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cover of episode The Scary Truth of How Screens Are Rotting Our Brains (With Carlos Whittaker)

The Scary Truth of How Screens Are Rotting Our Brains (With Carlos Whittaker)

2025/1/31
logo of podcast The Dr. John Delony Show

The Dr. John Delony Show

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以实用建议帮助人们解决生活和财务问题的知名播客主播。
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John Delony: 我长期关注科技产品对学生心理健康的影响,特别是智能手机和平板电脑的普及如何迅速恶化学生的心理健康状况。我本人也曾沉迷于手机,尽管之前一直告诫家长们要避免这种情况。我意识到自己沉迷于手机,尽管之前一直告诫家长们要避免这种情况。我邀请Carlos来节目中分享他的经验,因为他对这个问题有独到的见解,并且他的经历对我来说很有启发性。 Carlos Whittaker的戒屏实验结果让我非常震惊,也让我意识到这个问题的严重性。我们需要认真思考如何平衡科技产品的使用,以及如何保护我们的身心健康。 Carlos Whittaker: 我进行为期七周半的戒屏实验,期间住在修道院和阿米什人家中,并进行了脑部扫描和认知记忆测试。实验结果显示,我的小脑得到了显著修复,认知记忆能力也大幅提升。这让我意识到,长期使用屏幕会对大脑造成损害,导致大脑某些区域萎缩,因为大脑会将资源分配给经常使用的功能。戒屏后,我重新体验到了生活中许多被我们忽略的美好事物,并对这些事物上瘾了。我更注重与人面对面的交流,并从中获得了满足感。真正的社区和人际关系是建立在面对面交流的基础上的,而不是通过手机。与其制定各种规则来限制手机使用,不如创造一种能让你不再依赖手机的生活方式。我们需要重新学习如何去体验生活中的美好,例如,细细品味一杯咖啡,感受大自然的魅力,与家人朋友共度美好时光。我们需要重新学习如何去体验生活中的美好,例如,细细品味一杯咖啡,感受大自然的魅力,与家人朋友共度美好时光。

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My cerebellum healed years in a period of seven weeks. When I did not look at a screen, my memory went from the 50th percentile of adult men in America to the 99th percentile. There was only 1% of men with better memory than me when I finished this experiment. What's going on? What's going on? This is John with the Dr. John Deloney Show. Hope you are doing so great. Hey, on today's show, we have a special episode called

All things social media, screens, the internets, all of it. If you're like me, you know that this and you're reading, you read Jonathan Hyatt's book, The Anxious Generation. You are paying attention to what's out in the world with the TikTok bans and the social media stuff and the insane rise in mental health challenges, especially with young teen girls. But I think it's actually in boys, too. It just manifests itself differently.

Everybody's concerned about it, social media, and they've gamified human connection. It is hard to get off. It's hard to even... It's just the whole thing's chaotic. And if you pull your kids off of it, then they're crying in their bedrooms that they're missing out on friendships and birthday parties. It's just the whole thing's a mess. So...

I've got a buddy here in Nashville. His name is Carlos Whitaker. And Carlos wrote a book. He is an author and a speaker. He's here in Nashville, Tennessee. And I invited him. We went and had lunch. And I was like, man, you need to come on the show. And I want to talk about your new book. But more importantly, I want to talk about your experience as you unwound this thing. And this is one of the most important conversations I think I've had on this show. And I hope you will not just scroll past it.

Because this isn't us talking about the science. You can hear about the neuroscience of social media and the dopamine, all that stuff. And it's not a couple of guys just complaining and ranting and raving. I think this is the most honest conversation I've had on this particular topic about all of us. And screens and real life and meals and family time and friends and

and what we can actually do about it. So I'm super excited to have this conversation with my friend, Carlos Whitaker. Check it out. Pass this episode along to your friends. I think it's a really important conversation. And it's one that the moment it was over, I changed my life. My life's different now. So I hope yours will be too. Check it out. My conversation with Carlos Whitaker.

I'm super grateful that you're here. You have tapped into something that's haunted me for a decade. And I often, I don't say this lightly, and you and I have talked, I'm super selective about who's here. Yes. And it's always somebody that has a direct impact on how I'm seeing the world or experiencing or somebody, I'm going to do something different in my life because. And so to paint you a picture, in 2008,

Nine or 10, I was working at a university that was a beta campus for this new little product called Gmail. And they were also a beta campus for this new little thing called, hey, we got this new thing. We're going to call it an iPhone. Oh, wow. And so they shipped them to the university. And overnight, they passed them out to every student and said, we're going to follow it and see what happens. And we think this is going to change everything. And so I was working in student affairs, which is like,

student mental health, student crisis care, drug use, where they live, all that kind of stuff. And I saw in real time the unwinding of what Jonathan Haidt's writing about now. I watched it just in real time and it was wild. And then it was, let's fix it with this new thing called an iPad. Let's fix it with,

And as I left, then I began working with students and I'll, I mean, I've been working with students forever, but I've been working with different kinds of students. And my 20 year higher ed career went from, Hey, I think I want to do this job to, Hey, uh, me and my mom are struggling or two. I don't want to be alive anymore. And that arc went so fast. Right. The second thing, and I've talked about this to the people who

check this show out. I had no social media when I took this job. And I remember a couple years ago, I was in my closet. There's a door inside my bathroom. There's a door inside my bedroom. There's a door. And my kids are running around and I was in the dark scrolling. And I remember I just started laughing. And I was like,

Oh, you got me. Y'all got me. Y'all got me. I used to preach to parents. Like, you got? Well played. Well played. Yep. And so I found myself in this loop of I don't know what to do. And I say that like I know what to do. Sure. And yet. Absolutely. Absolutely.

And then your book shows up. And so I'm like, who's this guy? So I called him, but a mutual friend of ours. He's like, no, Carlos is a real deal. And so and then you spoke this morning. And I mean, I literally walked out of the event this morning and talked to my wife and I was like, hey, you hit the final domino piece for me. Yeah. Wow. And so I'd love just to kind of start here. Yeah.

Walk me through. It's Sunday afternoon and that little tag comes across your phone. You know, Sunday afternoon, we all get it, unless you've turned it off. Whether you're an Android user or an iPhone user.

Our iOS user and the screen time notification comes across and it says you have averaged so many hours and minutes a day on your phone, which honestly, it's not a very impactful moment for any of us. We swipe it away or we see the number, which mine happened to be seven hours and 23 minutes a day. And I would see that for weeks on end or eight hours or nine hours or six hours. And I just swipe it away.

Okay, cool. Whatever. But for some reason, this one particular Sunday, I decided to do the math. I don't know why. I was like, let me just do the math. So the math told me that I spend 49 hours a week on my phone. So I was like, okay, hold on. That's two entire cycles of the sun.

But awake time, that's like four days, right? So I'm not counting sleeping. No one's on the phone when they're asleep. So just being awake 49 hours of awake time, that's actually four days. That's work plus overtime. Yes, that's crazy, right? That is a full-time job plus overtime. Yes, that I'm staring at six inches of LCD in my hand. So then I was like, well, that's kind of crazy. So then I kept doing the math. And that math showed 100 days a year. So over three months a year.

