Modern Wisdom - #1080 - Pursuit of Wonder - The Terrible Paradox of Self-Awareness
Episode Date: April 4, 2026Robert Pantano is a writer, creator, and the founder of the Pursuit of Wonder YouTube channel. At what point does self-awareness become self-sabotage? The more you analyze yourself, the easier it is ...to get stuck overthinking. So how do you improve your life without ruining it? Expect to learn why self-awareness is a problem and the paradox of being too self-aware, if there is a way to be self-aware without becoming self-destructive, why aging is like a road trip, why regret is framed as a prison in which the prisoners are also the guards, if anxiety is just the natural consequence of seeing reality clearly, what makes life worth the trouble and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get the brand new Whoop 5.0 and your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom Get 15% off your first order of my favourite Non-Alcoholic Brew at https://athleticbrewing.com/modernwisdom Get 160+ biomarkers tested for just $1/day, plus an extra $25 off at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get up to $50 off the RP Hypertrophy App at https://rpstrength.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: lnkfi.re/SN-Goggins #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: lnkfi.re/SN-Peterson #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: lnkfi.re/SN-Huberman - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Why is self-awareness a problem?
Self-awareness is a problem.
Well, first of all, I think it's important to recognize that we often think about self-awareness as a good thing.
We generally think about it as a gradient.
So we might refer to somebody as being more or less self-aware than others and more is typically assumed as better.
When I'm referring to self-awareness, I'm referring to just the fact that we are aware of a self at all.
And so the mere fact that we have a certain form of consciousness that provides us that sense of self is a problem for a number of reasons.
First and foremost, we've arrived with a sense of self-awareness by a process of evolution that doesn't really care.
Obviously, care I'm using loosely there because evolution doesn't care at all about anything besides it's just continuation, propagation.
but the experience of consciousness and self-awareness from the first-person perspective is not
central to the reason for why self-awareness and consciousness arrived in the form that humans experience
it. And so we are often at odds with the fundamental nature of reality in existence
by virtue of the self-awareness, in my view at least. And the reason for that is,
as a self who is aware of that self, we attach to that self, we attach to the ideas of that self,
we attach to people and things, and our desire to make sense of our perception and understanding
through all of the concepts that we form by nature of having that degree of awareness.
And yet reality in existence is fickle, chaotic,
uncertain we're going to lose everybody and everything through time or distance, decay, age,
or illness, or death. And so we find ourselves in this sort of cosmic ocean where the waves are
crashing on our heads constantly. And yet we must continue because we are also a part of the
same substrate that built us that needs continuation. So it puts us in this very peculiar position
where we can feel the intensity and pain and suffering that seems from a conscious individual
entity terrible. And yet we just refuse to give up. We must endure. And so that's why it's
problematic. But also, obviously, I see the other side of that coin. And the paradox.
of self-awareness in my view is that self-awareness, self-apprehension is the most horrific,
terrifying thing in the known universe. And yet it is the most beautiful thing in the known universe
because as far as we're aware, it's the only thing that allows conceptual understanding
of existence and reality. So we can form the very idea of beauty and wonder and meaning
and purpose and hope. And it seems to me to be necessary that the first part, the other half of that coin, is in the equation for the second half to be possible.
Yeah, you've got this line, self-awareness is a sort of poison that we each consume upon birth.
Yeah, yeah. I believe that's our birthright is the horrific qualities of self-awareness, a poison, but that we,
as almost magicians or alchemists can transmute into into gold, into art and beauty and wonder
and love and all that. And so it makes you want to, you know, you love and hate it in the fullest possible
form of those words at the same time. At least, obviously that's my perspective. I know maybe some
people might see life in existence as purely positive and beautiful. Some might see it as purely
negative and horrific and somewhere in between there's a spectrum. But in my view, it's sort of,
it has to be both at the same time. And that is the paradoxical nature of it. How much of that do you
think is just us all coming up with some fancy philosophical explanation for our own
idiosyncratic experience of the world, that you have a bit of a grasp of the awe and a bit of a
grasp of the dread and some people are almost all dread and some people are almost all awe and each of
them kind of create their own philosophical views of the world and the universe based around just
well this is this is my typical daily affect this is my typical experience of things i i think that
it's it's definitely important to not universalize your own perspective your own experiences and
your own way of thinking it's it's easy to assume that the way you think both
in the most literal of sense and in the most abstract of sense is the way most people do. And it's not the
case. There's a huge spectrum and variety of modes of thought that people experience and operate
through. And so people might be more visually inclined. People might be more linguistically inclined.
People might be a more feeling orientation of the world. So just on that level alone, there's a wide
variety and spectrum of experience of thought. And so we have to start there in recognizing that our own
fundamental experience of the world and reality is not going to be universal in the way that we might
project or assume. If consciousness is a mystery that can't understand itself, does that mean that the
human condition is just fundamentally tragic? Well, that's at the heart or a heart of the
paradox. It's a multi-hearted paradox, I would say.
So it is a part of the tragedy, or it is partly a tragedy, perhaps, is a better way of
putting it, in the sense that, yeah, I think that consciousness from the first person
perspective, which is naturally the limit of consciousness, right? You can't, as far as I could
possibly conceive, there's no reality, world being entity phenomenon in which
a consciousness could perceive itself in the world without its consciousness.
And so it's a feedback loop in that sense.
And so it'll get increasingly close to comprehending the nature of itself, but it'll never breach.
It's sort of that Xenos paradox of the arrow where it'll get increasingly close,
but it's always infinitely far away.
And that's sort of how I see consciousness attempting to comprehend itself.
It's like, can you make sense of an inch with an inch, a minute with a minute?
No, it's just the same thing trying to measure itself with itself.
And so that is tragic in that sense, but also on the flip side of it, it's what fuels the
unending inquiry about what it means to be a conscious entity and what it means to be,
in our case, a human.
