On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 6 Steps to Detox from Your Phone & Reduce Your Anxiety Levels
Episode Date: August 16, 2024How often do you check your phone daily? Do you feel anxious when you’re away from your phone? Today, Jay addresses the growing concern of excessive phone and internet usage, exploring its detriment...al effects on mental and physical health. He begins by explaining how activities like swiping, liking, and commenting on social media provide our brains with dopamine hits, which can create a cycle of dependency and compulsive behavior. Despite the benefits of technology, such as increased connectivity and access to information, many people feel less connected and more distracted, anxious, and impatient. Jay elaborates on the neurological aspects of dopamine and its role in pleasure-seeking behaviors, emphasizing that problems arise when we expect constant rewards from our online activities. He draws parallels between the brain's response to food and its response to digital consumption, advocating for a balanced approach that avoids overindulgence in either. In this episode, you'll learn: How to become more conscious of your internet use How to have wifi-free meals How to replace morning phone use with healthier habits How to stay mindful when using technology How to engage in a cell phone detox The ultimate goal is to create a healthier, more intentional relationship with technology, leading to a more fulfilling and balanced life. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:46 On Your Phone All the Time? 05:32 Losing Control Over Phone Use 06:19 Six Steps to Phone Detox 07:01 Dopamine 11:23 People Aren’t As Happy As Before 13:39 How Often Do You Check Your Phone? 14:27 Cortisol 17:26 Step 1: Become More Conscious 19:19 Step 2: Wait an Hour Before Going Online 21:18 Step 3: The WiFi-Free Meal 23:45 Step 4: Watch What You Consume Online 24:54 Step 5: Limit Potions 25:48 Step 6: Intermittent FastingSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Every time we go online and every time we swipe or like something or buy something or comment or handpick an emoji to send to a friend, our brains experience a little bump of dopamine.
Again, there's nothing wrong with that.
So long as we know what's happening.
The number one health and wellness podcast.
Jay Shetty.
Jay Shetty.
The one, the only Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose,
the number one mental health podcast in the world.
Being here is an investment in your mental health as we dive into incredible conversations and
insights to help you become happier, healthier and more healed with the world's leading experts.
Now, let's be honest for a second. How many of you feel like you've just been on your phone too much recently?
Right?
You've been sitting there and sometimes you're even doom scrolling and thinking, why am I
here?
What am I doing?
Maybe you've even thrown your phone, feeling a sense of anger or disgust with how you've
spent your time.
And I think all of us can relate.
There's been moments where
I've thought afterwards to myself, I wish I was more present with my friends. I wish
I was more present with my family. Why am I constantly needing to be distracted from
my phone even when I don't need it? Right? Sometimes you're like, I know I don't need
it. I know I don't get anything from it, but it still keeps pulling me back. It keeps pulling me in, it keeps sucking me in, even if I don't want to be there.
And I think that's what we all experience is this almost hopeless, helpless relationship.
And that's why today's episode is called the cell phone diet or the cell phone detox.
These are the devices through which most of us
make our way online.
Over the past few years, I'm guessing that we've read
as many articles about the miracles of technology
as we have about some of the issues
it's brought up for us as humans.
That despite this wonderful new found global connectivity,
we have never felt less connected
to friends and loved ones.
How despite having more knowledge at our disposal than in any time in history, we have never
been worse informed.
How at home and at work we're losing the ability to focus or concentrate.
That we've gotten more impatient and impulsive.
The add to cart nature of the internet, where you want what you want when you want can sometimes
even trickle over to our real lives.
A friend once confessed to me that sometimes when he finds himself in a traffic jam, without
even thinking about it, he'll reach for his phone not to change the music or refresh his
GPS or to start a new podcast but to click himself out of the traffic jam.
As if his phone somehow featured a magic button
that with a single click could transport him home.
One of the most interesting things about being alive in 2024
is that there are hundreds of millions of people in our midst,
possibly your own parents and certainly your grandparents,
who remember a time before cell phones and Wi-Fi existed.
They're dealing with two versions of reality, a then and now.
And because we're always prone to see the past as better than it was,
it goes without saying that the pre-internet era was better,
filled with space and silence and stillness, and opportunities for contemplation.
Before long, the global population will be made up of people who know only one technological reality.
Now.