I'm looking at my phone and I'm like, oh my gosh. I know why the notification doesn't say this. Can you imagine if the notification said, you spend three months a year looking at, like that would change things, but it doesn't do that on purpose, I'm sure. Then I did one more equation.

And it showed that if I lived to be 80 some odd years old, and again, at the time I was 48, I will lose over 12 years of my life looking at a screen. And that was my tipping point. That was the point for me where I was like, okay, I don't want to lose a decade of what I have left staring at this stupid thing. What's it doing to my soul? What's it doing to my brain? What's it doing to my relationships?

I want to know what this is actually doing, the damage it's doing. Because I know some of the good things that it does. Like, you know, I help people. That's our jobs. That's our jobs. I talk to people and I know that it helps people. But it's got to be, there's no way, we weren't created for this. Yeah. So that began, that tipped my domino. And I just, I watched them fall and I made a decision that,

to not look at a single screen. So not a iPhone, an Apple Watch, an iPad, a TV, a laptop, not a single screen for basically two months, seven and a half weeks. And I wanted to see what would happen. So in order to add a little data to it, I got a hold of a neuroscientist in Los Angeles. And I said, would you scan my brain before and after so I could at least see if there's anything that

This is wise. This was wise. Yes. Just so I could see. And he's like, absolutely. We'll do it before. We'll do it after. And I'll do some cognitive memory testing on you as well. So I was like, sweet. So I go and he scans my brain. Now, in the middle of these seven and a half weeks, it's not like I just chilled or I didn't move to a cabin for two months. And what I...

Spent two of the seven weeks at a Benedictine monastery with 21 Benedictine monks. It's St. Andrew's Abbey in Valley Room, California. Then after those two weeks, I went and lived with an Amish family, a sheep farming family in Mount Hope, Ohio. And listen, I went all in with the monks and the Amish. Like I became a monk. I became Amish. I'm all in. I'm going to do the thing. Yeah, I'm going to do the thing. I'm going to go on. Then I lived with them for two weeks. Then my wife picked me up and I lived with my family at home for three weeks until

Because I was like, well, they need to see the benefits of whatever's happening. Let me try this with them. They can still be on their screens, but I'll not be on one. So a total of seven and a half weeks, and I went back and got my brain re-scanned and ended up writing a book and making a documentary. And I've hit a pain point that...

Christians, Buddhists, atheists, Republicans, Democrats, like not a single human being doesn't know this pain point. And so what I'm trying to do, and we talked about this at lunch yesterday, what I'm trying to do is to approach this conversation in a different way than maybe a lot of other people have approached it. Because, John, the truth is, the reason I made this choice to do this is that I went on Amazon and I started just looking up books on screen time and on how they're damaging. And there were all these books online.

out there telling me the research shows and this and that, but I couldn't find the book from anyone that had done it. Yes. Yes. Like I was like, okay, all these people are these, you know, PhDs, all these people are telling me what, what it's doing to me, but no one's done it. So I couldn't find the book. So I was like, well, then I'm going to be the guy. I I'm the perfect lab rat seven and a half hours a day on my phone,

TikTok, Instagram, all the things. I'm making videos every day, talking to the little camera that's staring at me, getting my identity based on what people think about what I post and likes and shares. And I'm the perfect guinea pig. So let me remove my identity. Let me remove everything and live it. And then that's why I'm sitting in front of you right now. Well, and you...

Offer the most compelling what's next. And I like you, man. I've watched this in real time. I've lived it. I've had my own haunting experience with...

Just golf clapping. Sure. The tech guys plus the neuroscientists plus the guys that created digital heroin. They beat me. They have beat me. They won. And they beat my wife, who is a Luddite. She's from the wrong century. You said a Luddite. I mean, she is. Yeah, it's so good. And I remember my two-year-old son. Dude, we were crazy. No screens, no TV, nothing. I remember he was two years old.

And they slid a, it was like at a burger joint in nowhere, Texas. And they slid a laminated menu and his two little non like functioning fingers. He was trying, trying to like, and I remember going, but I told my wife, I said, it's in the water. It's in the water. iPads were barely out, but he was trying to make it bigger. And I was like, Oh, it's, this is an air. And I,

I always, I go to two things that are compelling to me. Number one, when they discovered penicillin, Partridge in a Pear Tree, do this, death from infection fell off a map. They solved that problem, right? And the other one is, and I always forget, one of the famous psychology godfathers said, I thought if I took away my client's depression, anxiety, I would heal them. And what I did was I made them empty.

Wow. The anxiety and depression were serving a role. Yeah. And so it was not just about removal. It's about what do we put there? Replacement. And I have not seen that. Wow. It's all been here's five steps. And so you give such a compelling vision. I want to start here. Tell me what happened with your brain. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

And this, to me, takes it out of the woo-woo. Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, totally. Which is why I'm glad I did it. Now, to be fair to everybody that's listening, this wasn't a scientific experiment, right? No, no, no. I am the one at a point. It's a picture. It's a snapshot. It equals one. Yeah, yeah. So it was just me, the only lab rat. But let me tell you what happened to the lab rat. My cerebellum...

Healed he said years in a period of seven weeks now. He's like I see I see Traumatic brain injuries I see healing so I can see a lot of healing. He's like it's it's significant But the kicker was my cognitive memory score This is mind-blowing when I did not look at a screen for seven and a half weeks and

Now, the cognitive memory testing, I felt like I was in Stranger Things. Like I walked into this office with fluorescent lights. It looked like a hospital room with a 1987 IBM computer, and it would just flash faces on the screen. And so it flashed different black and white portraits at me. And I'd watch it for like two minutes, then it would stop for a minute. This is one of the tests. And then it would flash more faces. And every time I remembered a face, I'd

I'd have to hit the space bar, right? So those are the kind of tests that I was doing, remembering numbers, numerals, all those things. My memory went from the 50th percentile of adult men in America to the 99th percentile. There was only 1% of men with better memory than me when I finished this experiment. That is profound in a country where cognitive decline is...

Taking everything from us. And my father has dementia. I moved my mom and dad a year ago into the house across the street because my father, who's one of the brightest minds, incredible speakers, communicators, now doesn't even recognize me and who I am. And so let me tell you, when I went to the neuroscientist clinic, I was not only...

There was this fear. There was this fear when I first got the brain scan that he's going to be like, oh, bro, I know you want to do this experiment, but you got about five years, right? Because they can see it. You can see it coming. And the breath that filled my lungs when Dr. Amen walked in and goes, I know your father has dementia and I know you're worried, but I just need to tell you something. I've seen dementia brain. You don't have it. Like, bro...

It was like I could take the biggest breath. So, you know, the brain part was very important to me because I wanted people to know that things were shifting that I wouldn't have been able to tell just by telling the story. Well, it's not woo-woo and it's not like a... I felt different. I did a thing. You know? Yeah. So I had that. But here's the kicker. When I was done, I didn't have to go back to his clinic, bro. I...