And so that's the beauty, if you see it that way, because what else is there to do and make
interesting about existence other than the exploration of the nature of existence. I mean,
maybe some people would think that we'll just sort of sit around the surface and that's fun with
margaritas and, you know, sit by pool and all that. And I totally get that. But I think there's
something very riveting and the deepest experiences of wonder come from those explorations that
are, from my view, an infinite landscape of possibilities, questions.
and answers that will never satisfy,
will never fulfill,
will never reach some sort of peak,
that landscape is flat,
but there's just so much territory to explore.
Is there a way to become self-aware
without it becoming self-destructive?
I think so.
I think that it's a spectrum,
it's a gradient of,
you start from maybe a very,
I don't want to say a low level of self-awareness because that reduces it.
It's not like that.
But maybe reflectiveness about that self-awareness where you can realize that.
And then there's a certain experience of difficulties and confusions and sufferings that they are just, they exist for themselves and you struggle to justify them.
You struggle to deal with them.
and I think if you continue on that path, you get to a point where you become more comfortable
with the confusions and the uncertainties.
And you don't get better at justifying them.
You don't get better at dealing with the problems of being a conscious entity in the world,
but you get better at recognizing that the lack of answers, the lack of stability, the lack of
rigidness is is par for the course and par for the beauty of the course. And that I think is,
is the ultimate goal to strive for when it comes to these sorts of topics and questions.
I think a lot of people have this sense that the more that they learn about themselves,
the more difficult life becomes, that there's a kind of enjoyment, freedom. There's a freedom
in naivety, would be a way to put it. And that the less, the less,
naivety that they have, the more challenging the world seems to be. There's complexity and
responsibility and self-doubt and self-esteem issues come in and there's an awareness of what
I could have done. Standards kind of begin to rise, but in kind of squirrely ways about virtue.
If you've got a critical mind, you find an ever-increasing number of ways to derogate success,
even if you manage to achieve the success, because you were aware of all of the ways that you
might have lied or or cajoled or coerced or not being fully virtuous on route to achieving the
thing. Whereas previously, you were just happy to have fucking done it. And then, yeah, this tighter and
tighter spiral, this ever-increasing resolution that you look at the world with, I think to a lot of
people feels like a personal curse. I think it feels like an increase in self-awareness just equates
to an increase in suffering. Yeah, I mean, first of all, I resonate with that reaction. And I think
there's there's validity in that reaction and if you feel that way that's justified that makes
sense to me I feel that way often I think most people feel that way when they start to like you
said unravel the absurdity of a lot of what we are and what we're doing and there is perhaps a
better version of a being of existence from a human perspective that that dulls that that
dilutes that but unfortunately you don't really get to choose whether or not you are or are not
thinking about those things experiencing those thoughts and feelings so you you kind of you know you
don't think in my view you don't think thoughts thoughts you know arrive in your head after a sort
of conveyor belt of experiences and neurology and all of that and so you ultimately
wind up with these questions and thoughts and concerns, these, you know, a certain proximity
to those thoughts and concerns that become very difficult to experience and manage. And it might
make you envious of the idea of not feeling that way and not experiencing that proximity. But
unfortunately, once you start worrying about something or once you start thinking about
something that that can of worms is fully opened and you can't you can't close it you have to figure out
how to how to deal with it how to move forward and i find that the the best way to deal with those
sorts of cans of worms or those tunnels is uh is forward not back because backwards that that that end
is closed um in terms of the tunnel metaphor you can't return to some form of yourself some version of
yourself that hasn't already um you know wondered questioned pondered or become concerned about
about those sorts of things.
And so I see that it's quintessential to not put those things aside
if you're experiencing the sufferings and pains
of almost self alienation and self confusion.
You have to move forward and figure out how to,
in some people's cases, it's maybe resolving them
through practical and tactical methodology.
And in other people's cases,
it might be more of a,
embracement of those feelings.
And by embracing certain thoughts and certain experiences, if possible,
I do find that you can reduce their gravity, their force on your head and neck.
What about regret?
I think one of the things that comes along as a side dish with quite a lot of self-awareness
is people's increase in rumination.
sort of whimsical, wistful, remembering regret.
What have you learned about regret?
Well, I think regret is very interesting because regret implies that you could have done differently.
You could have done, you know, better than you had in a particular moment of your life,
which in my view, I get the impulse, I get the sentiment.
but if you rewind the clock of reality,
100% of the time you're arriving at that same moment
as your same self with the same brain, the same physiology,
the same information,
and the same external circumstances,
there's no way you could have made any different of a decision.
And so regret is sort of an understandable illusion of our consciousness
where it makes us feel like there's a lot of possibilities
and we can be diluted by our hindsight and our ability to reference back and forth between time.
But there is no world in which you didn't make all the decisions you've made,
putting aside maybe sort of quantum, you know, multi-world theories.
But in this world, the world that we're talking about and in, there is no version that you
could have done anything differently.
And that brings into sort of, you know, the concept of free will, which personally I,
I don't believe in in the sense that we typically refer to it as.
But yeah, if you consider free will as a part of the equation, and even if you don't,
I see no world, I see no logic that makes sense of regret being.
It's an understandable reaction, but not a, certainly not a rational reaction, which I know
we oscillate between emotion, feeling, and logic.
But I just think that, you know, regret exists in.
an illusory realm of our perception.
It's a weird one because I think the free will argument is one of,
it's in an interesting category,
it's something that might be literally true,
but figuratively useless,
that it might actually be,
we might be a deterministic set of dominoes
all the way from the Big Bang until this conversation right here.
But it's functionally pointless to believe that,
as far as I can see.
You need to go so deep,
into non-attachment to I couldn't have done any differently,
but you need to not overshoot into nihilism and fatalism.
And it's just fucking, it's too hard.
But if we stay, if we shelve the discussion around determinism,
and you say, okay, you get to go back,
you didn't make a decision before you got to the point at which you made a decision.