By now, we've also figured out various ways we can make our phones, and the impulse to go online, less attractive and alluring.
Less of a temptation.
We can turn off our notifications.
Instead of our phones ringing or chirping or making cricket noises, we can make them
vibrate.
With a little fiddling in our settings, we can even turn our screens grey, which gets
rid of the visual triggers that make our phones look a lot like a big bag of colourful candy.
Maybe you've tried one or more of these things,
but you still feel your reliance on the internet is unhealthy and imbalanced.
That even when you're not online, you're thinking about being online.
That on those rare times your phone isn't within reach,
you're thinking, where is it?
Why do I feel so weirdly incomplete?
This episode came about because of the many messages I get from all of you who feel you've lost control
Over your phone use who don't trust yourself to monitor how much time you spend online
Who get anxious whenever you're separated from your phone or a wifi signal for more than a few minutes.
Who are coping with feelings of helplessness and shame?
This episode is for anyone who thinks I should really get my phone and wifi addiction under
control one of these days.
Except that day never seems to come.
It's okay though, because you're not alone.
Everyone around you, from your 13 year old cousinold cousin, to your 75-year-old aunt,
all the way through to me, seems to be wrestling with this same issue.
The six steps of the cell phone detox are loosely repurposed from the steps you might take
if you embark on an actual diet involving food and drink.
As with any new regimen we start, you want to
banish any thoughts of overnight change or success. Stop trying to change in 24
hours. If you think you can build or break a habit in the next 24 hours,
you're setting yourself up for failure. The goal, as with any new plan we try out, is to adapt one or more of these steps as
time goes on in the hopes that before long a new habit will be ingrained.
I want to begin by acknowledging that our brains have a lot of heavyweight chemicals
working on their behalf.
There's GABA, glutamate, oxytocin, adrenaline, norepinephrine, the list goes on.
But of all these chemicals and hormones, the brain favours four of them the most.
In no order, there's serotonin, which helps balance out our moods, endorphins, which are
our body's natural painkillers, which our brains generate when we fall in love and that promotes trust and intimacy between partners
and also among new parents and their infants.
Of course, the best, most pleasure promoting chemical of these four is dopamine,
the brain's preeminent reward and pleasure zone.
But dopamine isn't always well understood.
A lot of people are under the impression that dopamine provides pleasure, that it gives us a mental or physical high, that in that way
it's like a drink or a drug. The truth is it doesn't. Instead of making us feel
good, dopamine operates in our brain by motivating us to go out and seek
pleasure, whether it's in the form of romance or going out to dinner with a good friend or having a few drinks or going on a long bike ride in a beautiful landscape.
There's nothing wrong with seeking pleasure. In fact, it's part of the wiring of our brains.
Problems only arise when we go overboard in that pleasure-seeking behaviour and begin
to expect rewards and another shot of dopamine every hour of the day.
This is because of the very nature of dopamine.
The more we seek out pleasure-seeking activities, falling in love, or anticipating sex or romance, or a yoga class,
or a night out on the town, or even an upcoming vacation, our brains, whose job it is to maintain homeostasis, otherwise
known as balance, compensate for this blizzard of dopamine by making us feel flatter and
even a little bit depressed whenever we're not engaged in that thing. Think about it,
it's mind blowing. I don't know about you, but in my experience, no one likes feeling flat.
It's almost as though without dopamine, our own screens turn grey.
We don't feel like doing much, and the things we feel like doing don't seem exciting.
In response, most of us decide, consciously or unconsciously, to re-engage with the same
activity we now know brings us, if not pleasure, then the anticipation
of pleasure.
The thing about most pleasure-seeking activities is that they have a built-in time limit.
We can only exercise for a certain amount of time before our bodies tell us we've had
enough and we need a cold glass of water and a shower.
If we go out and drink more than we should, our bodies and brains generally respond by
making our eyelids heavier until at least we fall asleep.
But as everyone knows, the internet is a 24-hour bazaar, and our phones are always on.
The web never goes dark, never closes down, and never takes a vacation.
And don't misunderstand me, the internet can be a completely magical place.
It's like a city where the possibilities for window shopping and people watching are
so varied and interesting that we could spend the rest of our lives there.
But if we do, it can have consequences on both our mental and physical wellbeing.
