How to Be a Better Thinker | The Nerdwriter (Evan Puschak) on Impact Theory
PYzGv6Tfu_0 • 2017-01-04
Transcript preview
Open
Kind: captions Language: en hey everybody Welcome to impact Theory you're here because you believe that human potential is nearly Limitless but you know that having potential is not the same as actually doing something with it so our goal with the show and Company is to introduce you to the people and ideas that will help you actually make good on your potential all right I'm really excited about today's guest because he thinks about [ __ ] deeply he crawls inside important ideas like an intellectual archaeologist and Roots around grubby fists and all until he finds the narrative thread that makes those ideas accessible in an era where people will tell you the only thing that matters is entertaining people he's built a wildly successful YouTube channel with roughly 1 million subscribers that proves there's still a huge market for depth his powerful essay is on an absurdly wide range of topics from Batman and Rihanna to politics and moral issues provide viewers with the kinds of insights that can truly shape one's worldview recognizing his unique gifts MSNBC snatched him up to produce for them when he was still in his early 20s and the Discovery Channel tapped him to write and host a show on their digital Network Seeker daily where he produced a horde of breakout content he is in my opinion everything that is good about the internet and he's proving that creators from anywhere armed with a simple camera and a willingness to work their asses off can not only make a living as content producers but they can alter the very Direction and flow of cultural discourse please help me in welcoming the man whose entirely self-made Treasure Trove of content has been viewed more than 48 million times by people all over the world the creator of the Smash Hit YouTube series the nerd writer Evan pusack um what an introduction dude I want that on my Tombstone I would love it um cool man well honestly that the intro is sort of the the hurdle for bringing people on the show it's like am I willing to do enough research about the person to be able to write that am I going to get something out of it and researching you was really awesome so Jason Silva put you on my radar Jason's a great guy and I am eternally indebted to him for that and not being super familiar with the essay format on YouTube it was really really interesting to see the diverse range of topics that you cover which of course then led me to trying to find out like what is the mission statement that you guys have yeah so the concept of cultivating worldview what exactly does that mean well it was something that launched the whole idea of the show and that was that when I had graduated college at Boston I had this very strange sort of frustrating feel feeling that I knew a lot of things but I I just didn't know how they all connected and I felt like I was constantly consuming contradictory information um and it just really bothered me because I felt that I didn't have a foothold on my own knowledge um and so worldview for me was a kind of um organizing principle of how do all the things that you know connect how do you build a worldview in which you are building bridges between the different spheres of things that you're learning um and so cultivating is what you know and how those things connect um and that's what the show is and you know I want to show people how I built my worldview um not so that they can adopt it but so that there can be a template for doing it yourself I love though that you've said and this is actually really interesting I want to go into this but you said that it's okay if you want to adopt my worldview I think that's how it starts you steal somebody that's how I did it so walk me through that cuz I think seeing the way that you do it is is maybe it's certainly as important maybe even more important than the actual worldview that you present which is very coherent and very compelling um but how how does that process look if it starts with stealing somebody else's while you get the you know momentum going like how do you progress beyond that well you have to learn how to think I mean that's the first part of it Ralph werson who is you know one of the early thinkers that that really blew my mind said that a young man rever Men of Genius because to speak truly they are more himself than he is and that is the perfect sort of way to think about being young and trying to you know trying to build build a mindset for yourself is that you know when you read the great philosophers or just the great thinkers about anything what is so um enlightening about them is that they knew how to say these things they articulate them in a certain way that when I read them and a lot of Emerson almost all of Emerson when I'm reading it it was like this series of Revelations where it was like yes that is what I was thinking about this this is this is what I want to say about it and so Emerson is right he was more me than I was at that moment because he was articulating those things so you know you start off by adopting the beautiful thinkers and beautiful articulators of the past um and then with by just applying a little bit of critical thinking you're going to sort of carve out your own statue you're you're going to carve away the things that you know don't mesh with you and you're going to add on the things that do um and that's a a long process of of cultivating something that um that you can sort of have and and use to judge all incoming information against yeah it's interesting because without sort of that eloquence was sort of how I put things together in my own head about you know people often talk about thinking unique thoughts right and that's like a big Obsession it's not a unique thought whatever and I thought wow I'm not sure that I ever really have unique thoughts what I'm trying to do is take in enough