The Last Place People Ask is Themselves
My new YouTube series tackles the easiest problems to solve when you ask the right questions
It’s the damn smart phones.
It’s google.
I was the first member of my family to get a smartphone. I have memories of being in the family minivan when I first got it, when everyone was still alive (my mom and brother have since passed), and any time someone would ask a question I would dramatically pull out my smartphone and say, “Well, I have google in my pocket so let’s find out.”
As happily smug as you imagined it.
Slowly we all began unloading our inquisitiveness onto the Internet. It was the Internet’s responsibility to know and to tell us all the things, now.
If only we knew the treasure troves of information that is exactly tailored to us because it is us lying just beneath the surface of our skin, rather than scattering our questions across the difficulty of greater and greater amounts of often-conflicting information.
I’m starting a new YouTube series which will answer several of my favorite questions or problems to tackle:
Processing grief
Releasing haunting memories
Relieving aches and pains
Alleviating stress
& Eliminating negative self-talk
And they all involve getting more information from yourself.
Which ones are you looking forward to the most? I also plan to post bonus information to Substack paid subscribers, which you can add for $5/month or $32 for a whole year. Consider subscribing now.
Stay tuned!
(Much of what I’ll be recording and more is already available in The Supportive Mind course, a short 4-video set that is available for the next week and a few days by clicking here, where you can also see reviews of the experiences some of the people that took it first round had themselves.)