The Blindboy Podcast - The Science of Happiness with an expert Psychologist
Episode Date: June 10, 2025Professor Bruce Hood is an experimental psychologist and philosopher , we chat about the science of happiness. I also speak about Autistic burnout Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more... information.
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Prevent the hen from bending you heaven-sent kevins. Welcome to the Blind
By podcast. I'm currently on tour. I'm on tour. I'm in Scotland right now. I'm in a hotel room in Edinburgh, thankfully
not underneath the duvet, because there's heavy carpets and heavy curtains in this room,
so the sound isn't too bad, but it's slightly different to what you're used to. But since
you joined me for last week's podcast, I've been gigging pretty much every single night and traveling in between.
So these are very few and precious moments that I have to set up my equipment and have a little
chat with you. I'm seven days, no eight days into this tour and I'm starting to experience
the beginnings of artistic burnout.
And I'm trying to explain what I mean by that.
So every single, every single day of this tour,
I've been highly social.
I've been speaking to, I've been having small talk with multiple people every day consistently because that's what's required to go on tour,
to do a gig, to travel between gigs. There's no way to do that without consistent communication
with people, with all different people, especially strangers. Now that's a struggle for me, that's difficult for me because I have to put on my...
I have to deliberately engage in the performance of being a neurotypical person, of being a normal person.
Masking. That might sound fucking nuts to you.
For me, my entire life, just speaking to people, strangers, speaking to strangers is difficult
and uncomfortable.
I've thought about ways of trying to explain this to neurodifficult people.
Do you ever want to do a massive fart?
Do you ever have a huge fart? Right? And you
think you're on your own and you're ready to do this giant fart and just as you prep
yourself to do this giant fart, somebody walks in and tries to have a chat with you as you've
just gotten ready to fart. Now the person's speaking to you and all you're
focusing on is holding in this massive fart. It could be at work. A colleague
comes in to tell you the photocopier is broken. Alright the photocopier is
broken so don't go near it because if you use it you might break the photocopier.
But all you're focusing on is this giant fart
that's hurting your belly and you're terrified of letting the fart out. And now this what's
supposed to be a regular conversation about a fucking broken photocopier. You're not listening
to your colleague talking about the photocopier. You have a cursory awareness. Someone's talking at me
and it's about a photocopier but I can't stop thinking about this fucking fart and all you
want is for the person. I can't wait for this conversation to be over so you can leave and
I can do my massive fart. I really need to be on my own so I can do this fart because
it's actually hurting me and the longer you're talking to me it's hurting me and and I can't wait for this conversation
to be over because this fart needs to happen. The person leaves, you do the fart,
now you feel relaxed, you feel okay and and you can't remember, like you can't
even remember what the conversation was about because you weren't having a
conversation you were focusing on holding in that fart
That's what most conversation is like for me
Except I'm not holding in a fart
I'm thinking about my body language. I'm looking at the other person's body language. I'm thinking about my facial expressions
I'm thinking about whether I should smile whether I should not smile. I'm thinking about when do I say hello, when do I say goodbye. I'm thinking about eye contact. Am I doing the right amount of looking
into this person's eyes? And I'm very afraid of coming across as strange or weird or rude.
And that's why like 90% of the time I just keep to myself. 90% of the time in my regular life I try and spend as much time with myself as possible
so then I can be happy and be comfortable and feel okay with who I am.
But when I'm on tour, especially 7 days into it, I'm chatting to multiple people every
single day. Chatting to lovely, kind, helpful, friendly, well-meaning
people. And each time I do it for me, it's like I've got this giant fart, this huge painful fart
in my belly. And when the conversation's happening, I'm really focusing on not giving away that this
giant fart is inciting me. But really it's like, I'm not really taking in most of what you're saying to me.
I'm not taking in most of this conversation because I'm focused, I'm really focused on my eye contact,
my tone of voice, my body language, my posture.
That's what I'm worried about right here. That's what I'm focusing on.
I can't actually listen to your words because there's other shit going on here and
I'm really looking forward to when this conversation is over because this is
This is this is a tough one. This is tough to do
This is difficult for me to do because I've just done 16 of these already today
And I sound like a bit of a prick my internal voice there sounds like a bit of a prick
Like I don't have time to speak to people,
or I consider myself above people
and don't wanna chat to them.
And that's not the case at all.
I have dyslexia.
It's like having dyslexia,
except instead of words on the page,
it's human conversation.
It's one-to-one human conversation with strangers.
The more,
it's not what really with people I know, the more I get to know a person, then the less I need to mask,
the more comfortable I feel being myself.
But when you first meet in another human being, when you first meet a person, you have to slip into
your first time meeting a person persona, which contains all the learned
rules of propriety and manners and appropriateness and all of this stuff that we simply pick
up from society and the culture that we're in.
For neurotypical people, this is instinct, just instinct.
There's a brand new person, time to put on my new person persona.
Boom, straight into it.
What's the crack?
How are you getting on?
Gone, back to private persona.
From where I am on the autistic spectrum, that's my area of difficulty.
That's my area of difficulty.
But I can do it.
I can pull it off.
I can pretend.
I'm able to actually do that and function in society.
Smile, eye contact, how's your mother, how's your father, how's the weather?
But I can only do so much of it and I'm seven days into it now and I've been doing it
multiple times a day.
I'm even having difficulty speaking now to be honest.
I've been doing it multiple times a day non-stop and now a week into it I'm starting to experience
the beginnings of artistic burnout.
And the first signs of it in me are it becomes more and more difficult for me to speak to
other human beings.
The other night before a gig I just noticed
I couldn't do eye contact anymore.
I had to speak to sound technician,
lighting,
tour manager,
people at the ticket desk,
security, and then my guest, my guest on stage who I speak to before we go out on stage.
And these conversations range from something longer to just a simple hello.
But I noticed, I could only do it if I wasn't looking anyone in the eye.
So now I'm trying to speak to people and be normal, but my eyes are darting all over the room.
Because that's the only way I'm able to speak to another person. I have to have my eyes everywhere.
But then what happens is...
In society, if someone isn't looking you in the eye,
it means that that person is either lying,
or they have incredibly low self-esteem,
and they consider themselves to be so beneath you that they can't look you in the eye. So lack of eye contact instantly makes
the other person feel uncomfortable. So now I'm forcing myself to look someone
into the eyes but because it's forced now I'm intensely gazing into a person's
eyes and that's intimidating them too. And then I come away from small interactions then feeling terrible, feeling really bad,
feeling intense shame and then that, then feeling, feelings of low self-esteem as a
result of that and then what happens is my capacity to mask, my capacity to appear normal, which means
maintain eye contact, keep an eye on my posture, not fidget, stay on topic.
These things, they start to disappear and it becomes more difficult for me to pretend that I'm not autistic. That's my life, that's the life of most
people who are autistic at the level that I'm at which is level one what used
to be called aspergers. Your life in public is pretending to not be autistic
that's what it is, pretending that you're
not autistic so that you can just get on with life. I mean, what do I want? I don't want
to make eye contact with people. I want to, if an interesting fact comes into my head,
I want to say that in the moment. And I want to fidget with my hands, because that's who
I am. And that's, that's who I can be around people that I know
I have a small group of people family who I can be myself around
Everyone else I have to pretend I'm not autistic and that's not just me. That's
Most nor a divergent people listening they can relate to some aspect of what I'm saying
That's what life is like if you're neurotypical listening and you're thinking,
fuck it blind boy, fuck that.
Go out there into the world and fiddle your fingers
and don't look people into the eyes
and talk about the Norman invasion as much as you want.
No, that's how you get bullied.
That doesn't work.
That doesn't work.
That works around a very small amount of people
who know you well.
Autistic people mask and learn how to mask as a defense mechanism from bullying, shaming,
being picked on, being pointed at, being laughed at, being ridiculed, not being taken seriously,
being called out as different, weird, strange, eccentric, whatever the fuck, our entire lives
since earliest fucking childhood and as soon as you find yourself in the playground and people go
why the fuck is he talking about volcanoes? This is a seesaw. We're focusing on up and down
and that's it. We don't need to hear about volcanoes. So that's where I'm at. That's where I'm at seven days into this tour
And I have to like I'm familiar with this. I've been dealing with this my whole life. It's just the past
Three years. I've had a fucking name for it
What did I used to call this before I knew I was autistic? I used to call it depression. I used to call it anxiety
Like I'm in Edinburgh right now
Tonight I'm gigging Usher Hall.
About 13 years ago I used to come to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. I did it three years in a row,
the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and at the Edinburgh Fringe I would gig 30 nights in a row.
And for all of those 30 nights I would be intensely social and speak to lots and lots of new people
and I'd drink every single night I would drink
because alcohol, after two pints
that little buzz after two pints, if you drink alcohol after two pints
your inhibitions start to go and
you stop caring as much about eye contact and the propriety of your body
language. So a lot of neurodivergent people without knowing it will use
alcohol as a crutch and also the rules change, the social rules change when
alcohol is involved. When alcohol is involved, people don't need to deploy their proper mannered or meeting someone for the first time personality.
When drink is present, you get to be a little bit more flamboyant or silly or whatever you want.
When drink is there, all you gotta worry about is being
a decent person, being a nice person and not being mean. That's not difficult. I'm a kind
person, I'm a nice kind person and when I meet new people I want to approach them with
compassion and openness. That has fuck all to do with autism. The difficult bit is the appearing normal
The expectation and pressure of appearing normal. It's not as present when drink is flowing and music is playing
So I used to go to Edinburgh years ago. I do 30 fucking gigs and
that would be in August I'd come home in September and
then experience a type of depression
until about January.
I'd come away from Edinburgh feeling hopeless, useless.
I'd be unbelievably forgetful.
I'd forget to pay bills.
I wasn't as diligent at responding to emails, doing my job, and I'd just get
into this deep depression that would take six months to get out of.
And I used to blame it on drink.
I used to say to myself, of course you're like that.
You drank alcohol every single night for 30 days when you were in Edinburgh.
Of course you're going to have depression for six months.
It was autistic burnout.
It was autistic burnout and I didn't know that's what it was. I'm speaking about
this because I have a huge amount of neurodivergent listeners. 40% of the
population is neurodivergent in some way. That's what they reckon. One in eight
people in Ireland I think is autistic, I think, is autistic.
I think it's useful.
It's useful for me, for me to be able to come on this podcast
and to say these things that I'm feeling,
almost like a journal.
That's really helpful for me.
And also, I'm hoping people who are fucking experiencing this
are listening and then they feel a little bit more normal. Like people have mailed me, people who are
neurodivergent and they'll hear me talking about burnout and they'll say
blind boy I'm so glad you put words onto that thing that I experience and then
that makes me feel normal because I'm like oh fuck someone else is going
through this too so what am I gonna do to try and protect myself from burnout?
