
Yeah, we're already here. Yeah. Yeah, but so the so the thing that's that I have a hard time
00:56:00
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►
talking about and that is
00:56:03
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►
extraordinarily poorly received by some people is that
00:56:09
◼
►
I'm doing great
00:56:13
◼
►
Okay, it's the honest truth. That's difficult to talk about is
00:56:18
◼
►
My theme, like, Year of Clarity, couldn't more perfectly be aligned for this sort of situation.
00:56:26
◼
►
Yeah, in that regard you really lucked out with a theme this year, didn't you?
00:56:30
◼
►
Yeah, you drew the short stick on that one.
00:56:32
◼
►
Oh boy, did I!
00:56:34
◼
►
But for me, it's it has been perfect and
00:56:37
◼
►
lined up with a bunch of changes that I wanted to make in life anyway, and so I feel like I've taken
00:56:47
◼
►
you know, for a variety of reasons this situation extremely seriously and
00:56:51
◼
►
that also means like that's part of the reason the whole video came out is because it's like, okay
00:56:57
◼
►
I need to set up these spaces. I need to treat exercise like it's mandatory medicine
00:57:03
◼
►
There's just no question about this at all. I'm being very strict about like if I'm in my office, I'm working and
00:57:09
◼
►
Yeah, it's it's I've been trying to think about how to articulate it, but the truth is
00:57:16
◼
►
is right now in this little spaceship.
00:57:20
◼
►
I just feel like I'm doing really well.
00:57:23
◼
►
And I also have a lot of markers that are objective markers
00:57:26
◼
►
that are tracking with that.
00:57:28
◼
►
Without a doubt, I'm in the best physical shape of my life.
00:57:31
◼
►
And I've got several really interesting,
00:57:35
◼
►
really engaging video projects
00:57:37
◼
►
that are in the works in parallel.
00:57:40
◼
►
And my wife and I have been spending
00:57:43
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►
great quality time together.
00:57:45
◼
►
The only place that's a real downside
00:57:49
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►
is that we don't have any access to private outdoor space.
00:57:54
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►
And because of my wife's health,
00:57:57
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we're still being very cautious about going outside.
00:58:01
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►
And so that is the only thing
00:58:03
◼
►
if I could make something be different
00:58:06
◼
►
to improve the situation.
00:58:08
◼
►
We should have escaped to the countryside years ago
00:58:11
◼
►
so that we could go outside for walks.
00:58:13
◼
►
So, you know, my wife and I have been inside without leaving the house since the start of this.
00:58:22
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►
With only for me a couple of rare exceptions for necessary errands and things.
00:58:27
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►
So that's the only part where I feel like if I could change something I would change that.
00:58:32
◼
►
Otherwise, I don't know, like, I feel really great and there's something psychologically very different about
00:58:38
◼
►
a calendar that literally has no items scheduled in the future at all
00:58:44
◼
►
versus a calendar where, oh, there's a conference two months from now. Like, it creates a real
00:58:51
◼
►
feeling of space and freedom and is quite a different way to have spent my time over the
00:58:57
◼
►
last couple of months than the original plan. But yeah, it like, that's a difficult thing to
00:59:05
◼
►
talk about because it makes some people really upset if you say like, "Oh, this lockdown
00:59:13
◼
►
has been great for me personally. I mean, yes, it's a global economic and personal disaster,
00:59:18
◼
►
and you know, it may very well be a personal disaster for me at some point in the future,
00:59:24
◼
►
but like right now, this is fantastic." So yeah, it's just a weird situation to
00:59:31
◼
►
be in but that's the truth of it is I feel like it's it's been an incredibly clarifying and
00:59:38
◼
►
focusing time for me and this and this is also where after saying all that it always makes me
00:59:45
◼
►
dread then being like how are you doing before before we get to that there's like something I
00:59:52
◼
►
think I've been thinking about recently like you mentioned about like escaping to the country
00:59:57
◼
►
Do you think you would be more likely to move out of London now than before?
01:00:01
◼
►
Yeah, yeah for sure.
01:00:03
◼
►
I'm thinking it now, like I want a house next, not an apartment.
01:00:07
◼
►
Like this has always been something I wanted anyway, right?
01:00:10
◼
►
I want to be able to move into a house.
01:00:12
◼
►
And so we haven't made any kind of moves on that.
01:00:17
◼
►
We would always have been at least a year or two before we would even have ever thought
01:00:21
◼
►
about moving anyway.
01:00:23
◼
►
But I am now more like thinking a garden would be nice right now.
01:00:28
◼
►
And I'm also now thinking right now in my life my proximity to London is not really that helpful.
01:00:37
◼
►
Right? Like I could be as far away from the center again and definitely know I would still have
01:00:45
◼
►
access to all the modern conveniences. Like there are lots of towns in England which would provide
01:00:52
◼
►
me what I want mostly for the time that I'm in right now. It would add frustrations for
01:00:59
◼
►
travel, but maybe I don't do as much of that in the future anyway. So I am personally thinking
01:01:06
◼
►
maybe we move further out now than we were expecting before, because priorities might
01:01:12
◼
►
start to change. And it's just not something that I'd really considered. I was always like,
01:01:16
◼
►
"We will stay in an apartment until we can afford a home in and around the area of London
01:01:22
◼
►
we were already in.
01:01:23
◼
►
Right, yes, yes, I see what you mean.
01:01:25
◼
►
But now it might be like, "Eh, no, maybe we just move like another 30 minutes further
01:01:30
◼
►
out and buy a home."
01:01:34
◼
►
Rather than an apartment.
01:01:35
◼
►
One of the things that's really been on my mind is that we don't have a car.
01:01:39
◼
►
I've never cared about that before.