I was so freaking sharp by eight weeks. Like I felt like a different human. I'm glad I went back to get the testing done because it felt, it confirmed what I thought had happened. But yeah, my brain changed. My brain healed. So it's so bizarre to me how I miss this.

But one of the most magical parts, I think, the most amazing parts of the human body is how it diverts resources to things that are in use. And it takes resources from things that aren't being used. And every minute of every day, I'm grabbing this phone. Where do I need to go? What's the answer to this thing? What does it look like? And I love you told a story. It was so great. It's so hot outside. Yeah.

That's not enough. I need to know the quantitative number that identifies how hot... Instead of just letting it be hot. Just letting it be hot. Or it'd be real hot. Yeah. Or not super hot. Totally. And so it...

God, I miss this. Of course that part of your brain atrophies memory, insight, intuition. Of course your brain doesn't use it because we've outsourced it. We've outsourced all of it. All of it. Literally all of it. But I think the part I didn't recognize is that's humanity. That's us. Oh, yeah. That's who we were created to be. That's it. And now I've outsourced joy. I've outsourced joy.

Justice. I remember I used to tell my students, yo, when Martin was walking across the bridge, they said, they're going to kill you. And he said, we walk. You guys thumbs upping something is not the same thing, right? Or-

How many times have I researched the article? I mean, the workout. Yeah. Instead of just going to exercise. Yes. Or I go for a walk and it doesn't matter what I feel like. It's what does this watch tell me? Yes. Right. All of it. Do we've outsourced our humanity? Everything. Everything. We've outsourced sex to pornography. We've outsourced discomfort to. Yes. Yes. And it was this. And I knew this. Yeah. But you saying, no, no, no, man, it took eight weeks in the brains. Like,

Oh, I get to, we get to use humanity again. Cool. And I spent eight weeks and I no longer could outsource any of this anymore. No, you have to. So I literally had to, like, it was, I legitimately like detoxed, right? Like I, my body and my brain, like wasn't used to actually living the way it was created to live. You talk about brain health and memory and there's a study done. I feel like this study was like 2016. So this was,

almost a decade ago that showed London cab drivers. Yeah, their brains are astounding. The ones that use GPS versus the ones that don't. The ones that use GPS versus the ones that use landmarks. The ones that use GPS develop a gray, dense matter on their brain that the ones that were using landmarks didn't. So it's literally like we are atrophying. I mean, you're right. Like when you don't use it, it slowly... Your brain's like, sweet, I'm going to go work on something else. Yeah. And it just lets it ride. Yeah.

All right, so I've done some soul searching recently, and I've come to the realization that I actually love the internet. Just kidding. It's the worst. I mean, it is amazing, but it's also the worst. And it doesn't matter if I don't like it because everything in my life and your life takes place on the internet. Our work, our personal messages, our communications, we buy most of our things on the internet now. It's where we are.

live. And because so much of our lives take place on the internet now, it's become normal to just give away our email addresses to random companies who then turn around and sell them to other companies. It's become normal to create all sorts of different accounts for banking and shopping and social media. It's become normal to even order our food and schedule our garbage pickup with our phones. Listen,

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February. That's almost 50% off their regular monthly rate, plus 14 days of free training. Go to trainwell.net. That's T-R-A-I-N-W-E-L-L, trainwell.net slash Deloney. I get the crack allure, right? I get the heroin of the phone. I get that. But I always want to look at what's underneath that. And

Tell me if I'm wrong, because you've been working with people a long time, and I don't mind being wrong here. I feel like the meta message of the last 20 years has been, maybe the last quarter century has been, everything out there is on a road to ruin, and everything out there is bad. Everything out there is you, because of what happened to you, because of your lot in life, because of the cards you were dealt, are always going to be less than. So you sit over here in the corner, I pat you on the head. That's it.

That's just what happened to you. We got it from here. And the only thing I can think of is the meta message has been, and maybe it's from helicopter parents that we're learning now, where you're actually teaching the nervous system of your kid is, we don't think you can. Totally. But the cultural message has been, y'all can't. Yeah.

Head to the sidelines and we got this. And when that happens, the only way to survive that is to numb it. Absolutely. And that's the only way I can think that made this stupid box. Yeah. Right? Yeah. I went to an insane, I bought tickets six months ago, totally forgot. I finished an event and I got home and I was exhausted and I got this little thing like, hey, Tim. And I was like, oh man, it was a wild old school hardcore punk band.

And my 14-year-old was sitting there in a t-shirt. I was like, you need something crazy. He's like, what, dad? He has no idea that this really exists. I was like, put on some clothes, dress in all black, we're going. Yeah, that's amazing. And I said, you're going to hear some language I don't approve of. Right, right, right. But I want you to know the high school, I want you to meet a high school dad. Yeah. And he walked in, and two or three minutes in, he goes, dad, these are your people. And I was like, you're correct, son. That's awesome. But there was a sliver of...

of a night when there was an alternative reality yeah like let's go do a thing yes and we laughed yes my son we got out of the car and the show had already started and you could hear the band from outside this little club and he was like where are we yeah and we had wonder and laughter yes crazy and yeah dad this is nuts and i look over halfway through and he's like trying to play along he listens he listens to country music yeah i know totally

And dude, the allure is to go home and look at this thing. Yes. Yes. And so tell me, am I wrong? No, you're not wrong. You're not wrong. And not only are you not wrong, but this black box, whatever, whatever we're calling it, right? This thing, um,

You talked about wonder. You talked about the allure. You were able to savor this moment with yourself. Like all of these things. I want us to... But everybody at the show, we're like this. Oh, totally. Through the screen. Absolutely. These are legends. Absolutely, right? And you've seen the videos or the photos of... There's this one famous photo that...

That shows the juxtaposition between Michael Jordan hitting a game-winning shot in like 1992 versus somebody hitting a game-winning shot in like 2022. Every single person in the Michael Jordan is just standing there with their mouths hanging open and their hands out like this. And then in the 2022, whatever, every single person has their phone up. And I'm just telling you that we have lost...