So neurodivergent people are different.
It's not a fucking disease.
It's not a disease.
It's brain pathways.
So I can be quite different to another person who's autistic or ADHD.
I can be quite different.
Another person might get...
What we're talking about here is overstimulation.
I am highly stimulated by social interaction.
I'm so stimulated by social interaction that it's quite overwhelming.
And I need to limit how much I do of it.
Some people are overstimulated by loud noises, by fabrics on their clothes, by bright lights.
Not me because I'm actually
sensory seeking. I'm not sensory avoidant. I'm sensory seeking. I actually love
bright lights and I love music and I love these these type of things so do me
and these things they recharge my social battery. I'm like an iPhone that hasn't
been charged. I'm an iPhone and I've
been so busy for the past seven days that I haven't had time to charge myself and now
I'm at the bottom fucking bit of my battery. That's what's going on here. So I have to
find a plug socket. I have to find a plug socket to plug myself into. And I know right
now I'm in fucking Edinburgh. And three minutes up
the road from my hotel is the National Gallery of Scotland. This is one of the best art museums
in the fucking world. So I'm gonna put my headphones on and I'm gonna put them on noise
cancelling and I'm gonna go up to that gallery for about an hour. And I know I get to stand and stare
at fucking Titian and Velazquez
and the paintings of fucking Paul Cezanne is up there.
I get to stand inches away from paintings
I've been looking at in books my whole life.
I'm gonna silently go up to that gallery
and I'm not gonna talk to fucking anybody.
I'm not gonna look at anybody. And I'm gonna walk around it for an hour just me and the paintings and
music and I'm gonna look at the paintings and go off into imagination
land where my stories come from and where my hot takes come from and where
my writing comes from and that's my protection from burnout.
That's the exact opposite, that's the exact opposite of having small talk with a stranger.
It's being by myself in my own world, listening to music, looking at paintings, imagining things, thinking about things,
and not speaking to other people.
And being around people. The gallery is gonna be full of people,
no problem at all. But I won't have to speak to anybody and I'm gonna have to pick those moments
in my week coming up. Like I've got a six hour drive to York on Monday and I'm just gonna have
to really politely ask my tour manager. I'm gonna just have to ask and say is it okay for this journey that I have my headphones in and I read
Wikipedia because I have to preserve my voice and that's the thing with
Nora Divergence. I'm not preserving my physical voice box. I have to preserve
the part of my brain where social interaction comes from.
That's what I have to preserve so that I can pick and choose the moments where I'm deploying
it and engaging it.
I'm chatting about this just to...for me to understand more what it means to be autistic, because I found out three
fucking years ago, remember, even though I've been dealing with this my whole life, I'm
putting words on language on shit that I've been experiencing my whole life.
So I'm understanding myself better.
And then hopefully, if you're neurodivergent, this helps you to understand yourself better.
And then if you're a family member or a friend of someone who's neurodivergent, then you
can understand them better.
Because I don't have friends.
Like I don't, I've got plenty of people I can ring up and have a pint with, but I don't
have any friends.
I'm not in any WhatsApp groups.
So in your 20s, you've got friends groups.
That's actually a bit easier. You've got
groups of friends and you can go along to a gathering and have little chats
here and there or you can go to the corner and say nothing. You can
sample conversations like they're tapas but then in your 30s that changes and
friends groups disappear and if you want, then you have to really work at it.
You have to stick at it.
You have to put in effort.
I've got family, but like, I don't have...
The closest thing that I have to friendship
are people who I work closely with, but I've no friends.
I don't have a person that I socialise with and hang out with for
the sake of socialising. And I don't think I've ever really had that. Like just listening
to people over the years.
Oh yeah, I called around to this person's house. Why'd you do that? Just to hang out,
you know? What do you mean just to hang out? Yeah, you know, just just company. I don't understand
that. I'm like, why would I possibly do that when I could be by myself reading Wikipedia? And also,
you have to stay in contact with people to maintain friendships. You have to stay in contact
with people and just talk for the sake of talking. And none of that is
I don't like people, I don't want to be around people. It's nothing like that. It is nothing
like that. Also what I want to point out is under neurotypical roles to say something like
I don't have friends, that's usually like a type of a covertly narcissistic way to ask for attention. It's a way to ask people
to feel sorry for you. No, like I don't have close friendships because it doesn't particularly,
it doesn't interest me. And if someone said to me, will you meet me for coffee on Tuesday,
I'm most likely going to cancel. I'm most likely gonna cancel that.
Because as soon as I have to meet someone on Tuesday
for the specific purpose of socializing,
it becomes this massive task
that I have to do next Tuesday
and nothing gets done in between.
It would fuck up my concept of timekeeping.
It would massively get in the way of my routine and the things
I want to do. And it's not social anxiety. I'm not afraid of going for a coffee. It's
task paralysis. It's related to that word I don't like, executive functioning skills.
And it's a neurodivergent trait, artistic people and ADHD people.
Will you meet me next week for a cup of coffee?
Meet another human being for a cup of coffee.
Now if it's will you meet me next week to discuss a script for television,
to discuss a new book that you might be writing, to edit some work,
can you meet me next week for work, for creativity? Not a fucking bother. We can meet next week. Can we meet next week for a cup of
coffee just to shout the breeze, just to socialize, to catch up? The emotional load of that becomes
like a blocking task. It becomes this giant task in the week and then
nothing else gets done because I've got this coffee that I have to have with a
person where they want to catch up and shoot the breeze. I'm gonna end up
canceling that cup of coffee. I'm gonna end up canceling that cup of coffee. But
my buddy James, who I write TV shows with, we got to meet next week, we got to
discuss this script,
we gotta go through this.
Fucking done, it's happening, I'm there already.
I can't wait for that.
Creativity, ideas, fucking bring it on.
I'd love to not be this way,
it's a pain in the fucking hole.
Similarly, can you come to a gig tonight
and speak to a stranger on stage
in front of 2,000 other strangers. Yeah, no
bother, I can do that. If I had a friend I'd be like, I might see you once a year, is that
okay? Maybe once a year. And that's not how it works, that's not the social contract.
You're expected to stay in contact with a person frequently. Go for coffee, why? To discuss your
day. The fuck could I do that for? I need to read about
the Cambrian extinction event. So quite a lot of autistic people, they choose not to
pursue friendships. And I'm saying that because if you've got friends who are neurodivergent
and you're neurotypical, don't take it personally if they don't show up to the party. If you're
having a fucking party, even if it's your... if it's an important birthday and it means the world to you and your
noradivergent friend doesn't show up, it's not that they don't care
about you, they probably are not... don't fully understand the gravity, the social
gravity of what it means to not show up to a birthday
party that you were invited to.
Like I just stopped going to weddings like 10 years ago.
I just stopped going to weddings even if I was invited.
Because I couldn't do it.
A wedding is an enjoyable fun thing for some people.
For me it's like holding in 90 farts.
I'm trying to catch the autistic experience in the moment
and journal it in the hopes that that might be useful.
Here on this space, as opposed to fucking radio stations.
Blind boy, will you tell us,
what's it like being autistic?
Blind boy, will you tell us?
Blind boy's here to talk about being autistic. What's it like, blind boy, what's it like being autistic? Blind boy, we can tell it. Blind boy's here to talk about being autistic.
What's it like, blind boy?
What's it like being autistic?
And the fucking corporate media want to bring you on
as an autistic person to describe the experience
in 90 seconds and then take your words out of context
and put it as a headline of an article
that's behind a paywall just to piss off a lot of daz.
That's why you'll very rarely hear me. Like I get fucking called, I'd say once
every two weeks, by the radio stations in Ireland to come and talk about being
autistic anytime it's in the fucking news. No, no, I won't do that because the
platform that you're providing isn't safe. It's not safe and I don't think it
helps autistic people. I only notice this shit when I'm on tour.
When I'm on tour and I'm thrust into the sea of people and the sea of conversations and
social interactions.
When that happens then I'm like, oh fuck, yeah I'm autistic.
Most of my life I'm just happily going about my day by myself with my thoughts and my interests.
Loving life.
Absolutely fucking loving life.
I really really love being alive and I'm a very happy person.
And above all I adore this job.
I fucking love this podcast.
So I wasn't actually expecting to talk there for 20 minutes
I thought I was gonna give a tiny little intro to this week's podcast because this week's podcast is
it's a chat I had a few days ago with professor Bruce Hood who is a
Phenomenal individual a wonderfully sound person and a great crack with him
he's a professor of
developmental psychology at Bristol University and usually with with
academics with professors sometimes I'm a little bit a little bit worried
because sometimes academics who are in a very specific field, they tend not to deviate from that topic.
They stay on topic all the time. But Professor Bruce Hood, Jesus Christ, I could bring up anything.
And he was quite happy to have a chat with me. His work is fascinating because he's a professor
of psychology with a background in neuroscience and he's written a book about
the science of happiness.
He's really interested in magical thinking in adults, the psychology of magical thinking,
the psychology of what the self is, what the voice inside you that you consider to be you.
So me, check out his books, check out Professor
Bruce Hood's books because they're really phenomenal. And we had a banging conversation.
I had this chat, I think it was last Saturday, and I've been editing the interview on my laptop
while I've been traveling between gigs. And if you're a new listener,
if you just stumbled across this podcast
because you like the topic of it
or you wanna hear from Professor Bruce Hood,
just be aware that I don't interview guests.
I have conversations with guests.
I'm not into the interview format
where I sit back and
Just ask someone questions
There's plenty of that. I prefer to have
unique conversations unique conversations where both me and my guest are chatting and figured figuring things out
So anyway, here's the chat I had with professor Bruce Hood in Bristol
Last a few days ago. You glorious cunts.
My guest is a philosopher and a psychologist called Professor Bruce Hood.
Come on out, Bruce.
How do you follow that? Your work is absolutely fascinating.
The first thing I want to look at is, so you're a professor of psychology, you have a background
in neuroscience as well, and one area you're looking at is the science of happiness.
What is happiness?
What I love about the areas that you look at is
you also started off as a philosopher.
So it's like you're using psychology
to answer the big philosophical questions
about the human condition.
Indeed, indeed, because those are the questions which motivate me and get me
out of bed in the morning or mean I can't get to sleep at night. The questions
which were relevant, you know, 10,000 years ago and hopefully they'll still be
relevant in 10,000 years from now. So I'm motivated by the kind of the big
questions. Just a quick one about human beings,
because you said 10,000 years ago,
how long back can you go where people were walking around
with the same brains as me and you?
I would reckon at least probably about 100,000 years.
Fuck.
Yeah.