01:01:42
◼
►
It's never mattered.
01:01:43
◼
►
I'm so f***ing annoyed that I didn't learn to drive.
01:01:46
◼
►
Because I've been talking about it for years, right?
01:01:49
◼
►
and just was like, "Ah, whatever, like, the studio will make me get the car, right?"
01:01:56
◼
►
If I would have learned to drive before now, my life would have been so much easier.
01:02:00
◼
►
Yes, yeah, of course.
01:02:02
◼
►
So annoying.
01:02:03
◼
►
Yeah, not having a car in a situation where, I mean, especially a month ago, where it's
01:02:10
◼
►
more like, "So is it the apocalypse?"
01:02:13
◼
►
Right, like you want a car, you want options, and this is one time where I'm really aware
01:02:19
◼
►
of like, "Ooh, we don't have options. We're in this apartment and, you know, my
01:02:25
◼
►
wife hasn't left the front door of our apartment and I haven't gone farther than the garbage
01:02:31
◼
►
cans on the street, you know, in two months." And I'm very aware of that because my parents
01:02:37
◼
►
are quarantining, but they also have a car so they can just go for nice country drives,
01:02:42
◼
►
right? And like, the car is a mobile part of the bubble.
01:02:45
◼
►
You can drive. Why don't you just get a car?
01:02:47
◼
►
I can't drive in the UK because I've lived here too long.
01:02:50
◼
►
Right? I need to go through the whole...
01:02:51
◼
►
Oh, you don't have a driving license?
01:02:52
◼
►
Yeah, I don't have the driver's license.
01:02:54
◼
►
And you can't do the swap because it's been too long?
01:02:56
◼
►
Yeah, if you're going to be a resident, you have to go through the driver's license process.
01:03:01
◼
►
If you're a tourist, you can do the like, "Oh, I can drive in the UK while I'm a tourist."
01:03:06
◼
►
But if you live here, you can't just swap it over.
01:03:09
◼
►
You have to actually go through the schools.
01:03:12
◼
►
Is that because you're American?
01:03:14
◼
►
I don't know if it's because you're an American, but I'm pretty sure it's just a general rule.
01:03:17
◼
►
That's so annoying, man.
01:03:20
◼
►
Because like you can have a... I'm sure someone can just deliver a car, right?
01:03:23
◼
►
Like I don't know if you have to go to a showroom. I don't think you do.
01:03:27
◼
►
Who cares about the rules, Grey? Just drive around.
01:03:30
◼
►
Like what are they gonna...
01:03:32
◼
►
Just go for it, man. There's no rules.
01:03:34
◼
►
What's the worst that could happen?
01:03:35
◼
►
Yeah, there's no rules in this new world.
01:03:38
◼
►
But yeah, so I don't know.
01:03:39
◼
►
It's just something that's been on my mind.
01:03:41
◼
►
And the lack of outdoor space, like I said, is the only thing that I would change.
01:03:46
◼
►
So it's been on my mind.
01:03:48
◼
►
But I also think the reason that you're thinking the same thing is
01:03:52
◼
►
this is the natural life cycle of urban areas and people's careers.
01:03:59
◼
►
Right, and so...
01:04:02
◼
►
The younger you are, the more advantage there is to moving to the biggest city you possibly can
01:04:09
◼
►
at the start of your career.
01:04:11
◼
►
Even if I know nothing about a human being, that is generically good advice.
01:04:17
◼
►
Did you just graduate and you've decided that it's time to look for work?
01:04:22
◼
►
Like, go to the biggest city that you reasonably can,
01:04:27
◼
►
and it magnifies your potential in a whole bunch of different ways.
01:04:31
◼
►
But then, as one's career goes on,
01:04:35
◼
►
the advantage of being in that urban core,
01:04:39
◼
►
There's like a decreasing marginal value of that.
01:04:42
◼
►
And so I think this is why like you just generally have this cycle of cities suck in younger
01:04:48
◼
►
people and then as people progress in their career they've extracted most of the advantages
01:04:55
◼
►
they're going to have for an urban core and start to value different kinds of things.
01:05:00
◼
►
Like I want more space in my house and like I'm willing to trade that against other different
01:05:05
◼
►
So I think for you and me, we're both at that point and maybe this moment has just sharpened
01:05:13
◼
►
that thinking a little bit.
01:05:15
◼
►
It's like having lived in London has been tremendously advantageous to my teaching career
01:05:22
◼
►
and my YouTube career in innumerable ways.
01:05:26
◼
►
But is that still the case now?
01:05:29
◼
►
Like yes it is still valuable, but not as valuable and as important and so I find myself
01:05:37
◼
►
more willing to think about trading it off against other things that I would want.
01:05:42
◼
►
So yeah I don't know it's just something that's been on my mind.
01:05:45
◼
►
But how are you doing?
01:05:46
◼
►
I would say that like I'm not doing as well as you.
01:05:51
◼
►
I'm not doing badly, but like I'm in the middle but with various fluctuations on
01:05:59
◼
►
that scale depending on the area that you're looking at.
01:06:02
◼
►
What do you mean by that?
01:06:03
◼
►
Well so like okay let's talk about exercise right?
01:06:07
◼
►
I'm doing more of it but I still f***ing hate it and everything I'm doing just hurts me.
01:06:16
◼
►
Like I just, I don't know what it is about me, Gray,
01:06:20
◼
►
but like, I'm not getting injured,
01:06:23
◼
►
but just like, it doesn't matter what it is,
01:06:25
◼
►
but my body just hates it.
01:06:27
◼
►
- Yeah, what are you doing?
01:06:28
◼
►
- Well, a mixture of either yoga or body weight exercises.