The ability... And listen, I don't want this to be all doom and gloom, but I do want people to understand. We have to sit and agree with that. You have to understand, like, you are legitimately losing decades of your life. Like, if somebody is listening to this that's 30, okay, I'm 50. So, like, yeah, I may be losing 12 years. You're losing almost 30 years. 30 years. 30 years of your life. And not only... I don't want you to even think about...

losing 30 years of your life, I want you to think about, um, like, what are you losing? Not, not just a life, but like, like these moments with your son, right? Like,

Walking out, when I would walk outside and it was just hot and I didn't, I would laugh because I was like, I don't know if it's 97 degrees, 100% humidity, or if it's 98 degrees with zero, I don't care. It's just hot. And I know it's too hot to do what I wanted to do. So I'm just going to, you know, like all of these uniquely human experiences that we were created to do, I got to do again. So the good news is like, I fell back in love with all of these things that we no longer do.

that we were created to do as humans, right? Wondering, noticing, savoring, beholding, getting lost and finding our way. Just all of the community, the table, all these things that are gone now, I got to live it again. And so the good news, here's the good news, is I'm now addicted to,

to those things. Yes. And I'm no longer addicted to my screen. And it's crazy. It didn't take me setting up all these rules. It didn't take me like, okay, I'm going to make my phone lock at 10 PM and no, it last night, for example, yesterday, I'll just use a current day example. I am, um, putting up my Christmas decorations in my front yard and I'm

The last few years, I've time-lapse filmed myself because I'm going to make a YouTube video and I'm like, no, no, no, no, no. And I was like, no, I'm not going to do that. I'm just going to savor doing this without having to think about a video and all these things that I'm doing. I don't know, maybe 25 neighbors. No, so this was at the point of this recording, election day. So election day here in America, and I'm putting up a 25-foot Rudolph in my front yard. The amount of people that just stopped and said, thank you.

I really needed this today of all days. I needed to see a Rudolph. I needed to see Santa. Like, thank you. And like, these are things, savoring these moments, having these face-to-face human-to-human interactions that normally we wouldn't have. But now, like, I'm addicted to those things. Those are the things I'm addicted to. Like, I want more of that. So I pick up my phone less. And to get nerdy for two seconds. Yeah.

I often tell people like, if you don't have a tribe, if you don't have people, if you don't have close friends, your body would be failing you if it let you sleep all night. 'Cause you're all you got, right? That's wired, that's how we're built, right?

And the peace you gave to your nervous system by making eye contact and waving and saying hello to 25 different people gave peace to your body in a really anxious moment. Yes. Right? Yeah. And it went boom. Yeah. And we've taken that from ourselves. We've taken it. It's gone. It's gone. These screens...

I mean, I'll just say it's not real community. It's not. It's not. And there's people that are listening to this that, and I get this pushback a little bit sometimes where people are like, well, I don't live in a, I live in a tiny town. I don't have, you know, a lot of friends. I don't have. And so my phone helps me make friends. It helps me. And I'm like, I'm not saying that, that you can't make a friend on your phone, that you can't, but it's just not, it's, it's not what it was supposed to be. Right.

And I tasted what it's supposed to be again. Ooh, I don't ever want to taste the other thing again. Like, like it, it's, it's not real. Well, so the magic that you propose here is, gosh, I just put this together just now. So, um, I wrote a book about anxiety. Yeah. And the whole thing was, I think anxiety is usually right. Right. So instead of trying to fix this,

Create this life and your body will turn the alarms off. Sure. Similarly, instead of creating a bunch of rules. Yeah. Only four minutes a day. Use this super planner with 40 ribbons in it. Yes. What if you create a life? Yes. It was rich again. Yes. And it's awkward and will be boring at first. Yes. And you'll have to face some demons like you mentioned this more like silence. Yes. You'll have to make peace with...

Like whatever demons you got. Yep. Yep. But what if you created a life that made this thing obsolete? Yes. No, it really is. And it's easy to make to honestly, I mean, I say easy. It's not complicated to make that life again. You don't have to move to monastery. I did it for you. You don't have to go to Amish farm. I did it for you. Right.

But I have laid out probably 17 to 20 things in my book that I think give people handlebars on what they can do to live this life, right? To get back to being truly human again without, you know, our phones. I was joking this morning to the staff how, you know, we trust Yelp now more than we, you know, it's taken our ability away to like,

go to a restaurant that we actually just want to go try. It's like, well, I checked Yelp and there's a one-star review. I'm never going there again. I'm not going there again. Some dude named Bob with taste buds that aren't like yours made that decision for you. Like, you didn't. And so, like, for me, I just think I have created...

Through writing this book, I've given people handlebars on how to wonder again, like let wonder happen. I think when I was – I think I'm a little older than you, but when I was in high school, I'd go to the CD store to go listen to music. And so I'd go to the CD store. I lived there. I'd go and I'd walk up and down the aisles. And back in the day, you'd have to take the demo CD, put it in CD player, put the headphones on. And I'll never forget walking down the aisle once.

And seeing the most beautiful woman cut out that I've ever seen, like by this new CD. And I was like, who is that with her golden locks? You know, I was like 17, 18. And I walked up closer and it said Mariah Carey. And I was like, who's this Mariah Carey goddess? And like, I put the CD on and I listened to it. I was like,

who is this? Yeah, she's an angel. Like, listen to her voice. And I didn't know who it was until then I took the CD to the person at the front and I was like, hey, like, do you know who this is? No, we just got it in. So they couldn't tell me. So then I bought the CD, I went home and I just listened to it for weeks. And I'm just listening and I'm like, I don't know who this is. And then on MTV, like three weeks later, there was like a three minute interview with her and I got three more minutes. But,

That's so uniquely human. I mean, just figuring things out. All of that is gone now. And I got to do it again with the monks and with the Amish. I got to literally live the purest existence. When I got back, my daughter said, because they got to live with me for three weeks without a phone. At the end, I had a Sony camera with me. I was kind of self-documenting the whole thing. I asked my daughter, I said, so how's it been?

And I'll never forget, she was 17 at the time. She said, this is the purest version of you I've ever experienced. God Almighty. That's it. And when parents ask, hey, my kids are so anxious. My kids won't sleep. My kids won't. My answer is always, they absorb the tension in your home. Absolutely. That's the air they breathe. Yeah. And...

To think about that comment, that gives me goosebumps. Yeah, dude. To think that my son would say, no, I got to meet my dad. Yes. Not the quantified version of you. Right, no. And the always optimized, how many calories are we cutting? Yep, yep. I just got to meet my dad. Yeah, dude, that's it. And to think on a punk rock floor. Yes, that's it. My son was like, oh, I got to meet my dad. Yes, yes. And thinking my eight-year-old daughter still doesn't really know her dad. Right, right. Right? Uh-huh. And we try to solve it in all these other bananas ways. Uh-huh. You, um...

You talked about something that got me choked up. And I immediately pulled my phone out and I texted my wife. Here's some changes that are happening right now. Talk about dinner time. Yes. Sorry.

So we know the stats, right? And this is unpopular stats. I don't care. Families that eat together. Yep. The kids have lower mental health challenges. The family has lower conflict. And the kids do better academically over time. Absolutely. That's what the data says, right? It's there. Is it data or data? They're both. Okay. Right. Depends on how pretentious you want to be. I want to sound like John. I don't have a lot of friends. So I'm at the monastery.

Every meal's... Breakfast and dinner are in silence. Lunch, you can talk. Okay, so that's weird. If you've ever eaten with somebody and all you can do is hear yourself chew and swallow, it's like the strangest thing ever. I immediately like... It's the strangest thing ever. I'll go and set myself on fire. So like meals already were weird with the monks, right? Chewing and slurping. Then I got to the Amish. And bro, like I just remember...