I mean, certainly the earliest records of the burials,
and that's where we can get a measure
of their kind of the artifacts that they left. The first jewelry, for example, is around about 90,000 years ago. So jewelry
is a measure of aesthetics, if you like, it's it was used for purposes. I mean, there were,
there are certainly humans doing hunting much earlier than that. And they were working together
and they're bringing down mammoths and stuff like that. But the aesthetics, the first jewelry and body
adornments appear to be about 80,000, 90,000 years.
Is that when you start going, these are Homo sapiens, these these like,
what does jewelry say to you?
Is it these people have a sense of self?
These people have identity?
Well, the translation of Ho sapien is thinking man.
But I think that, I mean they clearly were thinking and that they were cooperating and they must have been communicating in order to sort of bring down a huge mammoth.
But in terms of jewelry and aesthetics and art, I think that represents a different level of thinking
and that's the earliest that we can find. And then when you hit about 50,000 years ago, this is where you get an explosion in the
record of artifacts that they were buried with.
You see symbolism, you see those booby dolls, you know, the Venus figurines with the enlarge,
which must have been something to do with fertility.
So they were obviously practicing ritual. They were practicing belief systems.
And that to me is a kind of exponential level of understanding as opposed to just
hunting together with chimpanzees can hunt together.
But humans, by the time we get to about
60,000 years ago, doing really complex things.
It's interesting to that
which is a jewelry, the figurines, like that's art. Art. And
one thing, when we spoke backstage and this, you said that one of the, with
all the work you were doing on happiness, that one of the things you
found was that Buddhism was one of the schools that kind of got it right,
that your finding with psychology that agrees with that.
Yes.
And just there with the art, one of my favourite stories from mythology is it's the one with
Prometheus and Zeus and the creation of humanity.
And I'm going to fuck it up a little bit, but this is how we tell stories in Ireland.
Prometheus and Zeus were like bored
up in Mount Olympus, right? And they're like,
why don't we make like a video game full of creatures like us for the crack? Why don't we do that for the crack?
And Prometheus is like, yeah, let's do it.
And then Zeus is like, I want to do it, but I'm kind of scared.
What are you scared of, Zeus?
What if they get smarter than us?
What if we make this little world, this plaything of creatures that are like us,
but they get smarter than me and you
and try to kill us.
So then they go and do it.
Prometheus gives them fire,
and giving them fire was the thing that made them make art.
And when they made art,
that's when Zeus freaks the fuck out.
And he's like, now we gotta stop him.
When he sees the little civilization,
the human beings, me and you,
when he sees them making art,
he's like, no, we've got to stop it there. As soon as they make art, then they can kill
us. And then what did Zeus do? He gave a box to a woman called Pandora. There was a little
woman living amongst this side he called Pandora and Zeus gave her a box knowing that these
little creatures, this artificial intelligence that they've made were mad
smart and he goes, there's a box in there, you can't open it. And then she's like, well, I'm a
fucking human, I have to open it. So she does open it. But when she opens it, what comes out is like
mental health problems. What comes out of it, but that's it. What comes out of Pandora's box is
What comes out of Pandora's box is misery, jealousy, fucking pestilence. Everything about the human condition that gives us pain is what comes out of Pandora's box.
And that was like Zeus's code to limit these creatures from becoming powerful enough to kill him.
So like we're gonna, like, because I'm just thinking one day, because I'm freaking out about AI.
Someone's gonna have to figure out how to give AI a panic attack. Seriously though, that's what we're going to be doing.
The AI is going to get really smart and we're going to be like, let's give it body issues.
Low self-esteem.
It's true though. But different cultures, how do you know what happiness is? How do you measure happiness?
Is one culture unhappier than the other?
Or who's the happiest and why?
Well, we actually do, well, not I personally,
but the World Happiness Report comes out every year.
And I think just about every country contributes to it.
And it's a very simple measure.
And what they ask people to do is to imagine a ladder
with 10 steps on that ladder.
And the top of the ladder is a 10
and that's the best possible life you could live.
And at the bottom is zero,
which is the worst possible life you could live or imagine.
And so they ask them,
where do you think you are on that ladder?
And every year the same five countries come out on top
and it's the Nordic countries.
It's Finland, you know, all of those areas.
And they keep kind of switching for the top position.
Norway's there occasionally, but the moment it's Finland.
Now, the question is, what can you say
is the best possible life?
For some that might be happiness or the emotional content or you see it can mean
different things to different people.
And that's, I suppose, one of the reasons that they use that wording because
happiness means different things to different people.
For some, indeed the world, the word happiness and the way we research it, um,
is actually a broad spectrum of things.
It means your emotions, but also means that a feeling of contentment, a feeling
of moving forward, a feeling of progress.
These are all captured in that.
Uh, I actually, I remember getting an infant, you know, one of these, these
graphs with all the words, which we use for happiness and it was ridiculous.
There's something like 50 odd words, which we all had this sort of
positive valence as it were.
But in general, it's the emotional component and a sort of what we call a cognitive component,
which is a sense of everything being okay.
And that's what happiness is.
But the way you measure it, you can't stick an electrode in the brain, you can't take
a biopsy, you can't measure it with anything.
It's basically to ask someone, how do you
feel? So all happiness research is based on that sort of self-report. And that's the problem
because the trouble with self-reports are, is they're incredibly biased. That self-report
you generate based on who you're comparing yourself to, where you think you should be,
and therein lies the problem. Because if you have unrealistic expectations
about where you should be or you're drawing
the wrong comparisons, then you're gonna feel inadequate.
And I think that unfortunately is part of the problem
with the happiness research, that people are drawing
the wrong comparisons, making the wrong sort of expectations.
And you were talking earlier on about the fear of failure.
I actually teach the whole lecture on that.
It's an incredibly important point. A lot of my students avoid putting themselves
in situations because of the fear of failure and they don't learn, they don't progress.
And a lot of that is driven by this sort of inadequate or inappropriate comparisons of
where they think they should be. So it's a major issue. I mean, I only really got into this research about
six years ago, because we were having a crisis at Bristol and I changed my research. I normally
work on, you know, deeper issues and child development and neuroscience kind of questions.
But I turned it around entirely just to focus on happiness. Because really trying to teach
unhappy students is painful.
It's they don't learn.
It's a really, really hard thing to do.
I'm trying to avoid with the type of
questions that you'd get asked if you went on TV, right?
Because I know what there's one I do want to know about, which is
when I was a kid, I didn't have social media.
And I'm so glad, I didn't have social media and I'm so glad that I didn't have social
media because it's the comparison thing. Like obviously I compared myself to my peers, but
I didn't have a box that I could look into where I could see a few million peers from
around the world. Do you know what I mean?
Yeah. the world. You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah. Remember, there used to be this website called Bebo.
But social media was like a year old and I had a Bebo page and I started to notice
what you had at the time was page views. So if you had a lot of page views and then
your friend had more page views, they were a more popular person because it meant that more people were interested in their page views.
And suddenly I found myself thinking all the time about why do they have more page
views than me? What's this? And comparing myself and becoming really, really miserable.
I'm old enough to remember not having that and then suddenly having it and then all of a sudden having a comparison machine and being inescapably miserable because of it.
Like social media, it's something that's designed by billionaires and they do want
us to be, I don't want to say unhappy, but we do know that social media is about high arousal emotions,
anger, fear, and that billions can be made from data because of this.
So we do have machines that are not there to make us unhappy, but I don't know they're doing any good.
It's really, it's a complex issue. It's contentious issue.
And I go backwards and forwards on it because
I talk about the compare and despair phenomena that you're mentioning.
When you ask the kids, and the recent survey came out just from the Pew Center which do
these big surveys, half of teenagers find social media actually helps their relationships,
they think, but half of them also think that it's toxic for others. But
only one in eight thinks it's difficult for themselves. So it's kind of interesting. They
can see that everyone else or they're perpetuating this idea that is really problematic, but
they don't think that applies to them. So when you look at the big studies, the influence
of social media is not as dramatic as everyone assumes.
Okay.
So it has become a whipping boy.
I think what's going on is that when you're immersed in a story about the problems of
social media mental health, people are just retelling that story again and again.
So I think the court is out, to be honest, and that might be against popular opinion
because at the moment we're hearing this big thing about social media creating an anxious generation.
That I don't think is proven to the extent that most scientists would accept.
That said, we do know that teenagers are spending up to eight hours a day on this at least.
So whatever they're doing on that, they're not doing normal interactions.
So I think that that in itself is startling.
And that means that they're not having the normal things that we evolved to do.
Those communications, those kicking a ball around the playground.
So I think that's really the problem with social media.
Not necessarily it's creating it.
It's what it's taken us away from.
It's what it's taking us away from, which is the social connection.
And for me, social connection is the secret to becoming a happier person.
You asked me earlier about that.
My own take on it is that we start off as very self-centered little children.
We have to become cooperative.
We have to become socialized.
We have to learn the rules of engagement and how to communicate and theory of mind and
all these abilities to become socialized. And that's why we have one of the longest childhoods
of any animal. If you think about proportionately, we spend, you know, it's an enormous amount
of time in childhood. Why? It's not education. Education is recent in our evolution. It must
have been something else. And I think it's about being socialized and becoming a member
of the tribe. And so we spend all that time doing that.
And when you take that away because you've introduced a device which is designed and
is designed to capture your attention, then that really is a problem in my opinion because
it's moving faster than our capacity to adapt it.
That said, I'm optimistic.
Humans are incredibly flexible.
We're adaptive.
I think we'll get through it.
AI on the other hand, that has me really worried.
What's freaking you, because I wanted to ask you about AI,
what is it that has you worried?
Well I don't know if you've used it, but is it...
Oh the fact that AI can become your friend really quickly.
Yeah, so do you know the history of AI?
I don't know the history of it, no.
Well, interesting, the first chatbot was a Rogerian therapist.
It was a guy...
Oh, yeah, Adam Curtis did that in his last documentary.
Right, so back in 1967, he wrote a little program called ELIZA,
which was a program which in Rogererian psychotherapy, all you
do is just ask the question back, you say, so blind boy, tell me why do you feel this?
And you just you're really asking a question back to the to the client.
And that process of reiteration, they open up and they go deeper and deeper into what
the basis of their problem is.
So it's really quite straightforward.
All he did was he wrote a simple program which just repeated your question back to you. And they all knew it was a program, but the guy in
Vedive came in one night to find that his secretary was on the chatbot undergoing her
own psychotherapy using the program. So it was originally designed as a psychotherapist.
Now of course it is used as a psychotherapist. You go into chat GPT, you can actually have
a kind of in-depth conversation with AI.
Have you seen, so very recently, the past six months, they're caught in a Chat GPT-induced
spiritual psychosis. Have you heard of that?