information that I can make unique connections right so what you're saying about pairing away the sculpture until only you remain it's actually pretty beautiful was it Michelangelo that said that like I don't I carve away the pieces that aren't David or whatever until I you know until its form is finally revealed it's actually a really interesting way thinking about it why do you think cultivating a worldview is useful I I think it's useful because it provides a foundation through which you can act you know it's hard to act in the world in in a in a intentional way um without having a base or a foundation in which you feel stable is stable and and and you're comfortable with that was the kind of Ang anxiety the cosmic anxiety that I was feeling at that time when I was a little bit younger was that I I don't know how to move forward here because I don't feel like I'm stepping on something that's solid I feel like I'm stepping on so many clouds you know and it's it's sort of it was disorienting um and so when you start figuring out what your worldview is which is just another way to say when you start to figure out you know what your morals are and what your philosophy is as a as a individual person but also um how that relates to the world um The Way Forward looks a lot more clear because it almost becomes uh inevitable what you have to do um when you make a moral decision you're making a decision based on how you should it's based on how you should act so you know once you once you start to get a handle on it I think the world becomes a little bit less scary and your actions in it become a little bit more certain and intentional I think that's what we're all trying to do at least that's what I was trying to do back then really great answer so I love that metaphor that you're using of it feeling like you're stepping on clouds sort of that squishy marshy like am I about to fall through by kind of vibe which very much I had in my early 20s for sure do you know Pete Carol yeah so I'm not a big Sports guy but he happened to be the coach of USC and then the Seahawks and being from Tacoma and having gone to um USC made my radar and then did you read um Angela Duckworth's uh book grit I haven't so he comes up and that and and she really lays out his philosophy so he was the coach of New England the New England Patriots and didn't do well ends up getting fired um goes to college football ends up crushing it at USC and then going on to the Seahawks and winning Super Bowl um and people ask him like what the hell like how did you go from getting fired to having such a crazy career in college and then back to the NFL as a winning coach and he said somebody told me you lack a life philosophy and he said it was really realizing that I needed a life philosophy I needed that base that you're you're talking about to have the the the firmness under my feet the way forward as you said you know like the way forward becomes really clear and I think when people are really thinking about like so the question I get asked more than anything how do I find my passion yeah and which actually may be sort of a s side step to what you're really doing with your show that's a that's a crazy silly question I think I mean that's a question I hear a lot too I mean and and I think that's something that we're inculcated to think about when we're young and in college or in the schooling system how do you find your passion like it's something that you're G to find under a rock which is not the way it's do I think the great tragedy of modern society is that there is no thing for every individual person you have aptitudes like if you can draw then you have aptitude for that and there are certain things biologically that you're going to be given and you'll be lucky to have them but in terms of finding your passion everything in modern society because it does not it does not push you in a certain direction that is that's what being in a free society means is a choice and because it's a choice it's a tragedy it's so you know it's so arbitrary you know and so why do you say it's a tragedy I don't understand it's a tragedy because you know in a society where you know you pushed to do a certain thing if you're you know 300 years ago if your father was a cobbler you were going to be a cobbler right you you know didn't have many prospects outside of that but you did didn't have a chance to fail at choosing something in your life you were going to be a cobbler your identity was stable from the start you know for us in this Society where we are not only not told what to be but we're not told how to learn what to be which is to say we're not told how to learn what your passion is it only comes down to a choice and the choice is arbitrary and I think people and myself we there's a there's a there's a there's a difficulty in overcoming that fact because we want to believe the messaging we're given is that there is something out there there's a passion out there for you that you have to discover and wait for it to a soul reveal itself like a soulmate yeah but you but the the real truth is that you just have to choose choosing you know is when it's not based on anything is scary so okay let me follow that logic then so get world view realize then based on worldview that you're going to pick a path MH that leads to Passion yeah I mean passion will come I think I mean if you do some you know when you do something that you um develop an expertise in you know did you read cal newport's book so good they can't ignore you I I'd haven't no I think judging by way you're saying now you're going to love it um but he goes into that thing where gaining Mastery is a fundamental part of passion and if you don't G Mastery good luck well that's I mean that's the whole you know Jason Silva who we both know and who is you know so intense and so awesome he loves to talk about flow and you know I love it as an idea you know when you pick a lane for yourself