And that first morning, I show up at Willis' farmhouse. And after I – I was sleeping in a tiny house on their farm. And so I walked over to the main house. And he's like, all right, Kathy's got breakfast for us. So I was like, oh, sweet. And it was gigantic spread. Like, I mean, you know, farm breakfast. But we sat there for like an hour eating and talking. And I'm like, bro, don't we have to farm? And there's something to, you know. And then lunch was like an hour and a half.

And then dinner was like two hours. And there was like, I don't know, 20 people at dinner, you know, other neighbors that had come over. And this happened day after day after day. No meal was longer or was shorter than an hour. And most dinners were longer than two.

And I just was like, Willis, why? Did you get antsy? Oh, bro. I was like, let's go. Because I finished my bacon and eggs in seven minutes. I get antsy. You telling me that. Listen, listen. I finished my bacon and eggs in seven minutes. We sat there another 52, 53 minutes. And I was like, Willis, I'm done with my meal. He's like, no, you've just eaten. You haven't had a meal. And I was like, wait. Hold on. Did I need to sit on that? Yeah. You've just eaten. You've just eaten. You haven't had a meal.

We don't have meals. We don't have meals. We don't have meals. And they have meals. And I was like, why is this taking so long? He's like, Carlos, we don't have Facebook. We don't have Instagram. We don't have Twitter. The only way we can visit and know what's happening in our community is over a meal. So every meal is an hour to two hours long. When I was doing research for the book after I got home, this was the kicker. The average American meal in 1923...

was 90 minutes long. That average length for a meal in America was 90 minutes long, 1923. 2023, it's 12 minutes. 12 minutes. That's eating. That's not mealing.

And we wonder, again, why we can't have conversations with each other. Here's the thing. The Amish are Amish for a reason. I am not Amish for a reason. So therefore, just knowing that, we have a very large spectrum of beliefs, myself versus the Amish. I don't believe everything the Amish believe, or else I'd be Amish. Right.

So as we're having these two-hour meals, we're talking about the most hot topic, geopolitical. I mean, we were talking about all the stuff with the Amish. We disagreed on so much, Willis and I. But bro...

You cannot hate somebody for 90 minutes over a steak. It's too tiring. And so like we talk about something, we disagree. And then we end up somewhere where we agree. And we disagree. And it's next thing you know, I've got this cadence of disagreeing over something, but agreeing over what we love in the food and the relationship. And we've just lost that in America. We've lost the ability to do that. And so again, that's another uniquely human experience.

that is gone because we're either scrolling on our phone during a meal or they're just too fast. And I think what I'm rejecting in real time right now, not to think through this over a couple of months, but what we have done is not progress. No. We've de-evolved. Yeah. And I can see you're an efficient guy. Do you like efficiency? Yeah.

I'm at constant war, which means I don't have peace. Oh, okay. Because I'm late everywhere. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Because I love savoring. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And yet I've plugged myself into these systems that don't savor. Yeah, yeah. And that don't... So a thing that happened when I moved here, I took this job. Yep. And actually it was a point of contention for a while here until we finally broke it down. Like we had a meeting with some folks. Yeah. And I said, the single rudest thing

in my fiber of being is when somebody's in a conversation is to cut that off. You let the conversation end. And they were saying, and they were right, the single rudest thing you can do is tell somebody I will be there at three and they show up at 2:55 and you roll in at 3:40. That's disrespectful, it's dishonest. And I was convicting.

And two things can be right. They're both right. Yeah. They're both right. And so it was a matter of, oh, I had tried to plug myself into a system without being honest about what the cost was going to be. Right, right. And I was trying to hang on to these things while still trying to extract the benefits of this thing, right? And so I've been on the, I'd say I've been on 36, 45 months, three or four years of the

Optimization train. Sure. Every minute of everything. Is it planned? Is it this? How fast can you get there? If you're not growing, you're dying. Like if you're not wasting, like that whole thing. And it was a couple of years ago and I was meeting with a buddy who's a medical researcher and we're talking about growth. Yeah. And he's like, that is cancer. Totally. Cancer is growth that just keeps growing. Yeah. If the growth isn't for a thing. Yeah, yeah.

That's true. Then it's cancer. Oh, that's good. And I was like, oh, gosh. Okay, I need to exhale on that. But yeah, so efficiency has become, I don't know. It's not real. Yeah, it's not. And it's, you know, we've so... It's a hack. Yeah, we've so like fallen in love with efficiency. And, you know, I just, when I was with the monks and the Amish, I just was like, you know...

Yes, they're efficient with what they have, but that's not the goal. The goal's not. The goal's not to be efficient. Right. You know, I feel like their goal is just to live this peaceful life and to like, you know, Willis, I'll never forget, we're on the back of the tractor and we're being pulled by these four gigantic like Clydesdale horses, right? Plowing the field and we're just sitting there and I'll never forget, I turn to him and he's like, you know, Carlos?

Every day I'm out here on this horse, plowing this field, birds are flying around me. I think, I'm just so blessed. This is, there's a lot more efficient ways he could be plowing that field. There's a lot more efficient ways that the Amish could be doing a lot of things.

But they've made a decision to maybe not be so efficient so they can be a little bit more human. And which is why I asked you that question. I ask myself that question all the time. It's like, am I trying to like hack my life away into like this thing? Or am I just going to live it? You can live your life or your life will live you. And I just feel like so many of us, our lives are living us instead of us living our lives. And I don't know, man. I just think that, you know, watching the Amish live the way that they lived is

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If this is resonating, you know, you know, you know. Yeah. And okay. Your job's on a laptop. Fine. Yep. Your job is in front of two big screens because you're a data person or whatever. Or your job's like ours. It's on a phone. Yeah. No, absolutely. Okay. I did a, I did a talk based on my book to a bunch of

video game developers. Okay. That's their planet. Their planet is not only video games on a console, but VR. These people are immersed. Here's the no phone guy coming in to talk to video. It's like, listen, it's more about falling back in love. It's not about the phones. I'm telling you, it's not about the phones. When you start falling back, so you're an accountant on your screen or whatever, a simple thing.

If you're going to watch a movie with your family, the only screen you're allowed to watch is the movie screen. Gosh, yes. Here we go. So now what have you done? You've cut, you've severed another screen out of your, and so now, because most people watch TV and movies now with a screen in their hands. Dude, I have, because I'm so sophisticated, I have social media on another phone because I'm more pure. Oh, yeah. I have both of them on my phone.

Last night, I watched the election results. I'm texting on multiple text threads. And then you're... And then I'm scrolling this. So there we go. So that's simple. Watch a movie? Just watch the movie. Be with your family. Talk about the movie. Laugh. Just watch it. You're not there. Second thing, this is probably the most... It has been the most powerful thing for me. You talk about being present. Now, again, I know not everybody can do this. I was talking to a bunch of nurses like in hospice care a few weeks ago. And...

One of the single greatest things that I've done is I've placed my phone on permanent do not disturb. My phone...