Or you didn't do a thing or you did do a thing after or before you wish that you had.
and you want to do it differently. As far as I can see, sort of reading your perspective,
regret is kind of like a refusal to accept the limits of foresight.
You couldn't have chosen differently under the same conditions,
and an acceptance of necessity kind of helps to dissolve regret.
I think that's very well put. I think, and to your point,
you could even put aside the deterministic,
the potential deterministic nature of reality.
You're still limited by the same constraints in any given moment.
moment. It doesn't mean that maybe there's some sort of deterministic ultimate reality that was
going to pan out the way it has and did. But it does mean that you are always limited in every
moment by a set of constraints. Your physiology, the condition of your mind, your emotional state,
the information you have, the most recent influences you've experienced, all of that is going to
cause you to make a decision. And whether it's built in
to the laws or the nature of the unfolding of reality
is irrelevant at that point.
It's just you are going to make the same decision
over and over again.
To regret having made that decision
is to deny the very fact that you're always
going to be limited by a set of constraints.
And unless you intentionally decided
to make the less viable decision,
the worst decision in that moment,
which I mean, obviously there are masochists and so forth,
But for the most part, people are trying to make good decisions that make sense to them in any given moment.
And so you're always trying your best, given those constraints. And it's absurd to think that you could have done or would have done any better. And like you put very well, it's sort of this foresight, hindsight, equilibrium that you just sort of stretch and contort to make the most sense for your current reality. And I also think I think another important point of what regret tends to
point to is is a lack of embrace around the fact that there are no conditions of your life
that are going to resolve the fundamental tensions that we often experience, which is, you know,
we want a sense of certainty, a sense of happiness and ultimate resolve, a sense of having
made all the right decisions, having done everything right, and all these pieces are in order.
that's a sort of underlying desire that we all experience. Some, you know, maybe recognize that that's not going to be the case or not. But I think there's a proportional relation to how willing you are to accept that you're never going to get out of the sort of hamster wheel of desire and suffering and boredom and anxiety and how much you might regret what you've done and how your life has gone.
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heading to join.wop.com slash modern wisdom. That's join.com slash modern wisdom. You've got that,
you know that Colmac McCarthy line? You never know what worst luck your bad luck has saved you from.
I do not know that line, but I love it. I love how that sounds. I fucking love that line. You never know
what worse luck your bad luck has saved you from.
That's beautiful. No, I love that.
Well, you've got that story about the guy asking for directions, which is pretty similar.
Yes. And so, yeah, I mean, I've written a story called the Nova Effect.
And I've also done a lot of similar explorations around the idea that, you know, we basically
never know, this is sort of playing off a Kurt Vonnegut line.
We never know the good luck from the bad luck until the story's over. And, you know, for all of us,
we don't the story never ends until we're not even around and so you never quite can discern what was
good and what was bad for you or for a collective until it's reached its you know ultimation and um yeah that goes
for each of our individual lives where it's it's the same case it's we we feel in any given moment
that good some good fortune is going to lead ultimately to good fortune forever thereafter but that's not how
life works or reality works. It's a
sort of spurring off of multiple lines that one good
thing, one advantage could lead you to a misfortune or a
disadvantage and vice versa. And so
there's, you know, you always want to feel good when good
things happen, but there's, and you always, you don't always want to
feel bad when bad things happen, but you do ultimately tend to feel bad
when bad things happen. But there's, here's the dual-sided coin of
a different phenomenon where, you know, if you know, if you know,
that when good things happen, it's still, there's still more, more game to play, more life to live.
You're going to be willing to accept the potential for more trials and errors and all that,
which is not so great. But knowing that when bad things happen, that's not,
it's not going to just be misfortune forever thereafter as well, gives you some hope and gives you
a sense of, you know, the possibility that things could, could be directly related to that,
that ultimately save you, in whatever sense, save you, might.
mean. Yeah, you never know what
worst luck, your bad luck has saved you from. I wrote
an essay today, actually,
and I want to read you this thing,
because I thought it was really interesting.
All right.
Adversity is a terrible thing to waste.
Almost all of the biggest periods of growth in your life
have germinated from your lowest points.
Once shock, grief, sadness, and fear subside,
more energetic emotions arise,
pain, resentment, bitterness, anger, and a chip on your
shoulder. Change is hard and deep
fundamental change requires an insane amount of activation energy, far more than is available by
just wanting it a lot. This is why people change so much after losing a parent, enduring a
betrayal, losing a job, or going through a breakup. Not because the past version of their world has been
stripped away alone, but because they finally have enough fuel to get their new life off
the launch pad. In the mid-90s, there was a single mother living in a near poverty home in Edinburgh.
When she left her first marriage, it wasn't a quiet parting. She's described the relationship
as abusive. She fled to Portugal with her baby daughter and a suitcase that contained the early
chapters of a book that she was working on. At one point, her ex-husband hid the manuscript
trying to prevent her from leaving with it. She was clinically depressed and contemplating suicide.
She couldn't afford to heat her flat properly, so she pushed a pram to cafes to write while
her daughter slept. The manuscript was rejected by 12 publishers. That's 12 people telling her
in different ways that it wasn't good enough. The rejection wasn't abstract. It was survival level.
If the book failed, so did her last attempt at building a life.
The humiliation of those refutals became momentum.
J.K. Rowling went on to sell 500 million copies in the Harry Potter series globally and became
richer than the queen. But here's the uncomfortable truth. Not all adversity becomes growth.
Some people are crushed by it. Adversity is fuel, not destiny. The difference is what you do
with the surplus emotion. If that energy isn't directed, it curdles into rumination.
The same fuel that could power a transformation can just
is easily power self-destruction. There's also a time window, because pain calcifies, the chip on
your shoulder becomes your identity. The story of what happened becomes the story of who you are.