01:06:33
◼
►
But like, if I do yoga, I hope for the rest of the day,
01:06:37
◼
►
like, gee, it's just like, whatever.
01:06:40
◼
►
This is the thing, I'm gonna see some,
01:06:41
◼
►
I'm gonna go see a specialist
01:06:43
◼
►
after all this is taken care of,
01:06:44
◼
►
'cause this has always been a problem in my life.
01:06:48
◼
►
And I'm not looking for a diagnosis on the podcast,
01:06:51
◼
►
but there are various conditions
01:06:54
◼
►
that can be conducive to this,
01:06:55
◼
►
just joints and stuff like that, right?
01:06:57
◼
►
Maybe I'm just not built for this, but whatever.
01:07:00
◼
►
Anyway, so exercise is like, I'm doing it, but I hate it.
01:07:03
◼
►
And I don't feel any benefit from it.
01:07:07
◼
►
But that's just a part of my life
01:07:10
◼
►
that's always been there anyway, but I'm still doing it.
01:07:12
◼
►
For some elements to me, there isn't that much of a change.
01:07:15
◼
►
I relax about as much as I did before,
01:07:18
◼
►
sometimes more, sometimes less, but it's dictated by my week
01:07:21
◼
►
because the amount of structured events that I'm doing
01:07:24
◼
►
is still the same because I worked from home before,
01:07:27
◼
►
I have worked from home for nearly six years,
01:07:30
◼
►
and my life has this structure to it which hasn't changed.
01:07:33
◼
►
- Yeah, I was gonna say, your podcast recording schedule
01:07:35
◼
►
hasn't significantly changed. - No.
01:07:38
◼
►
- Has it? No. - No, it hasn't at all.
01:07:40
◼
►
I'm having more meetings than I've ever had before,
01:07:44
◼
►
like appointments, like calls, whatever.
01:07:47
◼
►
So I have more in my diary.
01:07:49
◼
►
Plus, I am working harder right now
01:07:53
◼
►
than I have worked in years,
01:07:55
◼
►
because producing content
01:07:57
◼
►
and trying to keep everything together
01:08:00
◼
►
is taking more work than it usually does,
01:08:02
◼
►
because things are different right now.
01:08:05
◼
►
- You have the problem that all content trends
01:08:10
◼
►
in one direction right now.
01:08:12
◼
►
There's like a, there's a little bit of Corona flavor
01:08:15
◼
►
in every topic, right?
01:08:17
◼
►
- Yep, yep, yep, yep.
01:08:19
◼
►
And so if you want to go down those routes, you can,
01:08:23
◼
►
and that's one element of hard work,
01:08:26
◼
►
or you can try and avoid it, and that's also hard work,
01:08:31
◼
►
right, so like doing that, and then also just running,
01:08:34
◼
►
running any business of any size,
01:08:39
◼
►
just inherently more difficult right now.
01:08:42
◼
►
- Yeah, I would say that's a trend I definitely notice
01:08:46
◼
►
among my friends is people who run businesses
01:08:50
◼
►
are having significantly more difficult time
01:08:53
◼
►
than people who don't.
01:08:54
◼
►
- And it's not even if anything's going wrong,
01:08:57
◼
►
the fear of is there.
01:08:59
◼
►
Everything's fine now, but what if it isn't in a month?
01:09:03
◼
►
And it's just a lot to carry around with you,
01:09:05
◼
►
especially when unlike most instances,
01:09:08
◼
►
some of this stuff can be completely unrelated
01:09:11
◼
►
to your own performance.
01:09:12
◼
►
It's just a lot to carry around, right?
01:09:15
◼
►
Like that just makes things difficult.
01:09:17
◼
►
We've been talking about this a little bit
01:09:19
◼
►
and we'll have more to share in the future,
01:09:21
◼
►
like Relay FM, my company,
01:09:23
◼
►
like we're taking this as a time
01:09:26
◼
►
to change a bit about who we are
01:09:30
◼
►
and where our focus as a company is.
01:09:33
◼
►
That takes a lot of work to do, right?
01:09:35
◼
►
Like if you have decided that you want to
01:09:38
◼
►
adapt your business model to something a bit different.
01:09:41
◼
►
Like, that's hard work, right?
01:09:44
◼
►
So, I've got a lot going on,
01:09:48
◼
►
which is adding a lot to everything, right?
01:09:51
◼
►
Like, I'm not sleeping as well right now
01:09:55
◼
►
because my brain doesn't stop working.
01:09:58
◼
►
I don't really see it as a downside
01:10:00
◼
►
because I have a lot of really great ideas
01:10:03
◼
►
when I can't sleep at 2.30.
01:10:04
◼
►
Like, my brain clarifies on things.
01:10:08
◼
►
You know, I'm not trying to stay awake,
01:10:10
◼
►
but like I'm just laying there,
01:10:11
◼
►
and my brain's just going and going and going,
01:10:14
◼
►
and then bang, there it is, I did it.
01:10:16
◼
►
This is not normal for a lot of people.
01:10:18
◼
►
A lot of people will tell you that this is a terrible time
01:10:20
◼
►
to have ideas, but for me, it works.
01:10:24
◼
►
You know, I hear a lot of people say
01:10:26
◼
►
that they're struggling with a problem,
01:10:28
◼
►
and they wake up the next morning, and they've solved it.
01:10:31
◼
►
That doesn't happen to me.
01:10:32
◼
►
What happens to me is before I fall asleep, it's solved.
01:10:35
◼
►
Right, so like when I'm trying to get my brain to shut down,
01:10:39
◼
►
that's sometimes where things pop out.
01:10:42
◼
►
Like that's just the way that I am.
01:10:44
◼
►
That's where I've been for years.
01:10:45
◼
►
- That sounds terrible, but I'm glad it works for you.