The only phone calls I allow, the only buzzing that ever happens on my phone, my phone will never buzz unless my wife, kids, or my mom calls me. Calls me, not text me. They know if they text me, I'm not going to know until I look at my phone. So that doesn't mean that I'm not getting notifications. They're still on my screen when I decide to look at my phone. But for a year and a half, my phone has been on permanent, do not disturb, which I'm sure Whitney, my assistant, or my manager, or my wife, I'm sure it drives some people crazy because...

Oh, my phone isn't in charge of me anymore. It never buzzes. I was with the monks day 10, sitting in Father Francis's office, pouring my heart out. He's like, yes, young man. All these books around. He's in his big, big robe. And his phone, I'll never forget, goes, bzz, bzz. While I'm like, and he's like, excuse me, young man. And he picks up his phone and he's like, oh, okay, I'm sorry. Hold on. He puts it back down. And I was like,

Did this monk, did this monk just do like, and he's like, Oh, I guess I need to read your book, you know? But I spent two months and never had one ding or buzz on my body to take me away from being present with the person in front of me. When I got home, I was like, I have to continue this. This has to be so like, I will never be with somebody and never,

my brain go away from the conversations we're in even though they don't they didn't hear the buzz in my pocket my my brain goes to my phone for one second and then back to the conversation i've left into an alternate universe and so that's one thing i've done whatever it looks like for you to turn do not disturb on yeah that's been a game changer for me um so now i'm in charge of when i'm picking my phone up again you know i i talked about this morning uh to the staff um buying an alarm clock yeah you

You know, like the Harvard study showed that the last 30 minutes we're awake before we fall asleep and the first 30 minutes we wake up, we're consuming more content than like my great grandparents' generation consumed in a month. So, and again, we're wondering why we're so anxious. So just buying an alarm clock, plugging your phone in in another room, read a book before you go to bed. And so you're going to save yourself an hour, right? So can, this is the unpopular conversation. Yeah. I'm trying to think of the right way to say it.

I'm just going to be disrespectful. If you live in a community, it's a rural community, and you don't have tons of people around. Yeah, absolutely. The neuroscience still applies. If you have a really busy job, the truth is the truth is the truth. If the thought of, so here's the thing that happened here, right? I'll use myself as the...

I never got home before seven o'clock, maybe 6.30. If I was like, my wife would be like, hey, when I was working higher ed. I was always another article to read, another budget to do, another student crisis to write. And I was here and my boss, Dave, was doing a late night media hit.

He pops in. Everybody's gone. I'm here at 630. Because first in, last out, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he says, what are you doing here? And I was like, I'm finishing up these articles. I was reading mental health articles because he hired me to be a mental health guy. And he said, go home. All right, dude. Like, yeah, I'm finishing up. I'll be gone. He comes into the little complex and he gets real close. And he said,

I said, go home. And he said it in a kind of a paternal way. I was like, oh, I'm a grown man. And I looked at him and he said this, if you are no good there, you'll be no good here. And then he said, you will not use the name Ramsey as an excuse to not be a present husband and father. Go home. Wow. So I went home. So the next day I was like, I'm not doing my work. I'm just going to go home when everybody goes home. Carlos, I got home at like 530, 515.

And I realized I did not know how to be a dad and a husband from 5 o'clock to 7 o'clock. There was a rhythm of my family that I was completely unaware of. Yes. And I injected my chaos into that. I was like, hey, son, what are you working on? He's like, dad, I'm doing homework. Just relax. My daughter, I'm like, hey. And she's like, ah. And my wife was like, hey, everybody's just quiet when you get home. They've had crazy days. So if you're thinking about- Yes.

What am I going to do? Just put my phone away? Right. And I'm going to have to face that marriage. I'm going to have to face three kids that I know they love me, but we don't like each other. Or I don't even know how to interact with them. Yes. This is so good. You have to go there. I guess that's what I'm asking you to do is you got to head into that. Yeah. Because that's where the healing is because that's where your life's on the other side of that. Absolutely, man. Is that fair? That's very fair. If you don't like what you see in the mirror, you got to go have a conversation with your doctor. Yes. Or with like whatever.

Like we're avoiding reality. I think there's a reckoning with reality. Well, and that reckoning is what people are scared of. It's terrifying. And so, but I want to let everybody know that on the other side of that reckoning is so much freedom and peace. It's, it's, it's so much. And I was the same way when I got home and I know screams with my family, like,

Were we just going to talk to each other? And my kids were like, dad, will you stop talking to me? You know, like, I just was like, hey, how's that? You know, and they weren't used to me being that present. And I'm telling you, presence and solitude, it feels like a reckoning because it is going to be a reckoning for all of, you know, and the CPA that's on their laptop eight hours a day, you know, all, I know nurses that are on call 24 seven, you have to have your phone on, you can't put it on do not disturb. Right.

There's caveats, right? But I promise you, every single person listening to this knows the one thing they can do to do the next right thing to get a little bit of that freedom back in their life when it comes to these screens. You all have an opportunity to do it. What's it going to be? What's the one choice you're going to make today? And again, I tell people, do one hour on a Saturday with no screen. Just start there. That alone gives some people heart palpitations. And when you start doing this,

Admit to yourself, I got a problem. Yeah. Yeah, it's okay. It's like when I'm like, I'm not going to eat candy for two weeks and 30 minutes in, I'm like, I know, totally. I got a problem. You know what I mean? I got a problem.

It just is. Own it. Yeah, yeah, own it. And just trust me when I tell you... Trust me, trust me, because I may be the only person that you know... If you're listening to this, I'll say that you know me now. I'm the only person you know that's actually done this for two months. I'm telling you on the other side of that reckoning, I love that you call it a reckoning, on the other side is you're going to fall back in love with wondering and savoring and being truly human, that you're just...

You're going to be able to—this is how I like to explain it. I moved to Nashville. This is what it's going to feel like. I put up a photo this morning of stars that it doesn't really work on. God, dude, that was like— Yeah. And so that doesn't really work on a podcast. But let me explain it this way. This is what it felt like when I finally got unaddicted to my phone. I moved to Nashville 2010, and my wife told me about three weeks in,

that I'm wheezing every night. She's like, hey, you sound like Darth Vader when you're sleeping. And I was like, what do you mean? She's just like, I can hear you breathing heavy. Maybe you have asthma. And I was like, babe, I don't have asthma. I've never had asthma in my whole life. I'm 40 years old. She's like, you should go to an allergist. So I went to a doctor and he did an allergy test on me.

I said, my wife says I'm wheezing. I don't hear myself wheezing. I feel fine. I'm working out every day. I'm running. He said, well, let me do an allergy test. So he tested all the allergies. He's like, dude, you're allergic to Nashville. Like everything, every tree, every piece of grass. He's like, let me do a breathing test on you. So he had me blow into this tube and he goes, man, you're only using 60% of your lung capacity. I said, what? I feel fine. He goes, you feel fine because you're used to it.

You're used to not breathing. But let me give you something. Then he pulled out this inhaler. I've never used an inhaler in my life. He's like, shake it up. I want you to take a hit. And the second breath you take, your lungs are going to go from 60% to 100%. I said, okay, whatever. I did it. The next breath I took, bro, after months of living in Nashville...