No, but it seems alarming.
So people with a tendency towards psychosis are asking. So they're not in the right frame of mind.
So they might ask a question such as,
I think the fella who was on the radio
was talking about me specifically.
And then ChatGPT says, yeah, I think so too.
But it's people who are experiencing psychosis and delusions.
The chat GPT is there as a friend who's reinforcing it.
And it's something that's emerged that no one predicted.
And they're very worried about it.
It's pernicious. I don't know how many of you have had this experience where you've
been talking to someone and then you go on to your or you've been talking out loud
and your Alexa has been listening in and then you go on to do a search and suddenly you find that what you were talking about has
been thrown up in your algorithms. So they are, that is being processed in some batches.
So that is not entirely psychosis. It's actually quite accurate. We are being monitored. So
I am, I'm worried about that. I'm worried about the kind of existential issue about
what happens if you suddenly
have a technology which takes away the need to learn because that's what's
happening in higher education. That's why I've so I stopped using chat GPT I used
it a little bit at the start because I could feel it taking over a very
important part of my brain and what I mean by that is
when I'm writing a podcast, what I'm always looking for is
connections, connections.
I'm handy at seeing connections that don't exist.
And when I was passing research on the
chat, asking questions that I should, I'm asking chat GPT questions that I should be asking
my own, myself. It's just, it's like the link stops. My creativity, where ideas come from,
stop, because I've offloaded it to chat GPT and I went and get the fuck away from me.
But like I could tell in the same way that I can feel, I don't know is my memory is good as it was because I don't need it
to be that good if I got everything in my fucking phone. I used to be the person who,
people used to ring me up on the phone wanting to know facts. Seriously, before the fucking
internet I was that guy when I was a teenager. Someone would be having a conversation about
volcanoes and what are you going to do? There's no fucking internet.
And they give me a shout going,
yeah, really useful part of society.
And then the fucking internet comes in
and I'm not that guy anymore.
What I am, I suppose, I've got this podcast, but like.
That was my, I'm autistic by the way.
And that was my, actually,
that's what I wanted to fucking ask you about.
I saw you mentioned you mentioned it there and you mentioned it before when I
was looking at you on the Internet about when it comes to happiness,
the importance of social connection, right.
And for me as an autistic person, that was the one where I was wondering,
where do autistic people fit in there?
Because me specifically,
if I speak to too many people, I get I get burnout.
Yeah. So like this tour, I'm going to be speaking to a new guest every night.
I'm going to be speaking to a bunch of people backstage.
When this tour is finished in 14 days,
I'm going to have to really, really mind my mental health, because if I don't,
I lose executive
functioning skills. And that for me is my experience of autism. Lots and lots of communication
and socializing for me as an autistic person. It's kind of exhausting. It's strange. So
I find meaning and happiness in isolation, but I do need it. I definitely need people because Covid was no crack.
I can't go full Hermit.
Yeah, I need a little bit of people.
But actually, this is a strange one.
So this is my experience of.
As an autistic person and the social contract doesn't allow for this,
do you know what I actually need?
I want to go to a party or a pub
and to be around people but not have to speak to anyone.
Yeah.
Seriously, I fucking love it.
I go to the gym frequently
and I've been doing it since I'm 14
and I'm like, what is it I love about this place?
Okay, I like the exercising.
What I love about the gym is it's socially acceptable to be in a room full of people,
speak to nobody and wear headphones all the time.
And it's actually weird if you talk to a stranger.
So the gym is actually a brilliant space for autistic people.
The rules are reversed.
And I went, holy fuck, that's why I like the gym.
Today in the art gallery, I fucking loved it.
I'm around art. I'm looking at art. Headphones on. Don't talk to people. That's actually considered weird.
So I find all these spaces where I get to be around people but not have to do the small
talk which scares the living shit out of me. You know what I mean?
Oh, absolutely. I mean, I'm not that different by the way. And actually, if you look at academics,
very often they're on,
well, I used to call the spectrum. They haven't gone necessary for a formal diagnosis, but
it's very common. I, for example, and I know there's some colleagues in here because they
text me earlier that they're coming along. So this is a little awkward, but I mean, I
am public disclosure. I am well recognized as someone who's pathologically awkward.
It's actually in my first book I described my inability to do that.
I'm fine in front of a couple of thousand people but you put me in front of a couple
of...
Fucking hell, I'm the exact same.
Yeah, yeah.
So, you know, I find that...
So I don't have tutees necessarily because I can't stand the pregnant silence or the
pause when
nothing's being said. So I always kept talking too much and they never got to say anything.
And have you ever got to tell me their problems because I'm just talking all the time. Have
you ever pondered your possible spectrum this? Yeah, I have. Yeah, I have. And yeah, I'm
up there. But why haven't you gone for diagnosis?
You just don't think it's it's.
I don't think it's useful for me.
I am somewhat.
I'm concerned about the over diagnosis that's going on in the.
Yeah.
I think that if it's something that's important to you and it provides comfort for you and
that's fine.
But there are, in my opinion, unforeseen consequences of the explosion in neurodiversity.
So for me, so here's the only reason for me that like, I would
have loved it in school. Because I in Ireland, I don't have
what's called a leave insert. And the leave insert is like your
A levels or GCSE. I was a smart kid who loved knowledge and didn't get to
complete school and that was fucking shit because then I couldn't go on to third level.
I had to wait until I was a mature student. So I would have loved it then. Like I'm trying
to figure out how useful it was for me now to get the diagnosis. I got the diagnosis
so that people would be nicer to
me.
Yeah.
Literally that's it because my job is in all sorts of, I was just like getting into my
late 30s and people were going, what the fuck are you doing with a bag in your head, man?
And I needed it, do you know what I mean?
And it was like, great, I can justify, because the thing is with the bag, like I've been
wearing this for years, but after getting the it was actually a
huge part of my diagnosis, because when I went to the psychologist,
the psychologist was like, what's your job?
And I'm like, well, you know, I go up and do gigs and I'm on TV and shit like that.
But I wear a plastic bag in my head, so no one recognizes me in the street.
Sorry, what?
I'm sorry, what?
And that was a huge part of diagnosis.
Not wanting any type of recognition or fame or going through that level of trouble
to be like, no, literally, I wear the fucking bag because I want to be on TV
and write books and do things I like, but I definitely don't want anyone to speak
to me the next day in the coffee shop.
So I wear the bag because of that and he goes, that's fairly
artistic, sir. So that was one of the things for my diagnosis. But the other thing that
I find that my autism is, is eccentric behavior. I am quite eccentric and I don't know when
I am and I'm not being eccentric and it really causes a lot of shameful situations, public embarrassment, publicly embarrassing things.
Like I speak about it a lot on the podcast, like fucking hell, I was dying my hair.
So I work in an
I work in an office, right?
Well, I work in this giant fucking office building with accountants and
solicitors and lawyers, but like that's where I write my books and record my podcast.
But I don't tell them that I tell them I'm a fruit seller.
It gets more autistic as it goes on, doesn't it?
So that's my life.
I don't wear a bag in my head.
I pretend to be a fruit exporter in a giant office.
And that's where I write my podcast.
But I'm going gray.
So I dye my hair right underneath the bag. And one day I dyed my hair right but then got distracted by a very
interesting article and then forgot that my hair was dyed but then I was thinking about
the article so much that I started rubbing my face and rubbing my hands together and fucking accidentally walked into a full canteen like blackface like and this was only like a month ago.
Do you know what I mean?
And people were just like what the fuck is this?
And then everyone's like it's the fellow who sells the fruit exporter.
But like I know it's funny but like that's my life.
I fucking and I had to come out
of that like, oh my God, how embarrassed. That was so embarrassing. And the hair dye,
it took about two days to get off my face. I couldn't leave my gaff. I don't want to
do shit like that. But like, the, like what had happened there was I'm dying my hair,
that's fine. Then the special interest kicked in.
The article was so interesting, so engaging that just 100 percent this is what I'm
doing and now I'm forgetting about everything and going back into normal life
covered in black dye.
And I want people to know I'm autistic because of that shit.
OK, that's a little get out of jail.
If someone comes to me and goes, why did you walk into the canteen in fucking blackface? I can go, I am autistic
and here is exactly how it happened and I'm really sorry about that. Something like that
happens once a month. Fucking three weeks ago, I got a chest infection, right? And they
gave me this antibiotic and the antibiotic, it was during a heat wave in Ireland.
And the antibiotic was the one antibiotic
where you could not go out in the sun.
So there's a heat wave, so I'm like,
fuck, what am I gonna do?
In Ireland, you don't have like flowing shirts
like you have in fucking Panama.
I'd never had to think of what do you do
when it's too sunny and you have to go out? So I had a kimono that I bought during the pandemic. So I put on a
fucking kimono and these mad sunglasses and was then running between shadows in
the middle of Limerick City like a vampire in a kimono and then people
stare at me and then I go oh yeah yeah, that's what, yeah, this
is mad. This is fucking insane. But that's the shit that I get into those situations
with autism. So that's why I come out and said it. But regarding the appropriateness
of diagnosis, I know exactly what you're saying in that here's the struggle I've had since
getting diagnosed. Now that I'm autistic, my fucking algorithm knows that
I'm autistic, so I can't go near Instagram or TikTok without getting all these
autistic people. And now I'm going, oh, should I do that?
Yeah. Do you know what I mean?
So now instead of being the biggest challenge of my autism was that it changed
my identity and my sense of self and trying to maintain who I am without going, now I'm artistic
and going, should I be that way?
Should I be that, do I need to be more artistic?
And the thing is that it's a spectrum and I can meet an autistic person who is completely
different to me and their expression of autism is completely different to mine. And that's it and that's the point that we are all peculiar and we all have our oddities
and I think the diagnosis is very helpful in your case and for many others where it
makes, it makes, it provides, it's not just an excuse, it actually provides meaning, it
kind of explains things and I think that's's I've got no problem with that. It's when it's used and exploited. You know, if I go on Facebook,
I'm, I'm getting sold all sorts of things to try and change my brain stimulation. Yeah.
And I don't know why. And it's because I've been looking at things intensely. So they
are it's, it's somewhat concerning. The waiting list now is three years, there's 200, 200,000
people on the NHS trying to get a diagnosis.
So this sudden explosion has caused problems.
We went over our little interval time. You people need a pint and a piss.
And we're going to be back out in about ten minutes, alright? Dog bless.
Alright.
Okay, let's have a little, let's have an ocarina pause here. Let's have an, I really enjoyed that chat with Bruce. Let's have an ocarina pause before we get to the second half of
this chat. I don't have an ocarina with me. I didn't bring an ocarina with me on tour.