you'll develop a Mastery you'll you'll feel great about it if you have to you course correct um but I don't think that it reveals itself to you like something that was waiting for you to find it think that's the where people go wrong you've talked really powerfully about your own course correction so um really cool by the way so for those of you don't know he literally uh he creates a video for this thing called the kind project making desk for these underprivileged kids in Africa the video is just a Smash Hit starts getting a lot of attention gets on the news goes to MSNBC literally live in the broadcast and woman says Hey somebody here should basically hire you which they then do which is incredible but then you realize not loving this no I didn't and you know you know MSNBC was great to me so I have to say that first and individual people there are extraordinarily smart and very cool and and all my bosses were great um and that experience was crazy because I was you know working as a telemarketer selling car warranties you know just absolutely hating my life and um and I made this one video and lawence O Donnell the host of of the last word which is the 10 o'clock show um saw it had me on the air and then the next day he was in Burbank and asked me out for lunch and was and at that lunch asked me if I wanted to move to New York to work for them he's like would you like to do and I don't know if he had the authority to do it I don't think he did they spent like 5 months trying to build a job for me there which I eventually took and um you know when I got there I thought maybe I'll like work my way through the ranks here and find and find that this is what I love um and then within I'd say a few months you know it just it just sort of to started to rub me the wrong way well so before we just gloss on so walk me through the the mindset so you're there you're not loving it a voice in your head is very much saying this isn't for me yeah most people will stay there for years years and years and they leave until someone kicks them out well I sort of did I mean like here's the thing is that once I checked out of the of of you know being a good employee at the company which is horrible to say but that's that's the truth is I would spend you know hours in an office hidden away working on the nerd writer right during work now I don't suggest that to people because that you want to be a good employee but you know I had a lot of free time there and so I was thinking I have to double down on my own work right right and so I just started working on that show all the time and then I you know I had quit when I thought that that msmc might be my you know might be my path I sort of like left the nerd writer for a little bit for a few months um but then when it was not so great I started up again and I was like okay I renewed my passion for this um and I worked and worked and worked and then someone at Discovery saw a video um they just said we're launching a new show called secet daily um and would you be interested in writing the show with a co-host and um and hosting it uh and launching it for us and I heard that I felt the same way I felt like this could be my path right you know and we talk about sort of how do how does a show scale I thought well maybe this is the way maybe I leave the nerd writer and and work for Discovery where I'm like in a higher leadership position my editorial influence is greater you know maybe I'm the voice behind this show and I make it exactly what I want with the resources of Discovery another learning experience that wasn't the case me as soon as I sort of checked out of there and started phoning it in I started paying a lot more attention to the nerd writer um and what I really wanted to do yeah such a it's such a fascinating thing and so we're sort of on opposite sides of this right so I'm an employer so I know what it's like to have a large group of people and have this huge um Enterprise that can only work if you can find people that can feel they're most alive right and if there's one thing I promise you it's that it works for some people and other people [ __ ] hate it yeah right and so you're constantly like Jesus what do I do because you want people to be alive and you want it to be the thing that they want to do and you like what I always told people is be here for the most selfish reason ever like don't come to work for me right like I'll think about me I'll obsess about me and what I'm trying to do I'll make sure the company's fine you come for you because when somebody's in the room grinding it out because their passion happens to align with what the show needs to be successful yeah unbelievably amazing things happen so we talking before we came on camera about boil things down to the physics right and so the physics of being a human is when you feel connected to something when you feel passionate it makes you feel alive you want to do it right you're moving towards something no one has to tell you to do it there's like this pull through demand of this is my calling or whatever abolutely so it's it's [ __ ] tricky right It's Tricky on both sides of the fence tricky because people like you say some aren't built for that and for me like you know studied film and narrated film making and I thought I was going to be a future film director and one of the huge things about film making that makes it so great that I hated was that it was collaborative right okay so know thyself know thyself all right so when I used to direct short films I used to give the speech to my whole crew and I was always the director I used to say listen I'm going to be a dict a benevolent dictator here right I'd love to hear what you say but I want to make it very clear that I have the final say on every everything and this is my vision that we're all helping to realize my vision if that's not for you fine like we can get get on to another film um but I'm such a protective perfectionist