Anger gets you moving, but it can't steer. It's rocket fuel, not guidance. Eventually, the chip on
your shoulder has to become purpose. As a TLDR, the worst thing that's happened to you might be
the only thing powerful enough to change you. Pain is temporary and fuel is rare, so if you're going
through a hard time, don't waste it. You never know what worst luck your bad luck is say.
you from. Beautiful. I think that's beautiful. I'm curious to think about or to ask you about
what you think allows someone to create that differentiation or to act on that differentiation
between it becoming a collapsible effect and a fueling effect. What do you think it is that
allows some people to utilize those adversities versus? Yeah, go ahead.
Great question. I'm always hesitant of giving some pithy philosophical answer to this stuff because I think so much of it is just practical.
Spending less time on your own. It sounds so dumb. You go through a breakup. Spend less time on your own, man.
Like it's important for you to have your friends come around with tacos and ice cream and watch shit movies.
Like that is an important part of the healing process. It's important for you to stay busy. It's important for you to reconnect with the hobbies that you had as a kid.
Start playing football again or pickleball or whatever it is that you like to do martial arts or running, whatever, and to do it in a group.
And that will carry a lot of the difference between somebody that pain calcifies and it turns into stasis.
Basically what I'm pushing toward is a bias for action.
But it's a bias for action when your capacity for action has been severely diminished.
So you can't act as easily.
your one rep max has been chopped down by 95%
and you're really going to struggle to lift anything,
even the smallest weight.
So what do you do when you have a weight that you can't bear
while you spread the load between other people?
So I think relying on other people,
but the broader lesson,
not everybody has other people, needs other people in this way.
The broad lesson, I think, is a bias for action.
How can I just, what's that line?
Anxiety hates a moving target.
Right.
that action is the antidote to anxiety.
And it's so fucking true.
And it sounds like maybe I'm running away from my problems,
you know, maybe I'm hiding them in the fog.
And that's a lesson that for a lot of people probably is accurate.
They use busyness and chaos as a way to sort of force down whatever it is
that they should be thinking about more deeply.
But I get the sense that if anybody's a fan of Pursuit of Wonder or Modern Wisdom,
that they have the opposite fucking problem, okay?
They're like the David Goggins of rumination.
They're the fucking Bonnie.
They're the Bonnie Blue of rumination.
They do not need to be told to spend more time thinking.
They need to be told to have a bias for action.
So I think learning to trust yourself again is done through experimentation and evidence.
Once you've got just a little bit of that moving, that tends to help.
I certainly think not being.
afraid to use some of the more negative emotions, some of the stuff like bitterness and resentment and anger, this is one of the paradoxes or one of the disadvantages of self-awareness that you don't like these sort of darker emotions. You think, I should transcend these. I should be sufficiently elevated that I'm not tapping into this. This is a more base version of me. It's juvenile. It's petty. This is a version of me that I don't like. I get that. But what did you use to get yourself here?
Because for the most part, you probably use that kind of fuel and then, okay, it's pretty toxic.
If I hold on to it for too long, I probably shouldn't still be thinking at 45 years old about what the kids said to me in school.
Fine.
But that also means that you don't have that fuel tank anymore.
And this fuel isn't going to be there forever.
It's not.
The anger will subside.
The resentment will wane.
Your bitterness will eventually dissolve.
What are you going to be left with?
You will have, the time will have passed anyway.
And that's some pretty fucking potent fuel.
So I'm saying just, you know, go in and maybe just fucking tap, tap, tap, tap inside of the fuel tank for a little bit.
Yeah.
And make use of it.
And yeah, look, you're going to look back on this period and it can either be some, you know, kinetic spark at the beginning of growth.
You can be your own primer switch for a hydrogen bomb or you can self-work your way through it.
And I'm sure it'll be great.
But I don't know.
It was just an idea.
And especially that JK Rolling story.
fucking good. And after I read that Comack McCarthy quote, which I've been wanting to write about
for ages, I need to fucking put something together. It's not true for all people in all situations at all
times, but I do think it's pretty fucking useful. Yeah. No, and I agree. I mean, I think that
it's like you said, obviously not true for everybody all the time, but you don't know if it's true
for you until you do everything in your power to attempt to make it so. And so you ultimately are up
against zero possibility by not trying to take everything in your power to make adversity worth it
for you and worth it for your circumstances and your goals. That's a 0% chance if you don't try.
And then you have some percentage of chance of things working out for you and being able to
transmute that adversity into the ultimate good fortune that you've, you know, the most you've
ever seen in your life. And so I agree that approaching it from a fuel-minded perspective
is really the only viable way. And that's also that, you know, brings up questions about
whether or not certain people can even recognize that and whether or not it's going to be,
you know, there are degrees of, you know, environmental factors that weigh down on people that
make it very difficult to even if they you know if you might recognize good luck versus bad luck
is not always the end-all be-all there are still you know there are still environmental and external
factors that make it very challenging for somebody to to actualize that potentiality in adversity and
continual adversity is one of those things well yeah dude i mean it's all only good me talking
about the survivorship bias of J.K. Rowling's 500 million books. Right. But there is a lot of people
that have not just one kick in the nuts, but a series of them that are, you know, so frequent that
their ability to even lift the lightest way it kind of gets degraded. But, I mean, the alternative
is, is to just keel over. And this is, you know, me saying it as a guy that's been kicked in the
nuts a lot over the last couple of years. Like, you literally do have only two choices. And one of them
is to give up and the other one is to do whatever the opposite of that is. And fuck that,
dude. Jesus Christ. Like, absolutely fuck that. What's that rage, rage against the dying of the
light? Yep. You might as well because you've literally got nothing else to do and the fucking
time is going to pass in any case. Yeah. So you might as well send it. I agree 100%. I think it's
important to recognize survivorship bias, but also to recognize as an individual that if you're still alive,
you're a survivor in some sense
and as long as you're alive, there's hope.