What I do have is this hotel, this hotel pen that I'm gonna click. I'm gonna click this pen
you're gonna hear an advert for something, okay?
Terrible acoustics in this room. Very poor. Postman! Postman! Postman!
Time to check on the skies!
It's another sunny day in Calgary.
Forecast calls for high levels of economic activity.
Late afternoon we've got a burst of potential in a place ranked North America's most livable
city.
Tomorrow, blue sky thinking in the blue sky city should hold steady, and the outlook remains
optimistic throughout the week.
So come grab your dreams and enjoy watching them take hold.
It's possible in Calgary, the blue sky city.
For the full economic forecast, visit calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com.
What is happy travels?
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That's by experts who have been where you are now and have gone where you want to go.
Booking is easy with vacations for every traveler, organized by destination, travel provider and more.
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Do it on a browser please. Also,
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That's because of, that's because this podcast is listener funded.
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Any gigs?
I suppose tonight, this is going out on Wednesday morning.
Tonight I'm in London at the Troxy.
That's sold out.
But this week I'm in, I'm in Bexhill on Friday and I'm in Norwich on Sunday and there might be a few tickets left
for those maybe they're almost sold out there might be maybe five or six tickets
left for both of those gigs chance it fuck it and then I've no gigs until
September I'm gonna be in Derry and I'm gonna be in Vicar Street and I get July
and August to be a big autistic cunt by myself.
Just dropped my pen on the floor there with the awful fucking acoustics.
Terrible acoustics.
Postman!
Um, new listeners there, I'm not sporadically shouting the word postman into the ether.
The word postman is a word that I use to test the acousticsman into the ether. The word postman is it's a word that I
use to test the acoustics of microphones and rooms because it's got a P and S and
a T and it's got an O in there so you get your lungs behind the O. Postman is
it's just it's a good word for testing microphones and the acoustics of a room.
It's better than one, two, one, two, no.
Post, man.
Much better.
So just so you know that there's a reason I'm doing that.
All right, let's get back to the chat there
with Professor Bruce Hood of Bristol University.
Another area that aside from happiness, right, is you look at magical thinking,
especially in adults. How do we define, like, what is magical thinking?
Okay, so I used to believe that you could bend things with your mind. I watched Yuri Geller
back in the 70s and 80s and I wanted
to go to university to learn how to use my mind to control other people and bend things
and time travel. I was a complete believer in all of that stuff.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah. Well, who wasn't then? I mean, he was all over the place and you could see
him doing it with keys and I was incredible. And I discovered his old bullshit, which was unfortunate.
But then I discovered the power of the mind and I got really interested in consciousness
and all the sorts of things we take for granted.
And that's why I became a psychologist.
What do you mean?
Like, did you look at those, the CIA experiments they did with the star program?
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
And then it's there at goats was the other one that John. Yeah, that's right. They did.
They invested 20 million dollars in teaching people to use their psychic powers to astral
plane, to astral plane, to kill people at a distance and all that sort of thing. Did
you ever do one of those meditations, the Hemi sync meditations? No, what's that? So,
so the CIA did this. So they did this program where basically they'd heard the Russians were doing it.
So because they heard the Russians were doing it, the CIA were like, well,
if we heard they're doing it, we have to try and do it at least.
Can you give us like 20 million dollars to do it?
So they'd developed a type of meditation
which can induce an outer body experience.
And then the person astral planes
to Russia and then looks at nuclear bombs. Right? But what was interesting about it,
like that was all bullshit, but what was interesting about it is that the CIA had a team of scientists
and their job was basically, can you do a report and tell us what reality is? And that
was really cool because it was about human consciousness and things like
that, but they did also develop a meditation called a Hemi Sync meditation,
which you can do on YouTube and it uses certain sounds.
And I'm like, fuck it, I'll give it a go.
And I gave it a go.
And then I got that feeling you get when you're on a roller coaster.
And it was literally like my body went to the jump out of it and I went fuck this. So whatever it
does it does. I'm not saying something supernatural happened but it freaked the fuck out of me
and I got out of it and went back to my regular breathing meditation.
I did the Gansfeld state.
What's that?
Oh the Gansfeld state is where you play white noise and you have diffuse light. It's like
altered, you remove all sensory input.
LSD for people who are scared of taking LSD.
That's right, yeah, yeah. And that really does actually create altered states of consciousness.
They made a film about it, but yeah, that's called the Gansfeld state.
And you're not depriving oxygen there or anything?
No, no, it's just, if you take the take the interesting thing about the brain is it's always seeking
out stimulation.
And that's why we see patterns all the time and random noise.
If you listen to random noise, you'll soon hear voices and anything.
You think you hear ghosts and things.
Yeah.
And that's actually an interesting phenomenon that people see faces and hear voices and
all that when the when the sensory information is ambiguous or very distributed, you start
to put patterns there.
So that's what's going on in the Gansfels state.
But anyway, getting back to the consciousness thing, I kind of was really interested, but
I never lost my fascination with why we want to believe in supernatural things.
So for me, I was really, I knew there was no evidence for it anymore because it had
been studied very thoroughly and there's still people who still study this stuff but the consensus of
opinion from conventional science is unfortunately there isn't anything there at the moment.
But that doesn't remove for me the fascination about why do we believe in all these things
and why are they so universal?
Do you mean ghosts? so for me it's...
What about aliens?
Because they could be real.
They could be real.
So I don't count them as supernatural.
I put them in the same category as conspiracy theories, which are plausible or possible,
but not unnatural.
But then it's like, what if...
Because there's a lot of conspiracy theorists who are like, the world is actually run by
inter-dimensional shape-shifting lizards. We know who we're talking about there, the ex goalkeeper.
David, yeah.
But like, that now is magic of thinking, I would reckon.
Well, you've actually made a really interesting point because what we consider supernatural
now may not be in 10 years time. So I was speaking to David Eagleman as another neuroscientist
and he's-
Not that one. It just happens to be a neuroscientist and it sounds like David Icke. It sure is
not David Icke in a way.
No, it's David Eagleman. I don't know if my lawyer is listening. But basically, there is a field of research looking at brain computer interface.
And it's entirely plausible that you could build sophisticated analysis systems which
could read brain wave activity and they could be transmitted to you at a distance.
So in a sense, telepathy could be possible.
But at the moment, without all that interf interfacing if you think you have telepathy
that falls into the category supernatural. But like yeah if you showed an iPhone to an Anglo-Saxon
they'd get a heart attack. Yeah yeah yeah that's true. Do you remember a cartoon called Inspector
Gadget? Yes of course. In Inspector Gadget the girl in it she had a book with a screen and it
had all the information in the world in it. Wikipedia on a phone. And I used
to look at that as a kid going, oh my God, and now it's real.
Yeah. Well, Arthur C. Clarke said that any sophisticated technology is indistinguishable
from magic. And so that's the point that it could be possible.
Oh, sure. Actually, yeah. The Brits did that when they were colonizing Africa. Seriously,
do you know about the use of magicians for colonization?
No, tell me about it.
So when, I don't know, so it was the Brits.
Again.
When Africa was being colonized, right,
it was like, we're talking maybe 1860,
so they were going around into the middle of Africa and they only had so many
soldiers and they were meeting tribes of people who were not as technologically
advanced as the British, but there was lots of them.
So the British were going, how do we conquer this village?
So they actually hired, I don't think it was Houdini, but they
hired famous magicians to come down to Africa and one thing they would do would be, the
British would come in, there's maybe 16 of them, they're the red coats, and they go into
the village, there's a couple of thousand people, and they do the Excalibur thing. So
they would get a stone and in the stone is a sword. First they'd go to the village,
give me your strongest man and get him to pull this sword out. And the strongest man
from the village would come and not a hope. Then they'd get the weakest British soldier,
he'd go up and just put it out. But there was a magician there with a magnet. So they
would use literal magic tricks as a way to colonize. And then the people who are in the village go,
well, we're not fucking with these guys because they're space aliens.
They have magic.
What they've just done there is clearly magic and we don't know what that is.
So we're terrified to resist.
Yeah. And that's an example there of technology being perceived as magic
if no one has seen it, you know?
Well, indeed the conquistadors as well is another example that they brought over.
The Mayans used to think that a conquistador on a horse was one animal.
Oh, right.
Yeah, because horses didn't exist in South America, so when they saw a human being on
a horse, which is fair enough, you just went, what the fuck is that entire thing? Yeah, so they're like, I'm not touching that. I don't know what the fuck that is.
Why would they assume it's a man on the back of a horse? They just, they didn't
ride the back of animals there. They'd lamb us. Go on. What? That's true. I didn't pull that out of my arse. That's in a book called Guns, Germs
and Steel by Jared Diamond.
That's true.
Great book. So magical thinking. It's not conspiracy theories because that's plausible.
So it's like ghosts or fairies.
Ghosts, spirits, energies, fairies. I mean energies is another hard one as well because obviously there are many parts of the universe. We can't perceive directly
But when you evoke an explanation
Which would require a new kind of energy then that would be falling to which is not recognized by
Conventional science that starts to get into the realms it but I think I think
by conventional science that starts to get into the realms. But I think I think premonitions is the one I like the most. This is where you think your great auntie is going to, you
know, going to die. And then you wake up the next morning. She has died. So you say, well,
I definitely had a premonition. But premonitions, of course, are coincidences.
And we tend to. So I would not consider myself to be someone who's prone to magical thinking
that I tend to challenge it.
But around when my dad died, then around when I was experiencing grief, then I was having
a little bit of magical thinking. Like when his coffin went down, the sun shined. And
I'm just convinced that's my dad doing that. And now I go, probably not. It might have been a cloud. Yeah. But at the
time full on when I'm experiencing grief, I believe that and I wanted to believe it.
You know what I mean? Yeah. Well, a personal anecdote here. My father-in-law, my late father-in-law
was a brain surgeon and his wife died very early and he had many years experience working
on the brain and all sorts of states of mind
and he swore that he would still see his dead wife months after she had gone.
So and that's actually a really, really common phenomenon.
The explanation is partly that you have such a strong representation or memory for someone
that it's the brain tricks itself into sort of recreating that experience.
So I'm not, I don't mock anyone who has these things.
I think it's really important to recognise
that these are just manifestations of an interesting kind of mind, as it were,
because that was I was afraid of asking you these questions because.
Like even people who are into horoscopes, right?
That's not my bag. But if someone's into that and it's like even people who are into horoscopes, right? That's not my bag.
But if someone's into that and it's working from I'm not going to be like,
I'm not going to shit on there.
You know what I mean?
I and the other thing as well.
I speak loads about Irish mythology on my podcast and the reason I do it and my
interests in not only Irish mythology, but folklore and the reason I do it and my interests in not
only Irish mythology, but folklore and belief around fairies,
because we have a lot of that in Ireland.