This leads me back to dopamine. Every time we go online and every time we swipe or like something or buy something or
comment or hand pick an emoji to send to our friend, our brains experience a little bump
of dopamine.
This tells us our reward system has been stimulated.
Again, there's nothing wrong with that.
So long as we know what's happening,
and so long as we keep our internet use
intentional and conscious.
But that's not always easy or possible.
For many of us, our internet use is automatic
and unconscious, putting us in a place
where we need more and more dopamine
just to feel normal, just to feel like ourselves.
Is there a connection between our dependence on our phones and the internet and our declining
levels of happiness?
No one can say for sure, but the answer is probably a bittersweet yes.
According to the World Happiness Report, humans just aren't as happy as they used to be,
especially people who live in higher income countries.
This might have to do with that flattening effect I mentioned earlier and how when we're
not engaged online, we feel not exactly unhappy but not entirely happy either.
As though we're missing something, as though we're somehow sidelined or not at the center
of something we know exists, we just can't put our finger on what that thing is.
The internet diet is an attempt to provide at least the beginning of a solution to this
problem. Why do I refer to it as a diet? Because I'm reminded of something that a high school
teacher friend told me recently. At the end of each semester, my friend gives midterm
and final exams to his students. No cell phones are allowed in the classroom, of course
while the students take their tests. In fact, before the exam gets underway, the students
all write down their initials on their phones and place them in a box next to the teacher's
desk. When the exam ends, they line up to collect them. But the interesting part of
this story is when my friend described the moment his students
were reunited with their phones, they clucked them as if they were food and they hadn't
had anything to eat or drink for days.
They appeared ravenous and the behaviours they then carried out, including checking
their texts and their inboxes, going on to this and that website made my friend think
that for his students, their phones
were a form of food or sustenance, a way to keep hunger at bay.
When you think about it, there's a strong connection between food and the internet.
Humans can't live without eating.
And today, the 94% of all Americans with access to the internet will tell you that life without
wifi would be unimaginable.
Without GPS, how would we get from one location to another?
Without social media and text messages, how would we keep up with friends and loved ones
who live nearby and far away?
Without the alarm clock on our phones, how would we manage to wake up in the morning?
How would we make lunch or dinner reservations, or split the bill after a night out, or pay
for groceries, or take photos or videos, or check out the weather conditions in Dubai,
Dublin or Miami?
According to the results of one study I read, Americans check their cell phones approximately
144 times a day.
Even if we don't open our phones, we make physical contact with our phones on an average of 2600 times a day,
just to make sure they're snug in our position.
All in all, on average, this study says we spend nearly four and a half hours every day on our phones.
But along with the reliable hits of dopamine that get released every time we punch in our code, or hear swoosh or ding.
We also get a bump of cortisol, the chemical that enters our bloodstream whenever we're
about to go into high gear and take on a new day, or in this case, when we're about to
come face to face with what being online means.
Something that makes me crazy is when people say, well, I had this career before, but it was a waste.
And that's where the perspective shift comes,
that it's not a waste that everything you've done
has built you to where you are now.
This is She Pivots,
the podcast where we explore the inspiring pivots
women have made and dig deeper
into the personal
reasons behind them.
Join me, Emily Tish Sussman, every Wednesday on She Pivots as I sit down with inspiring
women like Misty Copeland, Brooke Shields, Vanessa Hudgens, and so many more.
We dive into how these women made their pivot and their mindset shifts that happened as
a result.
It's a podcast about women, their stories,
and how their pivot became their success.
Listen to She Pivots on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Get emotional with me, Radhita Vlukya,
in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry.
We're gonna talk about and go through all the things that are sometimes difficult to
process alone.
We're going to go over how to regulate your emotions, diving deep into holistic personal
development and just building your mindset to have a happier, healthier life.
We're going to be talking with some of my best friends.
I didn't know we were going to go there, Amir.
People that I admire.
When we say listen to your body,
really tune in to what's going on.
Authors of books that have changed my life.
Now you're talking about sympathy,
which is different than empathy, right?
And basically have conversations that can help us
get through this crazy thing we call life.
I already believe in myself.
I already see myself.
And so when people give me an opportunity,
I'm just like, oh great, you see me too.
We'll laugh together, we'll cry together, and find a way through all of our emotions.
Never forget, it's OK to cry as long as you make it a really good one.