about my own work that I that I work best when I am by myself doing a project and that's why I quit film making and started writing fiction because you do that by yourself right and now the nerd writer is a similar thing which is um which I only there's nobody on the team it's just me collaborative in my life with my relationships right not in my work you know in my life I let people in there's a give and take uh I love people they love me back it's a very you know very integrated thing and so there's people out there who you're never going to convince to be a part of that larger thing I think and that must be the most difficult thing as a manager or a leader of of a company cuz those people need jobs too right you know what are they going to do yeah I mean that that's really fascinating it's like parents when they think about okay well the techniques I used on child a worked but the techniques I used on child a don't work on child B so now what so and that and that was actually really interesting so like my sister and I grew up in the same household very different outcomes so you know we had the same parents um but some things work really well for me and then some things work really well for her and but they weren't there wasn't like a lot of crossover it's and that's what it's like running a company is your Tech your natural techniques and I think the goal of a leader has to be to transcend your natural techniques to find something like Pete Carol says a life philosophy that allows you to figure this stuff out and to tie it back to what we were talking about with you know cultivating a worldview um you need a filter right you need to know what to say yes to and what to say no to and whether that's as a leader whether that's as an employee whether that's as an artist or just somebody trying to make it through life figuring out like what decisions to make right from a moral standpoint of course um you need to you need to have that filter but it is it is really difficult to when you start talking about a mass of people and this is what another thing we were talking about off camera is so I'm looking at the nerd writer and I'm thinking [ __ ] like this content is on another planet like it's so good and I could just sit there and watch out but the the real question that you should be asking is why do I think it's good because it's going to be very different for other people so for me usability is all that matters so I'm watching the content and I'm saying oh [ __ ] like I can really use this piece of information like you totally [ __ ] up my life you changed it in the most beautiful and amazing way with um the Hemingway quote and the notion of what's it kagi kugi kugi thank you yeah so I'm watching that episode about kugi the record player of my life skips grinds to a halt I'm like this is unbelievable yeah and the Hemingway quote that you threw in which I had never heard immediately put it on my list of like life changing quotes is life breaks everyone and some are stronger in the places that broke yeah I was great quote whoa great writer walk us through that concept that art form what it is how it's impacted you so interesting because that's a video that I've probably gotten the most um personal feedback about um and the concept is is sort of simple um in Japanese culture they have an art craft art called kugi where when uh Ceramics are broken they they don't throw them out and buy another or you know or create another one from scratch they put the camic pieces back together but the way that they adhes them is with gold a kind of gold adhesive gold sparkly you know it's almost like a mortar materal yeah it's beautiful and so you get these these pieces that are broken but at the cracks are are more beautiful and I thought that is such you know a perfect metaphor and it's not my metaphor because it it it you know it goes into the Buddhist concept of wabisabi and but the idea that you know we are going to go through trauma and it's particularly relevant right now I think in the in the postelection period um we are going to go through trauma but trauma is an opportunity to change and to um reorganize the elements that made up your life you know I I gave a a a speech in um Singapore a couple weeks ago and you know what I spoke about was that when a person's mind is traumatized it's like the story that they were telling themselves has cease to be persuasive right and when a story stops being persuasive um it is disorienting and that I think is what trauma is the period between when you when your old story breaks apart because of this last draw on the camel's back thing I mean we're going to continue to tell ourselves the old stories until it's so glaringly contradictory that it doesn't hold up so trauma is the period between when that breaks down and when you from the pieces of the old build something new um and we'll never glorify the trauma itself but recognize that in that period you have a very unique opportunity that will only come along a handful of times in your life to reorganize the story that you tell about yourself to yourself so that for me is what um kugi is all about and I think a lot of people just really connected with that idea for sure so the the idea behind my entire life and certainly the idea behind this show is is that humans are constructed right right which is why I think Jason knew I would resonate with you the concept of cultivating which it it's that you say cultivating worldview right so there's something so active in cultivation it's it's choices and you know you're talking about the narrative and I've never heard anybody say before that trauma is the moment where your old story breaks down you can't cling to it anymore and and you have yet to build the new one through kugi um that's [ __ ] beautiful by the way and thank you for that thank you um and I'm a big believer and you have to open yourself up to being changed that really changed me that's really [ __ ] cool yeah um so thinking about you know this notion of I'm going to take an active role in in rebuilding myself yeah and doing it in a way that becomes an art form like that's super super interesting to me so um I'm going to wrap up really fast why I brought that up but I want to come back to it so I brought that up just to talk about scalability yeah so you're having this big impact on people um which I think is is important and I think that we're living through um a revolution right now and the revolution is that the medium is changing so much that there are no Gatekeepers anymore yeah and the only gatekeeper is your ability to get my attention yeah that's that like when people really understand what that means huge huge opportunity that should not be glossed over yeah yeah it's a parad for creators and so you've risen up and there are other people like I God I was born in this era yeah for sure for those reasons for sure then the next question becomes so how do you scale it like and and I ask that from the position of somebody who wants you to touch more lives you know scaling for me is the thing that I'm constantly thinking about in the business I mean 90% of my mental energy is is you know going towards creating the videos which is which is all I really want to do um but now that the business side has become is that really all you want to do you just want to create the videos yeah I mean I'm a I'm a film director at heart like I'm a Creator at heart the the impact that comes out of it is is still very important to me and I try to engage with it as much as I can um but the business side of it particularly it makes me cringe a little bit that said I do think about scaling the show and what's the way forward because I want to make the most impactful work and so when I think of scaling I think in that way yeah it's interesting because I think that um so you and I look at the world in and let's say if ven diagrams like there's 90% overlap I was watching your content I'm like yeah I find this interesting too like it's amazing like this guy's dejing my brain it was like just so much fun and then there's like this area that does an overlap where we see things really differently so when I look at um when I look at anything right the first question I'm asking is scalability now that speaks to my personality that speaks to my worldview not that objectively it's right so when I think about Steve Jobs and Steve wnc right you had one guy all he cared about was SC and then you had the other guy who so enjoyed the art of being on the motherboard and wiring things together that he actually asked to be a midlevel engineer like you own the company and you FC character even now like the things that he sort of toils away with to toils away are are small but you know it's amazing we're living through a time right now the entrepreneurial generation yeah now to to really be an entrepreneur to be the lead to be the alpha in an entrepreneurial organization is it takes a certain personality type and not everybody's going to enjoy it and I think a lot about my wife and I so my wife and I co-founded the company she puts this whole show together literally I am the talent I'm not just saying that like I am the talent of her show but the show what you see like that's her and the team yeah so but I think about our personality type she's no interest in leading right so she wants to follow my vision by the way interesting very I mean it's speak to your interest in wnc and just the desire to really create and the funny thing is I went to film school so I used to want to be on set I wanted to direct and then one day I think it was my wife that asked me like would you ever go back to directing I was like no I could never do that yeah and the reason that I couldn't go back to directing is for me for my personality type once you taste scale there's no going back so like as you're talking about nerd writer and wanting it to be less content and more impact I'm like [ __ ] yeah less content more impact that's awesome so I'm put Evan on that and then I'm going to have somebody over here doing the daily content cuz we got to like the algorithm is changing bro like you got to stay on that YouTube is changing right I I I hear that and I might need to partner with a u type figure in the future to you know to do this but I so Seinfeld always says like the relationship with the show was so white hot that he knew he had to stop after nine Seasons because they were going to offer him like $100 million for season 10 and he just knew that wow you a little bit of too much can ruin a whole experience so I want to make sure that I'm doing things right um but I'm also you know not turning away from the opportunities that are coming at me sure you have a lot of self-awareness if you had to teach somebody how to be self-aware like that what are the steps oh god um that's a good question I I you have to be brutally honest with yourself I guess I mean you know put yourself around the people who um um will support the journey that you're on for me like introspection is one great source of the content that I make you know I you have like a um a strategy for introspection like do you put headphones on and listen to the sound of the rain and like are there things that you do to really facilitate that or no I hate the rain no uh love the rain but I I don't I mean for me like there's always a conversation happening in in your head in my mind so it's like you know my personal belief is that the you know the mind is you know made up of language so I am constantly you are constantly telling a story to yourself about yourself and about the world and it's got those two facets if you just take the time you can listen to it and make it explicit best way to do that is to write it down right you don't think without writing there's no thought without language so you have to make it explicit you know when I was when I just graduated school you