We call it Pishoghs, but it means superstition about fairy mounds, about
fairy trees, certain things you don't interfere with.
Like, I don't believe any of that, but I have huge interest and respect for it
because I think it's important for biodiversity.
Like in Irish mythology, we have loads of... Insects are sacred.
Like up until the 1600s in Ireland, it was illegal to kill white butterflies because so many people believed that a white butterfly was the soul of a dead child.
Horseshit! But a scientist will turn around and say, pretty good idea, not to fuck with butterflies,
they're pollinators. Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And I find that so many superstitious magical thinking within folklore and mythology is
actually really useful when it comes to living in line with systems of biodiversity. And
with since the Enlightenment and with things like colonisation, you lose that in favour
of extractive capitalism. That far as that mountain means fucking nothing other than
money. Let's take it away and look where we are now. We're fucked.
No I totally agree and I think that society, we need sacred values. If you reduce everything to a bottom line, to a monetary value, then
that undermines the cohesion of a group. We're a social animal. We need to have this convention,
something that brings us together, and that requires faith. Now, I'm not religious, but
I totally understand why people feel faith and experience it. And I can see it can play a very valuable role
in coalescing people around the belief systems.
So belief systems are really important to us as a species, I think.
And that's why we shouldn't denigrate them.
We just need to recognize when they get out control
and when they're trying to impose their belief systems.
And, you know, so I can see that I can see why people are anti-religious.
I'm not anti-religious. I
just think it's really interesting that it's so common.
I go back to William Golding's story, Lord of the Flies. I think the thought experiment,
because you never get the ethics for it, is to put a bunch of kids on an island without
any culture. And I bet my bottom dollar they would generate their own gods, their own belief
systems, their own explanations.
You mean kids that haven't been raised like just bare humans?
Yeah, because...
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think the...
Do you ever get excited around AI for that?
Because with AI you might be able to do something like that.
Oh, well, I mean, there's some issues about how much energy and water it uses.
That's fucking terrible.
Yeah.
But I think for me, my concern, my worries, and by the way, it's not going away.
So we've got to just recognize what it is.
But when it comes to the use of AI in higher education, I think we're facing a real kind
of problem because we can't tell the difference between machine and human essays or assessments.
So that means that's going to become really difficult. But then it starts, if you've got
a virtual tutor who's even better than the person in real, it starts to question. And
a lot of us in higher education are seriously worried about what's going to happen to our
institutions.
Yeah. I mean, the people, we got to start putting billionaires are allowed
to get away with an awful lot of shit. Yeah. And there needs to be some type of checks
and balances on and it's a strange thing. It's when you hear these billionaires who
own the AI companies, they're speaking about it as if it's this inevitable thing. And it's a strange thing with humans and curiosity like.
Do you ever hear of long term nuclear message warning?
No. No. Oh, you love this.
So it's a whole field within semiotics, which is you've got all this nuclear waste,
right, which we have.
And if you bury this nuclear waste, it's still going to be dangerous in 100,000
years and we're putting it under the ground.
And there's people now going, fuck, what if like someone digs it up in 30,000 years?
What if civilization has collapsed?
We can't predict what 30,000 years will be like.
But we do know if someone digs this up, it's still going to be dangerous.
And they know that if it's human beings, they're going to still dig it up.
Yeah. So they're trying to figure out how
do you communicate 10,000, 20,000 years in the future?
And one thing they're looking at is superstition and folk belief.
Yeah.
Now, one mad, really fucking exceptionally eccentric solution was called glow cats.
They wanted to genetically engineer cats so that the cats glow in the presence of
nuclear waste, but then create songs and folklore around glowing cats in the hope
that like religion, they would last 10,000 years in the future and
people would understand that if a cat glows, don't dig underneath.
I'm serious.
Brilliant.
And because it ties in with you like this because I know you were saying backstage you
like to fuck around with metal detectors.
I'm a detectorist.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So any other detectorists out there?
You know I'm.
I knew there wouldn't be any.
I just say I was high on the spectrum.
You'd be messing around with mounds and barrels I'm guessing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So in Ireland, we've got mounds and barrels in Ireland as well, but in Ireland, when we
find a mound, we tend to refer to it as a fairy fort. So in Ireland, you do not fuck with it.
It's a superstition that even it still exists in our culture.
Most people, even me, to be honest, and I consider myself to be a rational person,
I'm not fucking with a fairy fort and I'm not fucking with a fairy tree.
I'm just not doing it.
And so you have these mounds and it's just there in our culture.
Never, ever interfere with these things.
Now, what the mounds were is pre-Christian Ireland.
We didn't have towns or monasteries.
We had a society that was based on pastoralism.
So there was a lot of cows and people moved with cows and cows were the most
important currency. And what these mounds actually were, were they were a wooden fort and most likely
people kept cows inside there. OK, but there's a theory.
A very, very common disease with cattle is anthrax.
Anthrax kills entire fucking herd of cows and then it'll kill every human that's
around the cow. Anthrax is fucking
deadly. So a theory is that cattle would die of anthrax in one of these wooden mounds 2000
years ago. All the humans would die too. Their bodies rot. They go down into the ground.
The wood rots away on the fort and you're left with a mound. And you've loads of these
all over Ireland. A couple of hundred years later some person goes I'm gonna dig that
mound and they do but what you dig up is anthrax spores. Wow. Yeah so there's a
it's a plausible theory that some people actually died many many years ago when
digging up one of these mounds and killed their whole community with anthrax and then the fairy folk superstition.
There are people under the earth and they also believe too that when we see a mound
and there's a white thorn tree there, that's one you especially don't fuck with
because that's a fairy tree.
They reckon it's possible people put the fairy trees on the ones where the anthrax was.
So it's a theory.
Twenty nineteen.
An archaeologist put it forward in twenty
nineteen and at the end of his paper he basically says,
can someone please try and test this?
Can someone dig up a few of these mountains?
Because it's a lovely theory, isn't it?
Yeah, I like it. Yeah.
And what it reminds me of is it's that nuclear waste thing.
Right.
We are burying something deadly in the ground.
It is going to be dangerous in 100,000 years.
How do you tell those people then?
Because humans, like when they found the pyramids, it's like, stay away from this place.
No, I'm going to go to the mummies.
They used to eat the mummies.
Yeah, they used to get mummies and dip it in honey. there's another one, they used to make the colour brown out of
mummies as well. It's like, leave them the fuck alone, will you?
Mimiria, yeah.
We've gone ferociously off topic and I think you might also be autistic. Because I'm like,
I'm going to bring the professor out tonight for some rigorous discussion in
your area and now we're talking about anthrax fairly forts.
And eating mummies.
And eating mummies.
So.
Yeah, let's try again.
What I want to know is the value that that magical thinking and superstition has to the
human condition.
Yeah. So I think at a very basic level, it provides a sense of meaning, but it also provides
a sense of control. And I think that's very obvious if you watch certain sportsmen, tennis
players in particular, will have their little superstitious rituals. And that's interesting
because you might argue that's ridiculous, but actually that provides
them with a sense of control over this.
It becomes part of their habit, part of their pregame routines.
And so if you try and take it away or afford them, then they don't feel they play as well.
What do sports psychologists say about that?
I don't know.
I imagine associated learning would be the answer, which is basically you learn
an association, it becomes strengthened through repetition or the lack of contra- contra-action
and then that just becomes a kind of routine. So you'll see them. I mean, I love what that's
the only reason I watch Wimbledon. I don't care about the tennis. I'm looking out for
all the superstitious routines. They're bouncing the ball three times. Yeah, yeah, just about
everyone does it. It's a very familiar kind of thing.
And do you think Tiger Woods would only ever wear a red cardigan when he was playing?
Do you think he's aware of that? Do you think some of them are not aware of their little rituals?
No, I think they know about it. Well, I don't know actually.
Beckham, of course, well, he has a bit of OCD as well, so that would explain it.
But yeah, it's about regaining control over the environment.
I do it. I think everyone does it, don't they? I mean, a little bit of little rituals.
Well, it's, it's, when it comes to magical thinking, what I'm guessing is, is there's
healthy and then problematic. Sure. So is this thing helping me in my life or?
Fuck it, sure I was agoraphobic for a year.
I wouldn't have called that magical thinking.
But no, it wasn't magical.
It was irrational. That wasn't helpful.
I was afraid of getting panic attacks in public.
No, that's that's that's that's right.
Yeah, that's fine. Yeah, that's not natural.
I was it was it's an interesting one because there was an element of magic.
So magic and thinking is the wrong word because there was nothing supernatural.
Yeah, no theories.
I did start to...
So the way that agoraphobia was working for me was
I'd go to Tesco and then panic attack in Tesco.
So now Tesco's, that's off the list.
And then it happens in a pub, pubs are off the list.
And I start creating a map of
where I'm the panic attack is an awful thing when you don't know what they are,
because when I got a panic attack before I'd heard a label for it.
So I'm like, oh, sometimes I just feel like I'm literally dying.
I'm in the act of dying.
Like, that's what a panic attack is, if you get a good one.
If you get a good one, it's like, oh I'm dying,
I'm doing a death, that's what this is.
I'm in the process of dying, dying is happening to me.
Like that's a good panic attack, you know?
So I was getting damned in Tesco for no reason.
So I'm like, well I'm not fucking going back to Tesco,
and then eventually I couldn't leave my room
because that's the only space
where I couldn't get panic attacks.
So when I found CBT, we'll say that was kind of referred to as magical thinking,
even though it wasn't supernatural thinking.
It's profoundly irrational.
And Tesco is not the reason for my panic attacks.
You know, and then I challenge it by going into Tesco like that.
Right. Not literally. That's what I did. I grad going into Tesco like that. Right.
Not literally, that's what I did.
Graded exposure.
Gradual exposure.
And one thing that really was a breakthrough for me,
and it was the power of fucking art.
So I'd eventually gotten to the point where I'm going to nightclubs,
because I was like 19 and I wanted to do things that are normal.
So I was going to nightclubs, but it's like staying beside the emergency exit.
So I was comfortable with that much, but there's no fucking way I'm going into the
crowd and it was before smartphones.
So I'm there in the nightclub and then the DJ plays a song that I'd never heard
before and it was the most fucking I was like, oh my God, what is this?
Because it sounded like hip hop music, but it was clearly the 70s.
So I'm like, there's no Shazam.
This is pre-internet.
So I have to find out what that fucking song is.
And if I do not find out what that song is,
I may never hear it again for the rest of my life.
So that I ran through the crowd.
I got through all of my fears. Didn't matter.
I had a purpose and I went to the fucking DJ.
I said, what's that song?
And it was The Revolution Would Not Be Televised by Gil Scott Heron.