01:10:48
◼
►
- Look, I sometimes wish I could go to sleep,
01:10:50
◼
►
but if I can't sleep, at least if I get some benefit
01:10:54
◼
►
out of that, I'm happy, right?
01:10:56
◼
►
I prefer this to just laying there and worrying.
01:10:59
◼
►
It's not worry, it's like I'm coming up with ideas
01:11:03
◼
►
that are happening to me then.
01:11:05
◼
►
So yeah, it's like every day is a different feeling.
01:11:09
◼
►
But on the whole, I'm just really busy right now.
01:11:16
◼
►
And so that's tiring.
01:11:17
◼
►
But I will say, I'm a man who loves travel, right?
01:11:20
◼
►
I love to travel, I get to spend time
01:11:25
◼
►
with people that I care about, I get to go to places,
01:11:28
◼
►
I get to go to restaurants, which I enjoy
01:11:30
◼
►
and experience new things.
01:11:33
◼
►
But in a similar vein to you, the amount of quality time
01:11:37
◼
►
that me and my wife Adina are getting to spend together
01:11:39
◼
►
right now is unlike what we have had over the last few years.
01:11:44
◼
►
And I am enjoying that, that we are getting to spend
01:11:49
◼
►
this time together.
01:11:51
◼
►
If I can't do that one thing, this is a really great thing
01:11:54
◼
►
to replace it.
01:11:55
◼
►
'Cause I, oh boy, I am missing traveling.
01:11:59
◼
►
I know that it causes so much stress in our lives, right?
01:12:04
◼
►
Like to go to America and spend a week and come back
01:12:08
◼
►
and you've lost three weeks, right?
01:12:10
◼
►
Like it's very disruptive, but I love it, right?
01:12:15
◼
►
And so I'm missing that.
01:12:17
◼
►
That is the main thing that I'm missing in my life right now
01:12:21
◼
►
is getting able to do that stuff.
01:12:23
◼
►
Everything else I can handle a lot better,
01:12:25
◼
►
but I am missing that.
01:12:28
◼
►
I'll sympathize with you on the travel in perhaps the weirdest and most unsympathetic way.
01:12:34
◼
►
I do find myself thinking sometimes, "Oh, I'll be glad to travel again so that I can do a
01:12:40
◼
►
great cation where I can go somewhere and just be completely alone and lock myself in a hotel room
01:12:46
◼
►
for a week." No, but that's nice though. Like, one of the things that I would like about traveling
01:12:50
◼
►
sometimes is I had time to just decompress. It became such a part of my life over the
01:12:58
◼
►
last five years. It has been the biggest thing that I have noticed.
01:13:02
◼
►
Yeah, your travel really has ramped up a lot since we first got to know each other. I feel
01:13:07
◼
►
like you hardly did any travel at the beginning. It got to the point where I was like in America
01:13:12
◼
►
basically every four to five weeks. Yeah, which is madness, is absolute madness.
01:13:17
◼
►
have been a big shift and I know as time goes on I'm only gonna feel it more
01:13:23
◼
►
that I've not been anywhere like you know I like to travel I'm like so happy
01:13:28
◼
►
that we got in one great trip in January right where we went to LA we had a
01:13:35
◼
►
wonderful time and we did a bunch of really fun things and I'm very happy we
01:13:41
◼
►
got that trip it was like a trip of a lifetime for me it's something like I
01:13:44
◼
►
I ticked off a bunch of boxes of things
01:13:46
◼
►
I'd always wanted to do, and then that was it.
01:13:48
◼
►
- Can I make an exercise suggestion for you, Myke?
01:13:51
◼
►
- I know you won't like it, right?
01:13:53
◼
►
I know you won't like it.
01:13:54
◼
►
I'm gonna very strongly suggest
01:13:59
◼
►
you get a set of adjustable dumbbells
01:14:02
◼
►
so that you can do some actual weight training.
01:14:06
◼
►
- Okay, okay.
01:14:08
◼
►
- Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that you'll like it.
01:14:11
◼
►
I'm not saying that it won't hurt, like it'll, you know, you'll feel the burn.
01:14:17
◼
►
But this is for anyone who's trying to exercise at home.
01:14:23
◼
►
This is a place to start.
01:14:26
◼
►
Even if, or especially if you think like, oh, lifting weights, it's not for me.
01:14:34
◼
►
I'm just going to, I'm going to very strongly suggest it because it's,
01:14:40
◼
►
It's an area where you can see relatively quick progress.
01:14:45
◼
►
And in many ways you can start off on a much easier level
01:14:51
◼
►
than trying to do some of the body weight exercises.
01:14:55
◼
►
Like body weight exercises are totally fine
01:14:59
◼
►
when you don't have other equipment.
01:15:01
◼
►
But especially if like your fitness level
01:15:05
◼
►
is not particularly high,
01:15:07
◼
►
starting with weights I think is actually better
01:15:10
◼
►
because you can do motions with like,
01:15:12
◼
►
this is a two and a half pound weight
01:15:14
◼
►
and I'm just lifting it and it feels like nothing
01:15:16
◼
►
and you just slowly increase that over time.
01:15:19
◼
►
So I'm gonna strongly suggest that you give it a try
01:15:22
◼
►
and put it in your rotation.
01:15:23
◼
►
'Cause I feel like for me it is the most sanity keeping
01:15:28
◼
►
part of the physical routine.
01:15:30
◼
►
And like I just happen to as the very end
01:15:34
◼
►
of the year of order, we never got around to it,
01:15:36
◼
►
I had it as like this follow up note for weeks and weeks.
01:15:39
◼
►
But the very end of the year of order was I did get just like a very small set of dumbbells for the home
01:15:45
◼
►
just so that I could like do a little bit of exercise if I didn't have time to go to the gym.