Well, let me give you this one.
You know what the fucking ultimate inversion
of the survivorship bias is?
Every person that gave up.
Right.
Every person that reaches survivorship bias
is a mark on the wall for somebody
that didn't give up.
Absolutely.
If you want to guarantee
that you are not a part
of the survivorship bias numbers,
you can just give up.
And that would be fine.
And again, that creates a pressure.
that that makes people go,
fuck, it's all on me and that's not fair and things are hard and it's hard for her.
It wasn't as hard for her as it is for me and I've got this thing.
And get it.
I get it.
But I want to see you win.
And I would rather see you win and be in discomfort than see you lose and fucking keel over.
100%.
I mean, I think there's, you can carry both those thoughts in the same head at the same time.
You can recognize that there is a survivorship bias, a lot of people who try fully to
the maximum ability are going to face continual adversity, and it's not going to, it's not going to pan out.
And you can also recognize that as an individual person, it's better to not weigh that case heavily.
It's better to weigh the cases of the JK Rowlings more heavily in the pursuit of the counterbalance of that dynamic to inspire you to try everything you can and to continue forward towards what makes, you know, meaning out of the chaos of your life.
more viable, more possible. And to do that, in my view, and this is, I recognize there's,
you know, maybe a tone here, but to do that until the bitter end, you know, if you want to do
anything and you have a preference, a priority, a sense of meaning, an orientation toward meaning,
whatever, you, like you said, you have your time. And until the clock goes to zero,
until the lights turn out, there's still like just, just keep going for whatever it is that you care about and whatever it is that makes sense to you and it's worthwhile.
And there's no prescription to what that might be, what that source of meaning and worthwhileness need not be some sort of, you know, ungodly achievement from a societal level.
It could be a beautiful relationship, a beautiful family.
It could be a simple quiet life, whatever it is for you to continue onward towards achieving that,
maximizing that, working towards the maintenance of that, whatever you're up against,
you have your time and you ought to use it wisely to manifest that.
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Given the fact that we can never step outside of our own minds,
how should that change the way that we treat our beliefs?
I think that, and I've obviously agreed with the fact that there's, not only can we
obviously step out of our own minds, but there's a huge implication to that. We will never
obtain objective truth, in my view, as a consequence of that fact. And so I believe that
humility and almost a love of uncertainty is the only appropriate response to the fact that
There's just no way that you can get out of the tunneled vision of your mind, your specific mind.
And then your own mind is sort of been molded and mapped according to a particular condition of geography, of culture, of history.
And there's been no moment as far as, you know, if we sort of rewind the clock, every stage of history has presented a similar ensemble of ignorance, of futility.
of wrongness, all that.
And so you must recognize that as individuals and as a collective at any given time and any
given space, we're up against this contorted, chiseled out view of reality that's a pinhole size.
And to have rigid beliefs, have a sense of certainty, I think is a
a less than ideal response to that condition.
And this isn't to say that someone ought to be totally nebulous about everything they think
and feel and believe.
You can be convictive and confident in life while also not ever being dead set and final
about a belief or set of beliefs.
And so there's a sort of essence of confidence and conviction
that can carry through across a spectrum of ideas and beliefs.
And the importance is not the individual belief,
but the continuation of exploration and curiosity and openness and humility.
I feel personally that that's a sort of essential fundamental quality,
for lack of better words, a sort of wisdom.
What about choice anxiety?
because I get the sense that people who have a lot of self-awareness,
again, we've sort of touched on,
I know how much better I could have been,
I know all of the different optionality that lays out in front of me.
How do you come to think about netting down choice anxiety
as a deeply self-aware person?
You're sort of referring to the paradox of choice, if you will, right?
Yeah.
See, I don't know if I have a good answer to that because, first of all, I struggle with it.
I think the best way to deal with choice anxiety is to recognize the degree of your, you know,
at what point are your desires no longer serving you?
And if once you recognize that ceiling, the amount of choices that you need to consider can
reduce. So if I think that, you know, I'm on an infinite conveyor belt of desires and satisfaction,
desire satisfaction over and over and over, then there is an infinite number of choices that can
satisfy or can play into that conveyor belt phenomenon. But if you recognize that there is
a certain limit to which your, you know, minimum quality of experience is achieved in life,
you can start to redirect your decision making towards a smaller number of options for different
reasons than just like, you know, if you go to a grocery store, there's obviously an
infinite number, not nearly, I mean, there's not literally, but nearly an infinite number of choices
of cereal and everything else. And if you regard cereal as a reasonable proxy of your
quality of life, you might stand in that aisle forever. But if you, if you
recognize that cereal is not going to serve you, it's not going to serve your quality of life,
then you pick one and move on, and then you recognize that there is still a difficulty around
decision-making in other areas of your life that you're going to ruminate on and struggle with,
but you can reduce the amount of decisions that are relevant to you by recognizing this sort
of ceiling around how much your decisions are going to change the quality of your experience.
and I'm somebody who believes that it's much more like I want to make decisions that allow me to keep going.
And I mean that in both the most basic literal sense and then sort of a more abstract sense, which is, you know, I want to decouple my awareness from my desire when I'm making decisions about what's going to allow me to get up in the morning and still care.
And then also what's going to allow me to experience some continual fuel, as you put it in your essence.
say. And so there's no clean way of totally absolving yourself from the paradox of choice and the
anxiety around decision making unless you sort of, you can kind of oscillate back and forth between
the foresight of or the anxiety around decision making and the hindsight of regret. You can refer to your
regrets. You'll remember the absurdity of your anxiety right now. But I understand there's maybe a
degree of impracticality there. But I do think that just recognizing that there is, you know,
like every option in life for everything, from cars to cereal to clothes, to relationship partners, to
friends, to careers, you can start to chisel those down by recognizing that so much of that
is not what you care about. And, you know, you decide what you care about or you end up
caring about what you care about. But then you chisel those things out and you're still left
with a huge chunk of decision-making possibilities, but it's maybe a little bit more manageable.