And I wrote it on my hand in Biro and then protected my hand and went home
because there was no Shazam. This is what you had to do.
This is what you had to do.
But like I came home from that and I got
because I said to you before I met you backstage, like I don't I try not to use
the word happiness, I use the word meaning.
I pursue meaning.
I know that if I pursue happiness, I'll end up disappointed.
Happiness isn't a state I can reach, but I can have a lot of meaning.
And that there, I had meaning that transcended my anxiety.
And the meaning was music, art.
I fucking love this so much.
I will run through this crowd just to find out that song and forgot that I was
someone who had agoraphobia and it was again, I don't want to say spiritual.
It was massively transformational.
It showed me art ah, art.
That's what gives me meaning.
If I can pursue the thing that gives me meaning,
I can become a person who doesn't get panic attacks. You know what I mean? Indeed.
Yeah. I mean, happiness isn't a state.
It's a kind of process.
I know it's a cliche to say it's a journey, but it is true that if you try
and get it, it'll evaporate. It's elusive because you adapt to everything. And in many
ways you have to be unhappy to know what unhappy is. So you can never be permanently happy
all the time. And don't seek it in yourself necessarily. I think that part of the problem,
certainly amongst a lot of our students and what I wrote about in the Science of Happiness is that we've got to learn to stop focusing inward and being
so self-critical and not reaching our expectations and the fear of failure and so on and start
to kind of reach out and become, I say, allocentric, which means other focused. Now I know that
for an autistic person it's hard, but you can still enjoy the experience of other people
without necessarily having to have a very intimate conversation.
And I love other people's happiness.
Yeah, like something I find incredibly self-esteem building is
like I'm a human, so like I'm prone to jealousy.
I'm prone to comparing myself to other people.
And when I find myself being jealous of another person, especially their they're achievements, I catch myself in the moment and go,
actually, let's try being happy for him. Yeah.
You know what I mean? And it's really transformational.
I love doing it. And that brings me.
Again, what you're saying, like, I know that happiness is in a state,
but there's great meaning in pain as well.
Like I spoke there about like my dad died when I was like 20 and it wasn't nice at
all, but at the same time, there's fucking huge meaning in that pain.
All that pain I experienced, I grew from it as a person, you know?
So I.
Yeah, that's I don't I don't call that unhappy.
My dad's death, it's unhappy.
True unhappiness for me is when I'm stuck in my head.
Yeah, when I'm worried about the past or trying to predict what the future is.
And I'm in this washing machine of worries and I'm not in the present moment, that's
the shit I don't like. It's very hard to find meaning in that. But if I'm in the present
moment, even if I'm present with sadness, that's kind of happy.
Yeah. I think the danger of being inside your head is it's not often a very pleasant place
because if you're very self-critical and you're drawing comparisons, you can easily find flaws.
But if you can try and draw the energy and the ritual eyes of others around you, I mean
there are studies showing that the happiness you get by directing it towards others is
more authentic and longer lasting.
If you're trying to make yourself happy, if you're the instigator, purveyor and recipient
of the happiness, you know when it ceases to deliver.
And so it evaporates much more quickly because we naturally adapt. But if you're kind of, you know, if I go out and buy you drinks and everyone's
saying, oh, he's a great guy, you know, there's a kind of extension of your, your, your efforts
as it were. And by virtue, you, you become more appreciated. I think that's part of it,
but you don't want to be selfless. You don't want to kind of give everything over to everyone
else and absorb all their miseries and be super empathic.
I think that is a danger of losing yourself. But it's striking the balance between the kind of self-care of your one and the care you direct towards others.
Abraham Maslow.
Yeah. Abraham Maslow, so he was the psychologist that his work, he had the, what the fuck's
it called, his pyramid, actuation, the self-actuation pyramid, right? If you look at Maslow's work,
he was a Canadian psychologist and he had this pyramid of the needs that humans...
Basic needs at the bottom, yeah.
And then at the top is self-actualisation.
But if you actually look into the history of Maslow and what happened,
Maslow had spent a huge amount of time with indigenous people in Canada,
the Blackfoot people.
And when he was with these people,
he found that these people had high levels of self-actualisation in their community.
I mean, self-actualization is a nice word for again, I don't want to say happiness,
but these people are content.
They have great meaning in life.
Purpose. And he found that there's a huge amount of purpose in this community.
And what he also found that is these people, their value system wasn't based on
how much you had, but how much you could give
away your generosity. But Maslow's pyramid as we know it, this thing, that's not actually
Maslow's original work. That got changed through the years in textbooks in order to align with
individualistic capitalism. Did you kind of find that, what I was trying to get at there
is, because you also did a book about
What was it called? Why we want things possessed possessed. What why do we want? Why do we want more than we need?
Why do we want more than we need? Yeah, and to be generous and to give things away to the people around you within limits
Mmm is a better way to be happy than to be selfish and continually want true because if because if you are, I mean, it's called a hedonic treadmill.
I mean,
it's a hedonism is joy.
And if you're trying to chase joy, it's like on a treadmill.
You never actually you never get there.
King Midas. Yeah, exactly.
So the problem of pursuing riches and wealth
and materialism, apart from the impact on the planet
is that you get used to your stuff.
You get used to your shit, you know, because it's like you buy the car and then suddenly
you're comparing it.
Oh, I didn't get the best model.
And then you're starting to compare yourself to someone else again.
And so material things by their nature, you get used to them.
So that's one of the reasons experiences tend to show less adaptation.
So does external praise count as well? Because, yeah, yeah. So external prey, I mean, part
of the mech, I mean, there are lots of reasons why people have possessions. And I think they're
really fascinating some of them to do with our sense of identity is what we can control.
So our possessions are an extension of self. But also signaling theory from Darwin
suggests that you know, we buy things to show off our status. Yeah. And there's a long history
of research showing that as well. So that's and that's quite clearly designer goods, luxury
goods are all interpreted because of what they say about us as a person. But ultimately,
I think that it's a foolish task.
I make the point you can't take it when you go.
And if you consider all the effort you go into trying
to accumulate these things, you never really feel fully,
well, I would argue, really feel fully sustained, as it were.
So it's a folly.
And yeah, I think it's something that we've got to,
considering the impact on the planet,
I think we've really got to try and curtail it.
I mean, there's a point I'd just like to make
that most parents would readily die for their children.
Most parents feel so strongly about it,
but when it comes to thinking about the consequences
of our actions for our children's children's children,
we forget it.
And that's ludicrous when you think about it.
It just seems so silly.
I want to hark back to when we were speaking about Buddhism
and you found that in your research and happiness,
you found that Buddhism kind of got it right.
Yeah, so it relates to my interest in the self, which I think is a construct.
So, you know, that's your other fucking book.
Yeah, be busy.
You're hitting on the big topics.
So your other book is that the self illusion, the illusion that the sense of me, I is like, fuck that.
It doesn't exist. Yeah, it's a completely it's a story.
You're a story inside your head.
You prick. Well, it's a completely, it's a story. You're a story inside your head. You prick!
Well it's an interesting story. It's a constantly changing story, but you never know because
you are the narrator and the narrative. You're one in the same.
Did you get a lot of pushback for that?
Yeah, I did actually.
That's very challenging information. But like, I was joking there when I called you a prick,
I said, I apologize. But what I mean there is-
I didn't even hear it.
It's really challenging. It's really like to say that that's I don't want to hear that at all.
Yeah, the people hate that they hate the idea they don't have free will.
They hate the idea that they're not in control.
I mean, free will.
We could argue about that.
But the idea, I mean, the eye doesn't exist.
I like I talk to him all the time.
Yeah, well, that's that's the that's the voice you're hearing.
You're hearing. Yeah, well, that's the voice you're hearing.
So for me, the mind is a series of complex unconscious processes.
And then you have consciousness, which is the thing you can articulate and think about.
But there's a...
Is that the awakeness?
The awareness, yeah.
So William James talked about the I in the me.
The I is the sense of, in the present moment, conscious awareness.
The me is the autobiography of who Blind Boy is.
Yeah. Which is everything which feeds into the eyes.
So whenever I ask you a question, if I say you blind boy,
which kind of ice cream do you prefer, vanilla or chocolate?
Vanilla. Right. OK.
So you had to think about it.
I did, but I had to go into the biography. Yeah, that's right.
You are you're checking the library.
I went to the library and I was like, there was that chocolate phase for a while and then
I went, ah. Like I was going there, you know.
I was kind of going to the point where, remember when you thought chocolate was better and
then you realized that it was actually the simplicity of vanilla that you liked. And
then it was also a Madagascar and there's a more interesting, I'm not going to go in
there. That would be a crazy tangent. Go on.
No, but so hearing the question, formulating an answer is I,
but getting to the information, the database is the me. That's the autobiography.
And I definitely had to go to a different place in the brain. My eyes looked off there, yeah.
Yeah, yeah. So you didn't create the autobiography.
That's all the experiences that have imposed themselves upon you. So in a sense, you're
in answering the question, you're, you're really constructing a coherent story on the
basis of the data that you have stored away. Now you hear that as an internal voice. Um,
but in many senses after the fact, I don't know if you ever have this experience, but
sometimes I don't know what I'm going to say until I've said it.
So there's a whole lot of unconscious information bubbling up.
And we only ever really need to be aware of the things which are really important when
we're making decisions.
A lot of it is done offline, you're on autopilot most of the time, because you haven't simply
got the capacity of the bandwidth to process all the unconscious processes.
But that's what I mean by the self being a construct. It's a story which makes sense of all of these
unconscious things. Because when you're arguing in your library about the chocolate, you weren't
there having the library discussion. It was coming out of the and then it popped into
your head. And that's why he said, Oh, yeah. Is that useful? What I mean there is is.
When we were speaking about happiness, right? Right.
And one thing we were chatting about is is.
The removal of the self, the ego, that like
getting rid of that is a handy way to contentment.
I believe so.
And that's the bottom line, the science of happiness from my perspective.
It's the only thing I think I've contributed.
There are so many books on happiness, but the one thing I've said, which I don't think
anyone has really said apart from the Buddha, is that...
Go on.
We do actually start off as very egocentric children.
I mean there's a whole lot of research and that was my earlier career, studying egocentrism
in children.
And what I mean by that term egocentrism is that they literally see the world from their
perspective.
They find it very difficult to understand what other people may be thinking.
Basically children have to learn to become more integrated by understanding other people's perspectives.
They need to lose that egocentric view of the world.
And if you look at child development research and studies,
it shows that children start off very egocentric
and then they become less so.
Now, many adults, I think we're always egocentric
because of the flow of consciousness,
because we're always got that first person perspective.