01:15:51
◼
►
Like that by far and away is one of the best purchases and one of the most helpful
01:15:56
◼
►
quarantine items that I have.
01:15:59
◼
►
You may be resistant to it but I would give it a try.
01:16:01
◼
►
It seems difficult to find adjustable dumbbells right now.
01:16:06
◼
►
Look, here's the thing.
01:16:07
◼
►
This is a long term situation here.
01:16:09
◼
►
I would put in some orders and see what arrives.
01:16:12
◼
►
Do you have any recommendations you can send me or shall I just find something?
01:16:17
◼
►
I do have a recommendation.
01:16:19
◼
►
Let me just get the name.
01:16:20
◼
►
Can you feel how much I hate this?
01:16:21
◼
►
Like coming through the microphone?
01:16:24
◼
►
Oh, yeah, no, I can.
01:16:25
◼
►
I can 100% feel how much you hate this.
01:16:28
◼
►
I just want to make sure that you knew.
01:16:31
◼
►
Look, I know.
01:16:34
◼
►
Like, I totally know.
01:16:35
◼
►
I'm just trying to like, trying to cast my mind back in time
01:16:39
◼
►
would be one of the much more unexpected things
01:16:43
◼
►
if I were to have a conversation with a younger self and be like,
01:16:46
◼
►
"Hey man, you're gonna spend the next 10 years trying to figure out how to not hate exercise."
01:16:52
◼
►
And the answer is going to end up being weightlifting.
01:16:56
◼
►
And you, like, this is gonna be completely unexpected across every front,
01:17:01
◼
►
but just save yourself a bunch of time and do this.
01:17:04
◼
►
And also it seems to have a much higher hit rate
01:17:09
◼
►
than I would expect with other people that I'm trying to like,
01:17:13
◼
►
that I've tried to convince to do the same thing.
01:17:15
◼
►
It's like if you can do it a little bit, it has,
01:17:17
◼
►
it seems to have a much higher sticking rate
01:17:20
◼
►
than other kinds of things.
01:17:21
◼
►
Like running or whatever.
01:17:23
◼
►
Okay, but so look,
01:17:24
◼
►
here's the ones that I like and I think are really nice.
01:17:28
◼
►
I'm gonna send them to you.
01:17:29
◼
►
They're called Powerblock.
01:17:30
◼
►
And just try to put in your order before the show goes up.
01:17:33
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:17:35
◼
►
Yeah, my order will be in before the show notes go out to people, right?
01:17:40
◼
►
These are the kind where they're like, they're super compact and you can change the weights really easily.
01:17:44
◼
►
There's a bunch of adjustable dumbbells, but if you can't get adjustable ones,
01:17:48
◼
►
just get a little like light set of dumbbells.
01:17:50
◼
►
Get something.
01:17:51
◼
►
These are the ones that I really like and I strongly suggest you
01:17:55
◼
►
and any of the listeners who are having a hard time with exercise, try this.
01:18:00
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I mean the other way that you can exercise is in VR Myke. It's not quite the same as
01:20:11
◼
►
weightlifting but you know, it can get you part of the way there.
01:20:14
◼
►
I have some fun follow up. Mm hmm. I was able to get an oculus quest. Oh wow. Okay. Yeah.
01:20:19
◼
►
They came into stock and I got one immediately. It's a completely different experience. If you think you've experienced VR you haven't until you've
01:20:26
◼
►
experienced completely wireless VR.
01:20:28
◼
►
Great, you two have heard the good news about no wires. This is everyone's response. It's more than no wires as well
01:20:36
◼
►
It's like I don't have to turn the computer on. Mm-hmm
01:20:40
◼
►
And it really helps you just because it's just it on the kitchen table
01:20:44
◼
►
I just pick it up put it on and I can play a game. Yeah
01:20:47
◼
►
I've been playing four games quite a bit that I wanted to talk about.
01:20:53
◼
►
One of them is like we spoke about Beat Saber before.
01:20:56
◼
►
One thing we didn't talk about is Beat Saber's 360 degree levels.
01:21:01
◼
►
Well, we didn't talk about it because I didn't know that this wasn't a thing on the other headsets.
01:21:07
◼
►
So it didn't occur to me to bring it up.
01:21:08
◼
►
I don't know if it's on the other headsets,
01:21:10
◼
►
but when I played the game a bunch the first time, these levels didn't exist.
01:21:16
◼
►
it was just like straight on. But this completely changes the game in a bunch of really fun
01:21:21
◼
►
ways that you're not just looking at like a conveyor belt coming straight at you, they
01:21:28
◼
►
could be coming from any direction and you have to keep on top of that. That is a very
01:21:33
◼
►
different way to play Beat Saber which is much more fun.
01:21:35
◼
►
I think the optimal experience is the 90 degree one.
01:21:39
◼
►
Oh yeah, but the 360 degree ones are fun, but like the 90 degree ones are, or 90 or
01:21:44
◼
►
180 I think is another option like it's easier to play those. Yeah, I feel like they combine
01:21:49
◼
►
Enough. Oh, you got to look around for where the blocks are coming from
01:21:53
◼
►
You don't know without it being like it's gonna hit you from behind. All right, it's yeah 360 is like a completely different game
01:22:00
◼
►
I found another game which is kind of similar, but I prefer it's called pistol whip
01:22:05
◼
►
Which is a rhythm based shoot in game. Mm-hmm. And I think this game is fantastic
01:22:13
◼
►
It's exhilarating and challenging.
01:22:16
◼
►
How would you describe Pistol Whip?
01:22:18
◼
►
You are moving forward and you're in like these living target ranges basically and human
01:22:26
◼
►
shaped figures come at you and you have to shoot them.