Listen to a really good cry with Rady Devlukia on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Guess what, Mango?
What's that, Will?
So iHeart is giving us a whole minute to promote our podcast, Part-Time Genius.
I know!
That's why I spent my whole week composing a haiku for the occasion.
It's about my emotional journey in podcasting over the last seven years, and it's called
Earthquake House.
Mango, Mango, I'm going to cut you off right there.
Why don't we just tell people about our show instead?
Yeah, that's a better idea.
So every week on Part-Time Genius, we feed our curiosity by answering the world's
most important questions. Things like, when did America start dialing 911? Is William
Shatner's best acting work in Esperanto? Also, what happened to Esperanto? Plus, we
cover questions like, how Chinese is your Chinese food? How do dollar stores stay in
business? And of course, is there an Illuminati of cheese? There absolutely is, and we are risking our lives by talking about it.
But if you love mind-blowing facts, incredible history, and really bad jokes, make your brains
happy and tune in to Part-Time Genius.
Listen to Part-Time Genius on the iHeart radio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
As long-time listeners of this podcast know, cortisol is the steroid hormone produced by our two adrenal glands, which perch atop our kidneys.
Cortisol is the hormone that gives rise to the fight-or-flight impulse.
But since most of us aren't about to get into a wrestling match, what ends up happening is that the energy supplied by all that cortisol sticks around inside our bodies.
It stresses our muscles, our digestion, our breathing, and can even negatively affect
our immune systems.
What can possibly relieve these high levels of cortisol?
More dopamine.
Because after all, when we feel stressed or dread going online for fear we might see a
text or email we don't like,
our brains might as well balance out that fear by seeing if they can anticipate a positive reward.
Before we even know it, we've been online for an hour, two hours, or even longer.
The internet, or rather the brain, has gotten the best of us.
It's tough to resist it. We might as well throw in the towel, right?
The good news is that the six steps of the internet diet are focused on gradually reducing
the amount of time you spend online or gazing at your phone. Following these steps, or even
half of them, and you'll likely find yourself with significantly reduced anxiety levels,
along with an increase in clarity, a greater, truer
sense of perspective about yourself and the world around you, a deeper connection and
a deeper presence when you're alone or surrounded by friends and loved ones, as you're now genuinely
listening to what they're saying instead of quietly fretting that you need to respond
to your latest text or email. Lastly, it's safe to say that the six steps of the internet detox will increase your capacity for gratitude.
For your own life, for our five senses, for what you do have instead of what you don't.
Which we all know the internet is well known for eliciting.
Before we begin, remember that as with any behavioral change, the most important thing
is to start small.
Take one step and see how you feel afterwards.
All or nothing thinking doesn't work here, but all or nothing thinking never works.
See if you can check off these steps one after the next and take your time as you do it too.
I'm not proposing you can cancel your wifi
or trade in your smartphone for a flip phone or a landline.
What I am suggesting is that you begin to think
about your phone and being online
as the technological equivalence of the food you eat
and the liquid you put inside your body.
Most of us are careful about our nutrition
and the ingredients in our foods.
So all that I'm proposing is you give the same care, attention and respect to how you feed your brain, which
means not overwhelming it with the digital equivalent of ultra-processed ingredients,
additives, trans fats, potato chips, salt and sugar.
Step 1 of the internet diet is simple, become more conscious.
All I'm asking is that you become more aware of your internet use
and that you do it without any judgment whatsoever.
It's a fact that for many of us,
our phones have become almost like physical extensions of ourselves,
an extra hand or foot.
One study I read reported that 89% of Americans
reach for their phones within the first 10 minutes of waking up.
When you reach for your phone in the morning, what are you feeling? What are you looking
for by wanting to reach for your phone? What are you trying to achieve? Does it make you
anxious? And can we become more aware of that? What is the reason not just that you reach
for your phone, but why are you doing it? What are you seeking in the morning
and how can we substitute it later on?
Our phones are like mirrors.
They reflect us back to ourselves.
They have a lot of valuable information to tell us
about who we are and what it is we want.
You might tell yourself,
of course I reach for my phone every morning.
Doesn't everyone?
But that's different from taking a step back
from the routine of it and asking why.
For example, you might feel that while you are asleep, people are having fun without
you and you hate what it feels like to be excluded.