But if you are so egocentric that you fail to take into consideration other people's
situations, then that means there's a danger that you're going to be so self-absorbed that
you're blowing your own problems off, getting them out of proportion.
And also, by the way, everyone's thinking you're a prick because you're not actually
caring about them.
You're being ostracized.
So I think that when you can start to integrate and direct your energies to flourishing, to helping other people, that's a much better
balance to achieve. But getting back to the self, there is research, for example, in psychedelics
has shown to be very effective for people with profound depression. And part of the
common experience is a dissolution or a delusion of, you know, dissolving a diffusion,
ego death, ego death. Yeah. Um, but you don't have to take psychedelics to get that experience.
You can get that on other situations, which are also very positive. So, um, chance states,
uh, movement states going into outer space, flow states, flow states. Yeah. Uh, flow is
really interesting because flow is where you're directing
all your attention towards an activity. And one of the common reports is the sense of
time disappears and the sense of self disappears. So if I was to rate my happiest experiences
ever, it's when I can enter flow state. Yeah, literally that is, it's what heaven feels
like. Yeah, if I'm writing a story and I can go there for an hour, that's heaven. Yeah, literally that is it's what heaven feels like. Yeah. If I'm writing a story and I can go there for an hour, that's heaven.
Yeah, for me, writing compares to it.
Writing that we're writing.
Writing for me. Yeah. Yeah.
And detecting so.
Oh, metal detecting too.
You get flow when you're detecting.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, you can get them to that.
And what is it about the metal detecting that?
Well, because well, because you're studying,
you're paying attention to the sensory signals. you're listening for little signals all the time.
And so suddenly time is starting to disappear with you because you focus your attention externally when you focus your attention internally that's when you start to get into rumination which is why meditation works because meditation what you're doing is you're monitoring either your breathing or you're directing your attention externally or being mindful.
But if you go back into your inner space and just examine the content of your
thoughts again, that's when you start to get sort of rumination.
Here's an interesting one for you actually around the magical thinking and
that point you're making.
One of the last, we'll say socially acceptable pieces of magical thinking
that we have in Ireland.
You might have it here.
Does anyone pray at the St. Anthony when you lose something?
So like that's in Ireland, that's a huge thing, right? If you lose a thing, your wallet, whatever,
last resort, you pray at the St. Anthony. I fucking do it. The reason is, is it tends to work.
How many people have prayed at the St. Anthony and they found the thing?
is it tends to work. All right.
Like, how many people have prayed to Saint Anthony
and they found the thing?
Yeah.
And this has rattled me for years, going, come on.
There's no fucking Saint Anthony
helping me to find my iPhone, come on.
Do you know what I mean?
There's better things going on.
And then I thought about it, and I reckon what it is,
is, like, if I lose my fucking,
it's usually something important.
So it's watered or phone.
So that's high fucking arousal emotion.
I'm really anxious.
And in that state, I'm not great at looking for my wallet.
I'm really not great.
Then because I kind of believe in the Saint Anthony thing,
because it's happened so many times before, I go, I'm going to pray to Saint
Anthony and I'm going to find it because it's worked all those
times before. So I go, St. Anthony, come on, you haven't heard from me in a while, but
fuck it, I need that wallet. Come on. And then there's the wallet. And I go, thank you,
St. Anthony. But what's happened is I did a little mindfulness exercise. It's not St.
Anthony. I got down to a state where I'm calm
enough to actually see around me and go, oh, there it was. It was always right in front
of me all along. That's the thing. It was there all along. I couldn't see it because
I was so anxious. But the St. Anthony thing brought me back. And I reckon I'm right with
that. I reckon.
I think you're totally right. It happened to me Two days ago. I was trying to find my iPod. I was doing a very important podcast. Not yours, by the way and
I'm kidding. I couldn't find my air pods
They said you have to have it air pods and my wife is sitting on this you'll confirm this
I ran around like a headless chicken and I was so stressed. I couldn't see anything and of course after the show was over
I was more relaxed and then I just remembered. And of course, after the show was over, I was more relaxed.
And then I just remembered, oh, that's where you put them.
So my memory system.
But because I was so stressed at the time,
I was unable to kind of reconstruct where they were at last were.
So, yeah, I totally get that.
So the next time I'll call.
And I don't pray to St.
Anthony anymore because I got an app called Tile.
Oh, yes.
It's replaced St. Anthony. It's fucking an app called Tile. Yeah, so it's replaced
St. Anthony. It's fucking brilliant, especially if you're nowhere divergent. This isn't an
advertisement but basically it's my wallet and my keys, anything that's fucking crazy
important that I frequently lose, there's a thing in it called a Tile now and I can
never lose it because I just go to my phone. So if my wallet falls behind
the couch, I just go, OK, and I ring it on tile and it goes beep, beep, beep.
And then if I lose my phone, I can go to one of my keys and I can press a button and then
it finds my phone. So same thing, he can go fuck himself.
But again, that's another example of 10 years ago that was magic.
That is magic, yeah.
Absolute magic. It's like I can whistle for it if I want.
I won't because it'll make a noise.
My wallet will start beeping, but I can whistle at it and I'll find it.
Oh, OK. I've got to get that.
You're a Mr.
Losing Things. Yeah, of course you are, because you're a metal detector.
And all I'm we better take audience questions. We've got 10 fucking minutes. You're a metal detector.
Well, we better take audience questions. We've got 10 fucking minutes.
I could talk to you for hours, man.
Oh, that's good, thank you.
Let's bring up the house lights a little bit.
I get another photograph from my ma.
2000s R&B singer Usher has kindly come along tonight
to hand out the microphone.
I've got it. Go on, yeah.
My question is about critical thinking, and it's kind of a big question,
but I thought it's a good opportunity.
I'd love to hear from either of you or both of you about it.
There's lots of different reasons I want to ask this question,
but we were kind of you guys were talking about AI
and conspiracy theories came up as well.
And in a time of really dangerous political rhetoric,
in a time of AI being like an information source,
there's so many reasons for it,
but I wonder what you think about ways to encourage
critical thinking generally on a societal level.
It's one of the things that I think
is most important right now.
That's a big problem right now. Wow. That's a good question.
It's without doubt, it's what's going to be undermined by AI unless we pay
attention to it. I think that's at the heart of what I think you're asking is
critical thinking is being eroded by the rapid accessibility of narratives
and stories and whoever is controlling those narratives or stories is removing
the capacity for critical thinking so it's an existential question you've
asked and I don't have a simple solution to it but you're absolutely right that
these systems of their left unfettered are going to really cause problems. One thing I don't have a solution, right.
But one thing.
So most of our like around this problem that we're all seeing.
One thing we need to look at, and I mentioned it before,
a huge amount of our discourse is now on a platform owned by a billionaire
where they have set the rules of that discourse
and the rules are all discourse has to be
turn and response combat.
That's mad.
Imagine, right, social media didn't exist
and instead a billionaire came along and said,
both ye have an argument about racism
except you're both on a tightrope
and you have to hit yourselves into the head as well while you're doing it.
Do you know what I mean?
So much of our conversation is in this forum that's designed by billionaires.
You can't have critical thinking in the Instagram comments or the Facebook comments.
Has anyone ever had a decent argument in the Facebook comments?
You can't. It's impossible.
It's impossible. But it's that thing where what I think about a lot is,
do you know when you're walking on the street and you almost bump into a person
in physical space, you have this lovely little dance and a smile.
Yeah.
But then if you're in a car and you almost bump into someone,
you fucking prick! The same thing has happened, but there's that thing, you might know the
name of it, what's it called when you're in a car and inhibition?
Dysinhibition.
Dysinhibition. Because I was speaking to a cyber psychologist about this. Dysinhibition
happens when you're sitting in a car,
because I've often sat in a car on the main street of my city
and picked my nose, no problem at all,
because I'm in a car and no one's looking.
They are, man.
I'm not going to walk down the road picking my fucking nose,
but I'll do it in the car.
That's the disinhibition of being in a car.
The same disinhibition happens in social media.
Yeah, you're not accountable.
We're not accountable.
So, your question is scary, but it becomes less scary when I think about it that way.
When I think about it, yeah, that's really scary.
There's a lack of critical thinking.
Maybe we should stop conversing in the billionaire machine
where they make money out of our arguments.
I mean, that's the thing, data is the new fucking aisle. Like where are
these people getting their money from? Our behavior, that's the term mining our
behavior like aisle, that's how they're becoming fucking, it's, ah fuck me. I think
we're gonna get booted out right because it's five minutes past ten and Edward
Caulston is like get the fuck out everybody and no we are past curfew and I
want to be nice to the people working here listen the reason we're past curfew
is because you're such a fabulously interesting person and I could have
spoken to you all nice. Professor Bruce Hood everybody, buy his books.
Thank you everybody for coming out Bristol, you were wonderful.
What a wonderful crowd.
This was the Blind Boy podcast, dog bless.
Thank you, thank you.
Thank you to Professor Bruce Hood there.
Thank you to Professor Bruce Hood for that magnificent wonderful conversation.
He was a gentleman.
I'll have him on again.
Absolute cracking fella.
I'm going to fuck off now to the art gallery.
I'm going to go to the art gallery in Edinburgh
to chill out and to look after my social battery.
And then tonight I'm going to gig in Usher Hall in Edinburgh,
which never thought that was possible.
Usher Hall is, I believe the gig is sold out.
It's massive.
I used to flyer, I used to stand outside Usher Hall
and hand out flyers for my gigs
that 70 people would show up to.
So I never ever thought that I'd be headlining
Usher Hall. I don't want to say like in my wildest dreams, I never dreamt that
far. I never thought it was possible, never entertained it. So my absolute
gratitude to the people of Edinburgh who are coming to this gig tonight and for
everybody on this tour who's coming to my shows. Thank you so much. I'm
unbelievably grateful.
And I remind myself of that every single day.
Every morning I wake up,
I remind myself how fortunate and lucky I am
to be able to do this as my job.
Rub a swan.
Don't, don't, I always say rub a swan.
Don't rub a swan.
Genuflect to a swan.
Wink at a mouse.
And marvel, marvel at us.
It's probably raining back in Ireland.
I'm missing the rain back in Limerick.
I'm missing that Limerick rain.
It's probably raining back in Limerick.
Marvel at a little, a big fat snail.
Marvel at a summer snail.
And the smell of rain. Alright Dog bless, I'll catch you next week, hopefully with a hot take back in my studio. Calgary, also known as the blue sky city.
We get more sunny days than anywhere in the country, but more importantly, we're the Canadian capital of blue sky thinking.
This is where bold ideas meet big opportunity,
where dreams become reality.
Whether you're building your career
or scaling your business,
Calgary is where what if turns into what's next.
It's possible here in Calgary, the blue sky city.
Learn more at calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com.
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