01:22:30
◼
►
But it has the aesthetic that many VR games have of like this is a simulation which is
01:22:36
◼
►
way more comfortable feeling for a shooting game than this is real, right?
01:22:41
◼
►
you feel different about the things that you're shooting I think. So I think that works really
01:22:45
◼
►
nicely. I like that kind of idea. So still haven't tried Arizona Sunshine then anyway?
01:22:50
◼
►
Not yet. Not yet. You keep... I will, but just not yet. I need all of the moons to align before
01:22:57
◼
►
I try that game. I really like Pistol Whip because the songs are really good and the enemies are
01:23:04
◼
►
coming at you in a way that you can shoot them in time to a rhythm, which is very fun. And
01:23:11
◼
►
some of the levels surprise you in different ways.
01:23:15
◼
►
It is a very fun rhythm-based shooting game. I think it's great.
01:23:20
◼
►
Yeah, you recommended it to me. So I tried it and I didn't like it the first time,
01:23:25
◼
►
but that's partly because I was having some motion sickness issues with it.
01:23:30
◼
►
It takes a bit of getting used to because you are moving.
01:23:33
◼
►
Not a lot of VR games move you, but this one moves you forward through the levels.
01:23:38
◼
►
Yeah, well it's such an interesting way that the different systems try to handle the motion
01:23:44
◼
►
and as I've been just trying out different games it's interesting to see what different things do.
01:23:50
◼
►
But Pistol Whip was one of the very first ones that I had tried and I was like whoa I cannot deal
01:23:55
◼
►
with this. But I revisited it because you had mentioned it again for some reason I can't remember why.
01:24:00
◼
►
I just texted you and told you that it was incredible and you had to try it if you haven't.
01:24:04
◼
►
Right, right. Okay. And so I gave it a second try and I liked it much better for a couple of reasons.
01:24:11
◼
►
One of the reasons is I think it's a similar effect to like when I first started watching YouTube videos.
01:24:17
◼
►
I couldn't deal with the vlog style of filming where like the way that the camera bounces and is kind of jerky.
01:24:25
◼
►
At some point having just watched a bunch of vlog videos my brain just adapted to this.
01:24:31
◼
►
And it's like, "Okay, I can watch this.
01:24:33
◼
►
I can watch just a handheld camera in a way that I couldn't before,
01:24:37
◼
►
and I just don't even notice it really."
01:24:39
◼
►
And I think having done a bunch of the different VR games,
01:24:44
◼
►
I came to Pistol Whip with the same experience of,
01:24:48
◼
►
"Oh, my brain has learned a little bit better how to handle this."
01:24:51
◼
►
- It's like getting sea legs.
01:24:53
◼
►
- I genuinely think it's a good analogy.
01:24:56
◼
►
- You got your VR legs.
01:24:57
◼
►
It's funny how much the video games' like, conceptual framing helps your brain.
01:25:03
◼
►
So in Pistol Whip you are standing on a little platform, and it's the platform that's moving,
01:25:09
◼
►
it's not you just flying forward in space.
01:25:12
◼
►
And it's like, but something about just looking down and seeing the platform for a second,
01:25:16
◼
►
it's like it lets your brain go, "Okay, it's fine. We're moving forward on a platform.
01:25:22
◼
►
We're not just flying through space, and I don't need to freak out about what the heck is happening."
01:25:27
◼
►
I also, if people are going to try Pistol Whip, I recommend, I didn't realize there are a million
01:25:32
◼
►
settings for changing how stuff operates. I think you're about to recommend exactly
01:25:38
◼
►
what I'm about to recommend, but carry on. Okay, so I'm going to recommend, you want to do dual
01:25:43
◼
►
wielding. Yes!
01:25:44
◼
►
Because it's much more fun. Much better.
01:25:46
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And I'm going to recommend the Deadeye setting, which takes off like baby's first auto-aimer for
01:25:53
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- Oh, interesting. - for hitting targets.
01:25:55
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- Those are my two suggestions
01:25:56
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because the first time I played it as well,
01:25:59
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their aim assist was way too strong for me.
01:26:01
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I felt like it was impossible to not hit the targets.
01:26:04
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- Not enough of a challenge, huh?
01:26:06
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- Yeah, I just, I'd like, it's not,
01:26:08
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or I should rephrase that.
01:26:09
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It's not that it wasn't enough of a challenge.
01:26:12
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It was more like it's too obvious
01:26:14
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that the system is really helping me out here.
01:26:18
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- So those are my suggestions.
01:26:19
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Like, dual wielding, because dual wielding is fun,
01:26:22
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and I would say turn on dead eye, which removes the aim assist.
01:26:27
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But what was going to be your suggestion?
01:26:29
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I was mostly going to say just you wield.
01:26:32
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Yeah, because--
01:26:32
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The dead eye, I turn on and off sometimes.
01:26:34
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It depends on what I'm looking for in that moment
01:26:37
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from the game.
01:26:38
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Yeah, what you're in the mood for.
01:26:40
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Do I want to be precise, or do I just want to move around,
01:26:44
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I will say that the aesthetic in Pistol Whip
01:26:47
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is great for people in the know.
01:26:49
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It's very much like the opening scene of Lawnmower Man, which is right up my alley.
01:26:54
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But it's also something I wish more of the VR developers would do is, guys, don't try
01:27:02
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to make it look real.
01:27:04
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I much prefer the games for the most part that lean into the vector style artwork.
01:27:11
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Super hot really.
01:27:12
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Yeah, super hot.
01:27:14
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Pistol Whip is like a mixture of Superhot and Beat Saber to me.
01:27:18
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That's kind of how it feels.