Oliver Berkman had this question.
How much should you care about things?
Answer, I'm not sure, but I'm pretty sure it's not as much as possible about everything all of the time.
Yeah, I love it.
And I think, yeah, that's like the curse of the over optimizer.
Somebody who, just for everything at every opportunity, I have a friend who is huge into credit card points.
You've got every different airline and he knows to use this card for this.
flight and then if he goes to this supermarket he can get an additional 3% and then he gets to fly
his whole family for free and all of this stuff one of his best friends is the most simple person
oh you must have a complex system just like just like a mutual friend he's like no i i just
decided that there was an area i had to consciously be deoptimized in and and that was just
one of the ones i can't i can't pick it for everything all of the time and the advantage of that is
when you make the big decision around I'm not going to bother about this at all,
all of the sub-decision fall away if you can sort of relinquish it.
And there is a power in sort of letting go.
It's the same sensation anybody's had if they've left a bad relationship,
that they go, that thing and all of the decisions and all of the rumination around it wasn't serving me.
And by letting go of it, I feel liberated.
Isn't that great?
So, yeah, it's...
it's a funny it's a funny blend for that i think you mentioned anxiety there do you think
anxiety is just the natural consequence of seeing reality clearly and being a deep thinker then
i would even go so far to say that uh you don't have to add that that last part about being a
deep thinker i would think anxiety is a um sort of fundamental consequence of being aware of reality
on any level um and it only goes up from there um i know that
people have worse cases and experiences of anxiety, but the idea that somebody could live
and not, and this is me projecting my, you know, own experience, universalizing it and assuming
everybody's the same, and I recognize that. But I do find it very hard to imagine that
anxiety is not a sort of building block of consciousness and self-awareness from a human
perspective. Because everything, I mean, when we're talking about decision making, we're talking
about regrets, we're talking about adversity, all these things. Everything is this hodgepodge
of chaos and uncertainty that a singular framework of perspective is trying to control and make
sense of. And what could be more anxiety inducing than that? Trying to filter an ocean of
possibility into a tiny pinhole of desire and
preference and hope and idealization. So I would think that if you're if you're that pinhole,
there's a lot to be worried about. Is is the pursuit of truth really about truth or more about
sort of a psychological security then? It feels to me like our desire for truth is a fear
response to the uncertainty of the future. I absolutely agree. Yeah, I think that personally I think that
everything that humans do and humanity has done is is never in it of itself. It's never for
itself. It's based on some preference. And so the desire for truth is not because we care so much
about truth. In my view, it's because we care so much about what truth will provide us. And that is
a quelling of the uncertainty and the unknowability of existence and our relationship with it. We want to know
that everything is going to be okay, both now and forever thereafter. That's why heaven exists. That's why
religions exist. That's why philosophies exist. And so the pursuit of truth is an attempt to bring down
the heavens and make it make sense right now so that we can feel comfortable as conscious beings.
And so, yeah, no, truth is not, in my view, a desire in it of itself. It's a, it's a sort of
proxy byproduct of the desire to reduce uncertainty and unknowability.
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wisdom. I'm thinking about that anxiety, and I guess anger as well, which is kind of a little bit
like anxiety at motion. Anxiety is anger at rest in a way and anger is anxiety in motion. It seems
like anxiety arises because of foresight without control and then anger is desire for control that gets
denied and I'm wondering what you've come to learn about how to sort of dissolve or reduce
the anger and the anxiety in that way yeah so I mean they're they're pretty tightly intertwined
where if you start to recognize maybe
I would intertwine anger more closely with something like regret,
because if you start to recognize the absurdity of regret
and your ability to control the way things have gone
with a greater distance in time,
there are many cases of anger in which it might be in real time
that you're experiencing an event,
but it was an event that you couldn't have controlled.
And so in the same way,
it's a much more difficult thing to quell in the moment,
but you can sort of start to shave off the edges of anger, I find, by recognizing your lack of control over everything else besides yourself and perhaps even yourself. And that takes it to a different degree. And we don't need to, you know, necessarily take it there for the same point to be cogent.
I think the lack of control over yourself is the regret point from earlier on, even the one that's been lobotomized from the fucking deterministic perspective of the universe, that I'm angry at me.
I should have done differently.
You're right.
You're right to say that it's closer to regret.
It's like, I should have done differently.
Well, you didn't.
You didn't.
And you're trying to motivate yourself to do it more in future.
I understand.
And if your brain ramps up the pain of the lesson from the last mistake that you made,
you will make sure that you don't make that mistake again.
It's basically a existential psychological equivalent of I put my hand on that
stove. I'm close to this. I got bit by a dog when I was five. The lesson is don't go near
dogs for the rest of the rest of time. That is what our brain is trying to teach us. And the sort
of amplitude, the fucking volume of the lesson is proportional to how important we think it was
and how much pain we were in at the time. And if you're in a lot of pain and then you realize
that you are making the pain worse
by trying to sort of whip yourself into
submissions so that you will be reminded.
You've kind of nine-tails your way through this thing.
You think, well, in some ways,
you can kind of love that part of you.
That is a good thing.
That's a really fucking cool thing to love.
Thank you so much for trying to keep me safe.
I understand that I'm fallible and fucked up
and I consistently make apparently the same mistakes
over and over again.
And they really have a great,
great like fucking consecutive lineage of often being similar sorts of things and I get it. You're
trying to keep me safe. Thank you. Thank you for trying to keep me safe. Thank you for trying to make me
learn a lesson that my actions insist on not fucking detecting and not updating themselves from.