know one of the first things I did is I read all the philosophy that there was you know I started from the presocratic and I went all the way down to the 20th century and tried to just get all the big benchmarks and read all the books with a particular Bend for Albert kamu if I remember correct yeah he was he was a he was a definitely a watershed moment but I after that wrote this thing called a discourse on truth right and I had I had it bound up wow at Kinko's and it looked really nice and I had the perfect font and I got A4 paper and I I I made like a 100 copies of it and it was this like very high futin kind of very pretentious Le worded thing that went through truth and ways to know it and things like that and I gave it to all my family and my friends who were like you know what is this thing you know this looks like he just you know so but it was so important for me and when you when you learn how to uh to listen to your own story and write it down I think self-awareness is like an inevitable byproduct of that because you get addicted to knowing what you think about something yeah I think there's this weird State we all have you know we're operating on old memories and we're operating on things that we read but we haven't really like retained as soon as you start transferring that whole messy cloudy Misty uh area of knowledge into explicit knowledge you're going to start seeing a lot more in yourself and what's out there uh and so my advice is to write just write and the rest will follow uh the story that you were telling about um the journal that you wrote is uh what was it the truth what the discourse on Truth the discourse on Truth at all fine bookstores um it's actually pretty interesting and it made me think about how people cuzz I I know what your family was thinking when they read it like oh God right like it's pretentious or what graduated from school doesn't have a job but he's going to do this right but here's the thing like when people see little kids like learn how to walk and like you know they stop peeing the bed they're oh my God right they're ecstatic they're over the moon yeah but we should be thinking the same thing about intellectual development right cuz maybe that was like a little uh cringeworthy or what but what it's actually a really important exploration so I went through a similarly cringe worthy worthy um thing in in my late teens in high school when I got really into Eastern philosophy yeah and so like I had the I had the answer for everything right so be like water my friend you know what I mean like that kind of [ __ ] uh and I remember like I was convinced I was going to go to college get my degree is like the safety net but then I was moving to the Wilderness in China dude I am so with you I had the same thing my man I was like I got to this point where I was like oh I have to work my body out like I have to be a farmer I went to work on a farm nice for like a few months wow because I was like this is the inevitable last step of this journey that I have to go on so I have to do it and then I thought well I'll probably have to just be a monk for 10 years and I was like considering the ways of telling my family that I wasn't going to be able to contact them because you know in monk school you can't contact anyone monk school I like that that is badass tell me about the farm I went to Normandy and through a a a program called helex which was like you you know you live in someone's farm and they feed you and work for them um eventually I got over that thank God but um but I'm going to guess you actually learned some lessons from that kind of hard ass work yeah you do you learn to pers persevere through you know through pain you know cuz working working a whole day um moving branches or moving pieces of wood is so you know it's so exhausting and um it I I I you know people who do that for their whole lives I only did it for a very short period of time but it was very Illuminating in that way it's that you you just have to keep working at it and eventually you'll finish um but that was a direct outgrowth of the philosophy thing that we were talking about it was like this is the path I have to take it yeah that's really fascinating so that's how I think of the gym by the way for me it's I haven't mastered that yet when I was a kid I always had to have a job during the Summers and because I was so insanely lazy I would take whatever job my parents would get for me because I didn't want to go apply for a job so that meant it was always manual labor so I worked in a paint factory I did um a paint store I worked um doing literal like hard labor there was one summer where all I was doing was odd job so I spent some time um smashing concrete with uh a picka and like just doing all this stuff that is your mind literally is if you have a certain personality type and I think that we share that like your mind is just racing get me out of here or you go into a Zen state right and you find this way to separate your mind from your body so that your brain can like go explore go Daydream be somewhere else be creative while your body is is set to this task but it's actually one of those periods where um your mind do a lot of really productive thinking because you so want to escape the reality of what you're doing at that moment that the only place to go is in and I actually found so I loved your explanation about write it down it makes it concrete and it takes this sort of ephemeral mush and turns it into into something very real I felt that way about having manual labor to do because my body was taken care of there were no distractions oddly enough there were no distractions from my physicality I was totally engrossed in this thing right this amount of cement has to be broken apart this vat of paint has to be cleaned out like whatever it is you sort of set your body to that task do you read Kurt vonette of course all right so I forget which story it's in but there's