01:27:19
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Yeah, that's a great way to describe it.
01:27:22
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It's a really good cross between those two.
01:27:24
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But I just, like, it's been interesting having tried a ton of games is I'm very aware of,
01:27:30
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like, the more abstract stuff just works much better, and I'm not a big fan of most of the
01:27:37
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games where they're trying to make it look super real.
01:27:40
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It's like, "No, guys, lean into the limitations."
01:27:42
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Except for Arizona Sunshine, right?
01:27:44
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Yeah, I like Arizona Sunshine, but for the most part, like, guys, you don't need to make
01:27:48
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a tree that you're trying to make look like a tree. I'm perfectly fine with a circular
01:27:53
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triangular pyramid on top of a cylinder and you just color one green and one brown. Like
01:27:58
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I can go with that.
01:27:59
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I think these are the difference. This is like the main difference between VR gaming
01:28:04
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and non VR gaming. Non VR gaming, the more real it looks, the more engaging it is. But
01:28:09
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with VR gaming, you don't need visuals to make it engaging. Yeah. Like just make the
01:28:15
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mechanics work because you just accept the world you're in immediately if the physics
01:28:21
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are good and the mechanics work well. You just accept it. So it doesn't need to be
01:28:26
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photorealistic for me to believe that I'm there.
01:28:28
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Yes, yeah, that's exactly right. Like your brain, because they're objects, is just
01:28:33
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willing to go along with it in a way that you don't need to be tricked that it looks
01:28:37
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real. And I wish developers would spend less time trying to make stuff look real because
01:28:43
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It's like it's still not quite there yet and it just doesn't it just doesn't need to be
01:28:47
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But so that is also partly why I like the aesthetic for pistol whip is like they're not trying to make it look real
01:28:51
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And it's totally fine
01:28:54
◼
►
I was glad that you poked me again about that one
01:28:57
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►
Because I did enjoy it much better after I think my brain was a little bit more used to the motion
01:29:02
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Except the only thing I have to be careful about is every once in a while if I take a step backward
01:29:08
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for some reason that that still throws my brain way off of like
01:29:12
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what's what the hell is happening like if i take a step backwards like
01:29:16
◼
►
something about the physics doesn't work so i i try to make sure it's like
01:29:20
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►
forward only backward no that's interesting have you come across
01:29:27
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audica no i haven't it is a rhythm game made by harmonix okay which is the
01:29:33
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►
company that made rock band okay this is the most comprehensive best
01:29:38
◼
►
made rhythm game I've come across on VR. Okay. Because it's made by like the rhythm game people.
01:29:45
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►
It is complex. Like there is a lot of stuff going on. You have like sometimes you're shooting,
01:29:52
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sometimes you're holding, sometimes you're hitting things out of the sky and you kind of have to,
01:29:57
◼
►
like Rockband, there are like different shapes and you have to understand what you are supposed
01:30:04
◼
►
to do based on the shape and they have real licensed music and it's fantastic.
01:30:10
◼
►
okay I'll check it out. like it's just like mechanically it's done so well it's
01:30:16
◼
►
like oh I feel really good when I'm getting this right just like when I used
01:30:20
◼
►
to feel really good when I was getting rock band right. like in a way that beat
01:30:24
◼
►
saber is satisfying when you are doing a good job but I don't really feel
01:30:30
◼
►
accomplished but in Ortica I feel accomplished because I'll play a level
01:30:36
◼
►
and I'll play it again and I'm better at it play it again and I'm better at it
01:30:39
◼
►
and like it's that repetition of getting better and better that harmonics know
01:30:45
◼
►
how to do really well hmm and it is really really excellent like if you've
01:30:51
◼
►
played any type of rhythm game on VR and enjoyed it I really recommend this one
01:30:55
◼
►
and I also found a pottery game I saw the pottery game in the store and I had
01:31:00
◼
►
this moment of "I should probably tell Myke about that" but then I thought there's no
01:31:03
◼
►
way he doesn't know already that there's a pottery game.
01:31:05
◼
►
I just turned on my Oculus one day and I was like "oh my god it's a pottery game" and like
01:31:11
◼
►
it's not pottery isn't right but it's like close in some ways and it's it's fun and weird
01:31:19
◼
►
it's it's trying to be realistic in certain ways right like it's not trying to be like
01:31:24
◼
►
a weird VR game. I enjoy it. Like I love it. I don't love it anywhere close to the way
01:31:30
◼
►
that I love the other games that I've mentioned, but it was just like a really funny thing
01:31:34
◼
►
to happen to me. I was like so excited when I saw it and I played it and I was like, you
01:31:38
◼
►
know what? Pottery VR game, you're very calming. So I appreciate that about you.
01:31:44
◼
►
I'm glad you do. There's all these interesting VR experiences that can be had and you know,
01:31:51
◼
►
It's funny because when you mentioned before about how there's no substitute for travel,
01:31:56
◼
►
I was thinking a little bit about the VR systems because I've genuinely found the Quest to
01:32:04
◼
►
be a great tool for creating the experience of being in another space.
01:32:12
◼
►
I really think it has been meaningfully helpful, especially without the ability to go outside
01:32:18
◼
►
to be able to use the quest and I do have it kind of slotted into my schedule of like exercise
01:32:26
◼
►
rotation because I think it is useful to do this on a regular basis. It's just it's very interesting
01:32:32
◼
►
how your brain is willing to go along with it and ever since we did that demo years ago this is one
01:32:39
◼
►
technology where I feel like I'm really excited to see the future of this and speaking of like
01:32:46
◼
►
going back to the start of the show, but speaking of the physical distances in places, it's like,
01:32:50
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►
man, I am gunning for the day that I can do work in a VR environment. Like for when the headsets
01:32:59
◼
►
get light enough and comfortable enough and the resolution gets high enough so that text is sharp.