That's great. It's just, it's such a fucking all-encompassing emotion, anger. So trying to think
rationally when you're in it is not easy. It's definitely not. Do you think that anger is
necessary for what you just described? Or do you think you can have that response without
necessarily anger, the anger tank, so to speak, filling all the way up? I guess it depends. A lot of
people convert anger into other emotions. Right. And a lot of the time, these are people who, for whom
anger wasn't allowed as a kid. It wasn't allowed in the household. There wasn't a safe place to express anger. Maybe there was a fragile parent or an overly disciplinarian parent or a parent who had anger problems of their own or an absent parent who couldn't really hold that for them. And you need, I think it's really important for people to understand if there's something burbling inside of you. The world is basically split into two kinds of people. There's people who get mad and people that get sad.
but both of them are generated from the same place.
Like the anger gets turned outward or the anger gets turned inward.
And the anger that gets turned inward, that's not the job of anger.
The job of anger evolutionarily is you crossed a boundary and there's no police force around.
So I'm going to behave in a way that shows you that you can't do it again and shows anybody else who's watching
that they can't fuck with me in the same way that you did because we don't have laws to enforce this.
So my emotional response to you is going to show you how far.
you crossed over the line and it's not going to happen again.
That's the job of anger.
So when it's sad, not mad, it's usually because you were disincentivized in a, I mean, everybody's
disincentivized from being angry, right?
Like it's a very anti-social behavior.
It's a very antisocial thing.
Sadness is pro-social.
People come and give you a hug.
Anger is antisocial.
It makes people run away.
But there should be a container for that.
And if you don't learn it, there's a very long way.
way of saying lots of people are angry but don't feel anger and they turn it into other things they turn it
into bitterness agitation resentment uh depression anxiety um like frustrations at themselves and at
other people and that and the world or politics or you know whatever um so i don't think that you need
anger i would actually go as far as to say that maybe anger is a bit more warping because it's so it's
it's the fucking raw uncut version of the fuel.
And if you can have it just burble down a little bit,
I think you can make better decisions.
Making decisions,
is there any emotion that's worse to use to make,
maybe being horny.
Maybe being horny is the only worse emotion to utilize
when trying to orient yourself than anger is.
I can't think of many more.
Yeah, nothing come to mind for me either.
I think those are probably the two at the top of the legs.
The two wholesomen of the apocalyptic.
Yeah.
No, but I think that's super well put.
I think that there's absolutely practical application for anger.
And to just assume that you should never be angry is you're cursing yourself for a life of being taken advantage of and never signaling to yourself and others when things are wrong and when things have been crossed in terms of your boundaries and lines.
there is a separate category of anger i might i personally would categorize you know there's there's
the anger towards people and things that are that can be corrected and then there's anger towards
existence or things that can't uh you know components of life that things have gone wrong
in your life that nobody intended towards you nobody did that to you no no no no
conscious being or group was like, I want this to happen to you. And so there's no person or group
to be angry at. There's just the nature of misfortune, at least insofar as you've experienced
up until this point in your life. And so that sort of blanketed anger has a much different
ramification than if somebody does something to me directly or a group does something to a group
that I associate with that is tangibly negative.
that is reasonably, you know, a line is reasonably drawn between that act. And we can agree on that
as people. Then that anger is productive. But anger of just sort of the humming and vibration in the back
of your skull and neck and spine. I mean, that's, that's an anger that I think is totally unproductive.
So there's a difficulty in recognizing those different kinds of angers maybe to an extent.
but you definitely don't want to be so willing to be angry that you find yourself angry about
things that are totally useful to be angry about and so passive that you neglect the expression
and actually recognizing an anger you feel an experience about things that warrant a frustration
that if you express it people will understand people will change and by not expressing
your frustration and anger towards people or phenomena that can comprehend a reasonable,
you know, back and forth between you and them, you're actually doing you and them a disservice
because they don't have the information to maintain a useful, healthy relationship.
And so they're just going to assume everything is kosher.
Everything's fine as is because you haven't expressed otherwise.
So you just sort of propagate, you continue the problem by being passive in those sorts of
situations. And so, like I said, I mean, there's different ways of considering anger and different
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What's the desire trap in terms of what are you referring to? Well think about a
your relationship with desire and what you've learned about it is it a trap because it seems like
desire fuels suffering in many ways and even the desire to escape desire is a desire.
as well.
And then evolution
sort of
hardwired
dissatisfaction into us
and we sort of
may we may
secretly prefer
striving over satisfaction
in many ways.
So how the fuck
do we survive this?
Well, we survive
this because
that fuel
survival in my view.
It's inescapable.
I mean,
I know that there are
people that, you know,
maybe sit on
mountains sides
and,
and,
you know,
do nothing all day long and they're able to live an ascetic life and totally quell all desire.
But for the vast majority of people, especially those who might be watching or listening to this,
that's not going to probably happen.
And it probably shouldn't.
You don't have to force some sort of romanticism around ascetic life.
And so what you're left with is kind of comes back to what we're talking about a moment ago
when it comes to understanding the constraints around your decision making and what matters to you.
Because you're never going to eliminate desire,
and you're never going to eliminate the continual pain
or dissatisfaction that comes from the very substrate
that desire functions on.
Because desire is not something that you get, you achieve,
and then you're done.
Obviously, that's not how that works.
It's the same with hunger.
It's the same with every breath is a desire for another breath.
And that doesn't mean you're done.
You're going to have to find the next breath,
the next meal, the next everything.
And so you don't escape that trap.
That trap is paradoxical in the same sense as many of the other things we've discussed
where it's unfortunate because it makes you you're kind of destined to never feel an ultimate satisfaction.
But by virtue of that, you end up pursuing a ton of things.
People, goals, achievements, preferences, art that you wouldn't otherwise ever care about
if you were done after your first moment of achievement.
And so the trap is also the open door.
I mean, it's it's both ways.
You're stuck in an infinite, you know, hallway of open doors.
But in each door, you can decide what you care about and what meaning you might derive from what's inside that room.
