Have you seen the Wallace video? Did it change how you handle your daily commute? Let me know in the comments below.

October 11, 2023 | Category: Mindset & Philosophy

The point is crushing: The most obvious, important, and pervasive realities are often the hardest to see. Wallace argues that our natural, default state is worship . But we don’t worship gods anymore; we worship intellect, money, bodies, and status. The problem is that these are “unconscious” gods. When you worship money, you will never have enough. When you worship your body, you will always feel ugly.

Wallace paints a picture of a long, soul-crushing day at work. You’re tired. You’re hungry. You get stuck in traffic, then slog through the megamart. The aisles are crowded. The fluorescent lights are buzzing. The person in front of you has 15 items in the 10-items-or-less lane.

You think: If I just had more time. If these idiots would just move. I deserve better than this. You turn your immediate frustration into a capital-L Life problem. You become the center of the universe.

It is not a motivational speech. It is an autopsy of the default human setting. In 2005, David Foster Wallace gave the commencement address at Kenyon College. It was later turned into a short film (often just called “the Wallace video” or “This is Water”). On the surface, it is advice for young adults entering the "real world." In reality, it is a survival guide for anyone who has ever felt suffocated by traffic, grocery store lines, or their own self-pity.

But the most brutal part of the speech is the .

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Wallace Video Instant

Have you seen the Wallace video? Did it change how you handle your daily commute? Let me know in the comments below.

October 11, 2023 | Category: Mindset & Philosophy

The point is crushing: The most obvious, important, and pervasive realities are often the hardest to see. Wallace argues that our natural, default state is worship . But we don’t worship gods anymore; we worship intellect, money, bodies, and status. The problem is that these are “unconscious” gods. When you worship money, you will never have enough. When you worship your body, you will always feel ugly.

Wallace paints a picture of a long, soul-crushing day at work. You’re tired. You’re hungry. You get stuck in traffic, then slog through the megamart. The aisles are crowded. The fluorescent lights are buzzing. The person in front of you has 15 items in the 10-items-or-less lane.

You think: If I just had more time. If these idiots would just move. I deserve better than this. You turn your immediate frustration into a capital-L Life problem. You become the center of the universe.

It is not a motivational speech. It is an autopsy of the default human setting. In 2005, David Foster Wallace gave the commencement address at Kenyon College. It was later turned into a short film (often just called “the Wallace video” or “This is Water”). On the surface, it is advice for young adults entering the "real world." In reality, it is a survival guide for anyone who has ever felt suffocated by traffic, grocery store lines, or their own self-pity.

But the most brutal part of the speech is the .