01:33:05
◼
►
Even just in the quest, some of those loading environments where you're just picking, you know,
01:33:11
◼
►
know what game you want to play but they put you in like oh you're in a little Japanese
01:33:16
◼
►
house and and the lotus flowers are falling like it's so beautiful and I really have this
01:33:24
◼
►
strong feeling of if I could I would totally write in this geodesic dome 100% I would do
01:33:33
◼
►
that but the technology just isn't there yet.
01:33:37
◼
►
But you know like when using these it's gonna get there right like you can feel it right
01:33:41
◼
►
like it's close.
01:33:42
◼
►
Yeah that's that's what I mean by I'm excited about this because it's like okay in a couple
01:33:47
◼
►
generations if we can cut down the weight of the headset by half and if say the the
01:33:54
◼
►
resolution can increase by double or four times like we can get there and it's going
01:33:59
◼
►
to go there.
01:34:00
◼
►
So like I find myself really quite excited for that of like I know and can see like I
01:34:05
◼
►
I will use something like this as a working environment at some point in the future for
01:34:14
◼
►
Like there is no doubt about that in my mind and I just like I look forward to that to
01:34:18
◼
►
that becoming reality at some point.
01:34:20
◼
►
What I will say is for me like it is a replacement for outside.
01:34:24
◼
►
It's not a replacement for travel.
01:34:28
◼
►
Right okay yeah that's a good way to put it.
01:34:31
◼
►
I can feel that like, oh, I did a thing today.
01:34:34
◼
►
Like that thing could have been going to the park.
01:34:37
◼
►
It's not like I've been out of the country for 10 days.
01:34:40
◼
►
Like it doesn't, it's not that level.
01:34:42
◼
►
'Cause I don't think I could do VR for 10 days.
01:34:45
◼
►
- Yeah, no, no, no.
01:34:46
◼
►
I'm not saying I wanna take a great vacation in VR yet.
01:34:50
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah you are.
01:34:50
◼
►
You wanna do that.
01:34:52
◼
►
Don't say you don't wanna do that, you do.
01:34:53
◼
►
- That's more like 20 years from now, but yeah, for sure.
01:34:57
◼
►
- And look, I know you've played Animal Crossing.
01:35:00
◼
►
I watched the stream, it went exactly as I expected.
01:35:04
◼
►
For some reason people think that I wanted you to play
01:35:07
◼
►
when I explicitly said I didn't want you to play this game.
01:35:10
◼
►
- I know, I know, I asked if I should try it
01:35:13
◼
►
and you said yes, that's the way that went.
01:35:17
◼
►
- Well, I didn't want you to play it
01:35:18
◼
►
'cause I knew how you were gonna,
01:35:19
◼
►
well, okay, maybe it was like I said you should try it
01:35:21
◼
►
but I knew how it was gonna go.
01:35:23
◼
►
Like I wasn't surprised about the fact
01:35:25
◼
►
that you hated this game.
01:35:28
◼
►
- I knew you were gonna hate it.
01:35:29
◼
►
Yeah, no, I mean we don't need to discuss it in detail.
01:35:32
◼
►
The evidence is there for people.
01:35:35
◼
►
I didn't expect to like the game, and I was correct.
01:35:39
◼
►
- One could suggest that you went into it negatively.
01:35:43
◼
►
One could suggest that you were not in the correct space
01:35:47
◼
►
to play the game when you went at it, but you know.
01:35:50
◼
►
- That is totally fair, but the thing is,
01:35:53
◼
►
Animal Crossing annoyed me in all sorts of ways
01:35:55
◼
►
that I wasn't expecting, right?
01:35:57
◼
►
So I think even under the most ideal of circumstances, there is no way that I would like this game.
01:36:03
◼
►
But it's like I had expectations to be annoyed and I was annoyed in ways that I was completely blindsided by.
01:36:09
◼
►
This is not Animal Crossing specific. I think this is a kind of
01:36:12
◼
►
Nintendo disease. Nintendo likes to take things slow sometimes, like in there. And all of the
01:36:19
◼
►
Nintendo first party games, they're real chill about dialogue boxes and
01:36:26
◼
►
You're selecting a racing track for Mario Kart and you know, hey guys
01:36:30
◼
►
Don't you just want to watch this spinner spin for a while?
01:36:33
◼
►
No, I don't like I want to pick a course and go I have a way to describe Nintendo
01:36:38
◼
►
Nintendo's development it's painful charm. Yes. Yeah, that tends to be the way in the Nintendo makes their games
01:36:45
◼
►
They're like that charming and they do things in the way that they do them, but sometimes it's really painful
01:36:49
◼
►
Yeah, like with Animal Crossing. It's that everything runs in real time. I like that it runs in real time, but sometimes
01:36:55
◼
►
It's like, "Oh, jeez. Tom, look, will you just destroy the bridge right now?
01:36:59
◼
►
Why is it gonna take you a day to destroy the bridge, Tom?
01:37:02
◼
►
Like, you've just got a thousand bells for this."
01:37:06
◼
►
Yeah, like, so that is a Nintendo disease,
01:37:10
◼
►
and I think Animal Crossing may be its most pure expression.
01:37:15
◼
►
I am glad I at least played it for a little bit,
01:37:18
◼
►
so I had a bit more of a first-hand experience of what this was.
01:37:23
◼
►
But yeah, I very quickly realized like, you know what I don't want to do? I don't want to press A
01:37:27
◼
►
20,000 times over the course of many hours to accomplish things. So I'm gonna bail on this, but I'm glad I tried it
01:37:36
◼
►
I'm glad I tried it