one where the people can move their body in a direction and then send their mind in the opposite direction they can actually exit their body which I always thata felt so true to me because that was what manual labor was for me I would send my body over here to do something and then I would turn my mind to this way to deal with some intellectual Pursuit some either film idea or what who knows but in doing that really learning to to go deep it's why I was asking you like what your process is in fact one of the first questions I wrote down that I wanted to ask you was what is your process you've done such a good job of taking a subject like Rihanna's work work work work work song like you've got a whole [ __ ] like show about that song love that video how how is this happening he made a show he spent a week on this song and it's really interesting hardcore week how how did you train train yourself to go deep like that um I think when you write a lot uh it makes it a little bit easier to uh compose a a story right so that part of my brain is and mind is still is you know primed for taking information and composing it into something that is persuasive and like a story so you know every week or whenever I come up with something for the nerd writer I you know it's usually a combination of some kind of introspective thought process that I want to talk about and something from the world that I've consumed that I think is interesting and like to talk about and it's like oh there's a there's a good interaction between those two let's see what I can do there so once I have that which is the hardest part because ideas are just a [ __ ] um then I research very intensely for a week or two weeks um do you give intention to your um subconscious at all I forget who it was that said it maybe Einstein oh God it was one of the like big um scientists who said never go to sleep without making a demand of your subconscious I thought wow this guy's accomplished a lot in his life so I'm going to take that pretty seriously well I mean there is a there is a truth in that your mind works out problems when you sleep so yeah a lot of times I will be totally stuck on something um and go to sleep and wake up the next morning finding that I've solved that that persuasive Problem whatever it is that's awesome yeah all right so what's the impact that you want to have with your life with my life um I don't know I mean you said earlier in the interview that you saw something that was in one of my videos and it sort of stopped you in your tracks and helped you think a different way like I've been talking about a lot in this interview you know for me we learn by saying not thinking we learn by articulation and articulation is what makes the world go around right so the impact I want to have is I want to articulate things in such a way that people actually view a different world than they viewed before they heard what I said about it you know because the world and our minds are made up of language and um when you find a new way to you know write that language you change the world and you change people's minds man thank you so much for coming on the show it's absolutely incredible fantastic all right where can these guys find you online uh you can go to uh the nerd writer on YouTube if you just type in the nerd writer in Google you'll find it um I have a Twitter uh as well but I mean it's all happening at the nerd writer show so watch it subscribe all right guys be sure to do that you're going to want to go deep in this man's world I promise you it doesn't matter what you are interested in he has gone down that rabbit hole and he has come back with the Nuggets of gold that you need to understand in his words to open a new door for you and show you things in a totally new way to help you put unique connections between things that you never would have imagined before the idea of actively cultivating your world view of building that platform and translating it from clouds that really feel like you're going to fall you're on unstable ground and making it this platform that's actually going to let you find out what you want to do how to move forward pivot if you're later in your life it doesn't matter going in and learning how to think learning how to objectively critique these things and really go in and discover a truth that you don't see when you're skipping across the surface and what I love is he will do the profane the profound he will go on pop music and make you realize that there is a layer of depth and interconnectivity that you never could have imagined but then he'll also break down Gotham City Through the Ages and deal with comic books it is [ __ ] incredible it is a whole universe unto this man and the most amazing thing that you're going to take away is you're going to realize that there is a whole universe unto you and he is going to help you tap into that so subscribe drink deeply of this man's stuff it is unbelievably great Evan thank you so much for coming on the show man it please give it up guys you know this is a weekly show if you haven't already be sure to subscribe we are trying to get as many amazing people like this on the show is humanly possible and if you rate and review that will help us out so go to iTunes Stitcher let us know what you think tell the world about the show and until next time my friends be legendary subscribe thank you man that was awesome fantastic a lot of fun thank you hey everybody thanks so much for joining us for another episode of impact theory if this content is adding value to your life our one ask is that you go to iTunes and Stitcher and rate and review not only does that help us build this community which at the end of the day is all we care about but it also helps us get even more amazing guests on here to share their knowledge with all of us thank you guys so much for being a part of this community and until next time be legendary my friends [Music]
Resume
Categories