And then you get bored, unfortunately, and then you move on to the next room.
But there seems to be if you keep moving an unending hallway of doors.
So it's not, it doesn't have to be purely tragic.
Okay. So does that mean that happier people are simply less aware or are they better at metabolizing awareness?
Oh, that's a very good way of framing that question.
I reluctant to answer that with conviction because I just don't know if I know enough happy people to say one way or the other.
I think that it could go it could be both I don't I don't know if it's binary
I'm not saying you're presenting it as a binary option but I think that you can be happy
by being maybe less reflective and less aware about absurdity and futility and all that
and the sort of associated you know suffering with desire you could be happy that way
and you can be happy is maybe not the best word but you could be a kind of happy by also
knowing that everything you do is ultimately absurd and futile, but you're still experiencing
moments that are enthralling and interesting, and you're experiencing moments of love and wonder.
And those don't, you know, the awareness of the futility of those things for me doesn't negate them.
So I see no reason why both kinds of people or all kinds of people couldn't find maybe not
happiness, but a
justification, a wonder,
a reason to keep moving.
I guess if everything is uncertain and constructed,
why trust any of our conclusions?
Oh, I wouldn't.
You're saying, why trust any conclusion?
I definitely would not trust any conclusion,
at least in the absolute sense.
when you say trust do you mean
believing wholly
in its sort of finality
yeah I suppose
how can we trust any of our
insights
like our own conclusions
everything's uncertain everything's constructed
our consciousness is filtering what we see in the world
there's no such thing as real truth
how are we not just
permanently sort of wallowing in our own uncertainty
yeah so I think
I have a way out of that to some extent is everything isn't uncertain because what you're
experiencing now is is completely real and certain. And so you have that basis always, that
tether to experience in self-hood and existence that, you know, maybe can't be extrapolated out
onto some sort of metaphysics and, you know, insight about some grander picture. But you can know
that you're certainly feeling
what you're feeling
and experiencing right now
and you can navigate
a life and existence
based on those feelings
to the best of your ability
and that doesn't provide certainty
and I think the way
that we often like to think of it
but it does provide a barometer
a compass that we can
reference and
derive what we're really after
from
what do you think makes life worth the trouble
I would certainly
So
Pursuit of Wonder is the name of my YouTube channel
The reason why I'm bringing that up is because
Pursuit of Happiness is the common phrasing
And I believe that there's
That's the wrong way of approaching
The justification around pursuits and life in general
And so I think what makes life
Worth the trouble is
and it's by a very slim margin, I must say,
but the experience of wonder,
the experience of a self-produced meaning,
and you can experience wonder from through art,
through relationships, through friendships,
through, um,
and,
you know, aesthetic experiences,
just,
uh,
walk through nature.
And if you have enough of those moments,
and enough is relative,
but if you have enough of those moments,
you can draw,
you can take the ingredients of the trouble of existence,
you can take the graphite of that sort of sludge,
and you can make it into something beautiful and worthwhile.
And it's like I said,
it's by a certain margin for everybody,
how much that actually feels like you made it worthwhile
in terms of all the trouble.
But I think that's,
you're kind of in a boxing match
that you're destined to lose,
but you're still putting up a hell of a good fight,
and there's so much spirit in that.
Everybody loves an underdog story,
and I believe each of us are the underdogs
up against our lives and existence,
but we put up a hell of a fight,
and that makes it worth it.
Do you think self-awareness makes love deeper or more fragile?
Probably more fragile,
if I had to pick.
The reason I would say that is because it makes you maybe more self-conscious.
Obviously, self-conscious and self-awareness are almost synonyms,
but self-conscious in the more typical sense of the word,
where you're worried about how you're coming off
and how you're integrating with somebody else's preferences and desires.
However, on the flip side of that,
to be more self-aware is to recognize, and this is one thing that I think is useful in all areas of life,
is to recognize, you know, how annoying you can be and how neurotic you can be.
And so when you recognize a more granular sense of your neuroses or your annoyances or your,
all the sorts of things that make you on a day-to-day basis from,
inside your skull a little bit challenging to deal with. To be more aware of those qualities
makes you more understanding of another person's difficulties with dealing with those qualities.
And if you're not aware of those qualities, then you might never understand why is this person
reacting to me in such a way? Why are they feeling this sort of way in relation to my behavior?
You know that you have a certain outward behavior, but without recognizing the proper, you know,
picture, the full picture of those qualities and how they become manifest and why they are the way they are,
it can be challenging to empathize with somebody who is trying to be as close to you as possible.
And they, obviously, you are as close to you as possible, humanly possible.
And if they're trying to get anywhere near that, without recognizing those qualities, you do tend to lack the empathy.
for their perspective and experience.
So I think ultimately this may be more of a benefit,
but it can be also very challenging
because you want to,
you always want,
I mean, when you're,
you're always seeking ideal circumstances,
at least for me.
And so when you're aware of all those negative qualities,
I'm always seeking to integrate them fully and properly
into myself and in a way that makes sense
for other people that I'm close with.
and that's an impossible goal.
And so that also can make you, you know, maybe over,
overzealous, over-angered by the lack of success in certain areas like that.
Yeah.
Robert Pantano, ladies and gentlemen, dude, you rule.
I love your YouTube channel.
The book's fantastic.
Why should people go to check out everything you do?
Appreciate it, Chris.
Yeah.
So I have a new book, A Terrible Paradox of Self-awareness.
That's coming out March 10th.
So depending on when you're watching this,
it's available for pre-order now.
After March 10th, it's obviously available for regular order.
And then YouTube channel is Pursuit of Wonder,
try to come out with videos a couple times a month over there,
and then Pursuit of Wonder everywhere else on all socials
and Pursuit of Wonder.com.
Fuck, yeah.
Dude, I appreciate you, man.
Congratulations.
Thanks so much, Chris.
I really appreciate you.