I took a breath at 100% after only taking a breath at 60, and I almost started to weep because I didn't know I was suffocating. That's what I feel right now. And this is what I'm telling people is when you do this, you may be thinking, I don't need to do this. I'm fine. I'm telling you, when you take that breath after your inhaler, you're going to realize this is what it's like to breathe, and I haven't been breathing. So there's another side to it.

And that's this. And I always just want to be honest. When I tell people, like, hey, you're heading on a journey, it's always day three. You're like, this trip sucks. Or your new workout program, it's like, I'm so sore, I can't move. I was having lunch with a couple of fancy, fancy, fancy pants. Who's got bank accounts. Not with me. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was not with Cheeseburger Carlos. And...

One of the guys at the table didn't understand what I was doing. And I'm new to this whole thing, and I don't really understand what I'm doing either. And they're like, so what? You know, like squinty, like looking at you like you're stupid. Like they're going to squint their way to figuring you out. Like, what are you doing? I'm like, well, I travel around to speak. And he goes, I'd never hire you to come talk to my company. Yeah. I was like, why? I've been talking to companies. So you don't know anything about marketing and sales. And I was like, I wouldn't talk to you about marketing and sales. Right, right, right.

And he said, what do you, with squint, like, what are you talking about? Yeah, yeah. And did I just throw in spaghetti at a wall? Yeah, yeah. And I said, I bet your kids don't like being in the room with you. Oh, jeez.

And it went, oh, wow. And he said, or you walk in and your kids either pick up their phones or they just get up and head to the room. And you say, that's just them being teenagers. And you know it's not. And it was one of, he leaned back and he smiled real big in that way that only super rich people know when they got had. And he smiled and he goes, you got my attention, right? Here's the reality. Yeah.

There's peace on the other side of a reckoning, but reckonings are hell. Reckonings are reckoning. And there will be a whole bunch of people that put their phones down and they realize their marriage has been dead for 10 years. Yeah, yeah. They realize their kids are not okay. Yeah. They realize their health is precarious, right? Or they hate their job and they don't have a path. Yeah. All right. And so I think there's a, I don't want to use religious language, but there's a holiness to, there's a refinement to,

The only path towards a real life is through the middle of that fire. Yeah. Not avoiding it or walking around it. Dude. And so if you can put your phone down and look at your spouse and say, look, we got a choice. Yeah. We can walk away. This is me and my wife. Uh-huh. We can be done. Yep. Or we've chosen our way into this. Yep. We can choose an amazing something else and it's going to suck, but we can choose that too. Absolutely, man. That...

I guess I feel a sense of re-empowerment. There's something about putting your phone down, meaning, you get to choose what happens next. Yes. Well, and that...

You know, again, not to revolve around religious language, but, bro, I had to come to a reckoning when I didn't have my phone, and I'm with these monks, and all of a sudden, like, I feel like God's silent, and I feel like... I'm like, what is this fairy tale I believe in? Next thing you know, like, everything fell apart. Yeah. And I'm like, I couldn't Google it to put it back together. That's right, because it wasn't about answers. It wasn't about the chapter in the verse. No, it wasn't. Oh, gosh. I'm sitting here with a sweater full of yarn. I'm telling you, bro, it was...

I had numerous reckonings. You can read about it in the book, but definitely a lot of reckoning and a lot of freedom on the other side. I can choose to continue to live at 60% lung capacity, and that life is hard. I can choose to say, okay, I'm going to figure this thing out. I'm going to be a band of people, and we're going to figure it out, and that's going to be real hard. But I don't think there's an easy option anymore. There's not an easy option. But just like that screen time notification came across my screen,

There's an aha moment waiting for every single person. The only thing I'm asking people to do is do the math. So just do your math. And do your math. See how many years you're losing of your life. Legitimately, I should have called my book, Get Half Your Life Back. Because if you even just cut it in half, I can legitimately say on this microphone, beyond a shadow of a doubt, you will get half of your life that you were losing back. And if that's not...

motivating enough like to think like gosh I could actually live 10 more years maybe not in length but in life in depth in depth yeah you know like it is yeah so you know if you're a developer if you're a

Like chew on it. Let it, let this be hard. Like it is hard. Like, like this isn't. And if you don't think, if you don't think you're worth another half. Yeah. For God's sake, go talk to somebody. Yes, absolutely. Cause you're not a burden and you're worth, you're worth having that kind of depth. And if that terrifies you. Yeah. That's the healing. Absolutely. You're worth the work, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What are some things besides an alarm clock and a newspaper? Yeah. Rattle off some things that are going to sound like we are rolling back the clock a little bit, but I think it's the new progress. I'm going to challenge you. Okay.

I rarely, if ever, now drink my coffee out of a to-go cup. If I go to a Starbucks, I need to let everyone know they have ceramic mugs. I was in Italy, and I went to a gas station on a road trip, middle of nowhere, and I went in to get a to-go coffee, and they looked at me like I was crazy. I was like, can I get the espresso to go? And they're like, to go? And I looked down the middle of nowhere country gas station, and there's three people.

One old man, one kind of maybe 30-year-old woman and someone else leaning against the counter with their little ceramic mugs, sipping their espresso. And I thought to myself, if I don't have three and a half minutes to drink my coffee before it gets lukewarm out of a ceramic mug, then I'm moving too fast. So literally every single coffee shop I go to, I ask for a ceramic mug and I never get it to go. So there's one thing that I do. Yeah.

Savoring is something that I think we need to redevelop our skill set. We can get used to, in this world, you get used to good things, right? Like something was great and then you have it all the time. It's like, it doesn't feel so great anymore. One of the things I now do is when I look at my life and I see something that I've gotten used to how good it is, I walk away from it for a second and I come back to it. Why? Well, if you walk into a bakery and it smells amazing,

oh it smells so good and you get that croissant and you start drinking your coffee and you eat the croissant well five minutes later you can't smell the croissant anymore but someone else walks in and they go oh my gosh it smells amazing and you're like i don't smell it anymore what do you have to do you have to walk out of the bakery you have to come back in to experience it again so i try to do that all the time i try to like um walk away and then come back in so i can recognize that i've gotten used to the goodness can we double click on that real quick yeah sure

Maybe the purpose of meals is not to go to Yelp and have a perfect meal every time. No. Maybe a big part of meals is going, that was terrible. Yeah, totally. That wasn't great. Yeah. I'm not going to eat there again. Yes. Or how many of us have, I remember seeing Paul Blart. I laughed. Yes. And then I ran across a review. It was like one tomato or something. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I remember feeling stupid. Yeah, totally. I was like, nope.

Totally. I get to think that movie was funny. That's right. Tommy Boy's funny. Yep, you get to. It's okay. It's okay. Yes. So maybe the perfect isn't the perfect date and the perfect sex and the perfect is that maybe life is this. Oh, yes, man. And that's the richness. Get lost. How about this?