You might begin the morning feeling bored or sad or understimulated and consciously
or unconsciously decide that the only way to solve that feeling is by going online.
Or you might wake up feeling lonely or isolated
and reach for your phone instead of getting in touch with a friend
and making a plan to meet them later for coffee or a drink.
You might worry that a crisis happened overnight,
whether in your workplace or somewhere in the world,
and you're the last person to know about it,
which makes you worry your friends might not see you as hypervigilant
and responsible and in charge.
Again, the most important part of step one is observing your behaviour without judgement.
That increased consciousness leads me to step two.
Wait an hour before going online.
But rather you sitting around wondering when the hour is up, step two proposes that instead of going online, you replace that impulse with a better, healthier habit.
You could take that time to meditate or make a list of the things in your life you're
most grateful for.
You could listen to beautiful music, or read a few chapters of a book, or do both at the
same time.
In my experience from a reading perspective, being online is like taking a hundred quick
showers a day.
We're scanning headlines and perusing emails and texts, but are we really reading them?
It's probably nearer the truth to say that the only thing we're doing is scanning pixelated
words.
This is why the early morning can be a fantastic time to delve deeply into a book.
As opposed to a two minute shower, reading a time to delve deeply into a book. As opposed to
a two minute shower, reading a book is like sinking into a bathtub. It's a form of time
travel as well as an exercise in empathy. In this way, you can give your brain the opportunity
not just to awaken naturally, but to deepen your understanding of the world around you.
It doesn't need to be reading a whole chapter. You can read a quote,
a paragraph of your favorite book, scripture. It could also be listening to something that
motivates you, that inspires you. Now, what if you rely on your phone as an alarm clock?
Well, first recognize that our phones are intentionally engineered so that they're
indispensable. Like big box department stores, they offer us anything anyone could ever need.
There are mailboxes, our phone centers,
our bookshelves, our jukeboxes,
our maps, our photo albums,
and our memory keepers.
There are sources of news and friendship.
Add a tape measure and an alarm clock,
and your phone truly becomes what it was designed to be.
A one-stop shopping destination.
But that doesn't mean you can't go someplace else.
In this case, why not go and buy a real alarm clock?
It's as simple as that.
Step three of the internet diet or detox involves another deceptively simple change.
I call it the Wi-Fi free meal.
And it's exactly what it sounds like.
A Wi-Fi free meal is one where you make a conscious decision
to enjoy your breakfast, lunch or dinner while keeping your cell phone in your pocket or
better yet in another room entirely. This means that instead of using one hand to hold
your fork or spoon and the other to scan for online information or browse social media,
you're devoting 100% of your attention and energy to the food and
drink in front of you.
Ayurveda suggests that we chew morsels of food 16 to 32 times.
I promise you if you try this, you'll forget that you ever had a phone in your hand.
It's a really hyper mindfulness practice.
For many of us, this will feel strange at first.
As we've gotten into the habit of
always doing two things at the same time.
Shopping while gazing at our phones for example, so we can see if another store offers a better
price.
Taking a walk while listening to music, or driving a car while our GPS tells us which
turn or road to take.
In step 3, I'm suggesting you do one thing at a time, monotasking or solo tasking as it's called
and in this case, it involves eating and focusing on the textures and flavors of that food.
And if you find yourself racing through the meal because your brain is busy anticipating the dopamine hit
that's certain to arrive the moment you set down your fork and pick up your phone, then set limits on yourself.
Tell yourself that during the next 15 minutes that you set aside for breakfast, lunch or
dinner, you will not engage with your phone and you will not go online.
False stop.
The effects of taking that time to eat a meal will surprise you.
You'll find that you eat more slowly and conscientiously, that you chew more properly, that you digest better,
that you appreciate your food more and that you become more conscious of your body's
hunger cues and the effects food has on your feelings.
Step 3 of the internet diet has another strong thing to recommend.
A study that was done in Brazil a few years ago concluded that using our phones while
we eat increases our caloric intake
by almost 15%. This means that even though staring at our phone when we're dining out
in a restaurant makes us look busy and occupied, it can have real life ramifications on our
health and wellbeing.
In step four of the internet diet, we scale things up a little. This time I want to make
a close analogy to the food and drink we put in our bodies and
the content we take in online because to my mind, they're very closely related.
By now we all know some foods just aren't that good for us, whereas certain other foods
promote good health, increased vitality and longer lasting energy.