So don't put Chick-fil-A in your freaking GPS because you know how to get there. And the only reason you're putting it in there is what if there's traffic and I can get a faster way? No, just drive to Chick-fil-A. Stop putting everything in your... So many people tell me now, they're like, yeah, it's so weird. Like if I'm driving to church or driving to the office, sometimes I'll put my office in my GPS, even though I drive every day because I'm like, what if there's traffic? And I'm like, what if there's traffic?

Maybe you're just supposed to sit and be still for a while. Something else that I do. If I'm ever... I don't do this when I'm flying, but when I'm driving now, I no longer...

Listen to podcasts in the car. I only listen to podcasts if I'm on a trip, if I'm flying. You're going to have to figure this out for yourself. But solitude, we're the first generation of people walking the earth that have the opportunity to completely get rid of solitude. This has never happened in the history of humanity. If anyone was traveling alone from point A to point B up until 19, when the car radio was invented, they had solitude.

We no longer have solitude. And so start making a decision. You're going to go on a walk without your AirPods. You're going to go on a walk without your phone. You're going to drive from point A to point B for 30 minutes without any solitude.

So like even those little things, I think, can help you recapture this lost art of being human. That's literally the subtitle is how seven screen-free weeks with monks and Amish farmers helped me recover the lost art of being human. Because it's an art that I feel like we all know. And some people are listening to this. Honestly, if you're 20 years old, you've never known life. You don't know this. You don't even know this. It sounds like we're talking about living on the moon. Yes. And I'm telling you, give it a shot. Yes. Try it. And you're gonna be like, oh,

You're going to have that hit of the inhaler. And it's the, I remember being under a tree in the field when I heard this, and it freaked me out. Yeah. Dude, it was a bird. Yes. Bird wings make noise. Make noise. Depending on how big the bird is, loud noise. Yeah. I'd never heard it. Yes. And it made me wonder, what else am I missing? What else? And so, yeah, occasionally go on a walk without your- Yeah. Yeah.

And write down, I'm not going to spoil it here. You got to get the book, but I'm going to start keeping, this is going to sound cheesy. Yeah. For all you beef cake, I'm going to start keeping a wonder journal. Yes. Stuff that I rediscovered or discovered that I didn't know. Yes. I didn't know you could hear birds flop their wings. Exactly. I love that. I didn't know that. Yeah. I didn't know there was this many different colors of flowers. Yeah. I didn't know that. Yes. I'm going to start keeping a wonder journal. I didn't know this meal could taste that good. Yes. Or that bad.

Right? I didn't know it could be that bad. You know? I mean, gosh, even I talked about earlier today, slowing down to what I call Godspeed, three miles an hour. Like, what in your life can you slow down, you know? When COVID happened and everyone's shut down and we're stuck at home, what? Everyone's walking. Everyone's walking. My neighborhood looked like Central Park. And my family and I would walk around the neighborhood. And it's so funny. I'd lived there for seven years and I was like...

The first walk, I was like, what's that? It smells like a rose garden. And I looked in my neighbor's backyard that I've never seen before because I drive by at 30 miles an hour, but I'm walking and I literally smelled something I never smelled before. And I realized they've got an entire rose garden. And oh my gosh, they've got bees back there. I was noticing things I never would have because I slowed down. I'm telling you, we're missing so much.

Last thing. I was at the Atlanta airport and I decided after I wrote this book to count out of 100 people coming up the escalator, how many people were looking at their phone and how many people weren't.

I want to take a guess as to how many out of 100 people were looking at their phone. Was it 90? 100. Holy smokes. 100. And I just thought to myself, we're literally living our life looking straight down. Gaze up and glance down. It shifts things. I started a practice in airports. I'm in there so much. Yeah. And this sounds ridiculous. And it's hard for me even to explain it to non-therapists.

There's a thing in therapy where if you're meeting a client and you feel yourself kind of falling asleep, getting bored, like you're struggling to stay connected, is to imagine, this sounds cheesy, almost Care Bear style. Like my chest is connected. There's a beam from my heart to yours. And I'm going to consciously. And it started as a cheesy, like kind of rolled my eyes. And then it became magic, which is walking down stairs.

the, the, just the regular airport and looking at somebody and saying, I love that guy.

I love that woman. Wow. And you start to see people's faces. Yeah. And you see their exhaustion. You see their joy. You see their nervousness. Yeah. But it was just a simple practice of, I love that guy. Yeah. I love that woman. I love that guy. Oh, dude. But it became this, I will do a thing so that I see the people that I'm walking by. Yes. And it makes me slow down. And you can't do that if you're not looking up. And you can't do that with earbuds shoved in. And my whole life.

of my house is paid for by people listening to me so I get what I'm asking same same and I think there's a time and a place but I think there's something about plugging back in yeah absolutely dude this is one of those moments where my family's life my life my marriage will be different today because of your time and the work that you put in so thank you for that I don't say that lightly

Thank you. I appreciate you. Unfortunately for you, now you got a new friend. We live in the same town. We will have cheeseburger time. Yeah, and we'll go to a punk rock show. I got black skinny jeans. I will hold you. I don't wear skinny jeans. No, no. It's the one time I can pull out my secret cargo shorts. Yeah, yeah, the cargo shorts. The one pair my wife didn't get rid of. You'll have to teach me how to do that. I was listening to NWA. Oh, yes! Hey, appreciate you, brother. Dude, thanks for having me.

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All right, we're back. I hope you enjoyed that conversation and I hope you have already thrown your phone into the river. But before you do that, you can click on the link below to get all of his books and to find out more about Carlos, where he might be at on tour and everything like that. Books is a worthy read. It's a fascinating read and it's good. So go check it out and just make a commitment to yourself.

I'm going to turn my phone off more. I'm going to be present with my family and kids more. And if you find yourself present with your family and kids and it's awkward, it's electric, you don't know what to do next, that's right. Get some questions for humans. Go for a walk. Go dig a hole. Go play in the mud. Go throw stuff at each other. I don't know. Play Candyland for God's sake. I don't care what you do. Make a commitment to live life on the other side of the screen. Love you guys. Stay in school. Don't do drugs. We'll see you soon. Bye. Bye.

All right, it's the new year and it's a perfect time to begin focusing on your most important relationship, your marriage. Every marriage needs intentional time and energy so that both of you can be aligned in co-creating the life that you both want. That's why my friend Rachel Cruz and I have teamed up to offer our amazing money and marriage getaway retreat in Nashville, Tennessee, this time over Valentine's Day weekend.

You and your spouse will head to Nashville for three days of laughter, hard conversations, maybe a few tears, intentional time together, and lots of practical teaching. At Money in Marriage, we don't shy away from anything. We have sessions on sex and intimacy, communication, how to fight, money, building a new future together, and more.

This is my favorite live event that I'm ever a part of, and I hope you'll grab one of the few remaining tickets. You are worth an extraordinary marriage. Prices start at $799 per couple. That's for the whole weekend. And like I said, there's only a few left, and Valentine's Day will be here before you know it. Get your tickets at ramsaysolutions.com slash getaway.