In the first group are things like sugar, salt and trans fats and in the second
group you'll always find fresh fruits, fresh vegetables, nuts and legumes. Let me also
add that while most of us are aware that potato chips and buttery popcorn aren't good for
us, sometimes we just feel like having a snack and there's no harm in that, so long as we
don't do it every day for the rest of our lives.
The same goes for the internet.
A lot of websites and digital apps are the digital equivalent of a tray full of nachos or a chocolate milkshake,
or you can fill in the blank and name your favorite guilty or not-so-guilty pleasure.
Junk content is harder to digest just like junk food,
and the more junk content we expose ourselves to, the unhealthier our minds get.
Step five of the internet diet is limit portions.
I touched on this already in step two,
which asked you to wait an hour after you awaken
before you check your phone.
And also in step three,
step five takes this idea even further.
We all know what it means to limit our portions
when we're preparing or serving food.
Studies have shown over time that our plates and cups and glasses have got larger and so
too have our portion sizes.
You could equate that to how the amount of data that our phones can process now increases
all the time.
The amount of memory and storage our phones have increases over time.
Which means naturally our portions and desire to
consume content also increases equivalently. Remember when your data
used to run out? Remember when there used to be a cap on the minutes you could
speak to someone on your phone? That's all gone away now and therefore there is
no portion control. If you've managed the first five steps of the internet detox
step six probably won't come as a shock. It's intimate and fasting.
We're probably all familiar with that phrase as it relates to food and placing boundaries on when
we eat. In step 6, I propose you adopt this same idea to your own online behaviour. For example,
one of the best known intimate and fasting plans around is what's known as the 5.2 plan. That's the
one where you eat as you normally would for five days a week,
but every Saturday and Sunday,
reduce your food intake
into a single 500 calorie meal.
Try this same method with your own online use.
Unless there's a pressing workplace emergency
where you have no choice
but to remain reachable over the weekend,
why not start by turning off your phone
every Saturday and Sunday afternoon?
Instead of spending your time off loosely tethered to technology, And why not start by turning off your phone every Saturday and Sunday afternoon?
Instead of spending your time off loosely tethered to technology, why not do something
that has nothing to do with it?
Go outside, go hiking, go kayaking, ride your bike, play two sets of tennis or pickleball
or even three.
The more time you spend without your phone and without access to a wifi signal, the more
confident you will be that you can regain control of your time, energy, mental and physical health.
Just as we learn to eat when we're hungry and quit eating when we're full, the internet
diet also teaches us to take in information online when we want and not just because it's
there or because we have nothing better to do. By creating boundaries around your own
online use, you'll start to experience a new feeling of control and authority
across all aspects of your life.
But remember, start small.
Go step by step.
Too much too soon and the brain's hypothalamus
will act the same way it does when we don't have enough to eat.
What we're really trying to do in any lifestyle change
is create a new balanced
relationship between the time we spend online and the websites we ingest that are authentic,
healthy and nutritious, which in turn will lead to a new relationship with ourselves,
our friends and the world around us. Thank you so much for listening. Make sure you pass
this on. Maybe even pair up with a friend to be accountable for the new cell phone detox and remember I'm always in your corner
and I'm forever rooting for you. Thank you so much for listening to this
conversation. If you enjoyed it you'll love my chat with Adam Grant on why
discomfort is the key to growth and the strategies for unlocking your hidden
potential. If you know you want to be more and achieve more this year,
go check it out right now.
You set a goal today, you achieve it in six months.
And then by the time it happens, it's almost a relief.
There's no sense of meaning and purpose.
You sort of expected it and you would have been disappointed if it didn't happen.
This is the story of how a group of people brought music back to Afghanistan it if it didn't happen. My head should be cut off. I'm John Legend. Listen to Afghan Star on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Guess what, Will?
What's up, Mango?
I've been trying to write a promo for our podcast, Part-Time Genius, but even though we've done over 250 episodes, we don't really talk about murders or cults.
I mean, we did just cover the Illuminati of cheese. So I feel like that makes us pretty edgy. We also solve mysteries like how Chinese is your Chinese food and how do dollar
stores make money? And then of course, can you game a dog show? So what you're saying is everyone
should be listening. Listen to Part Time Genius on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your
podcasts.