TRANSCRIPCIÓNEnglish

Why Nothing Feels Exciting Anymore

38m 3s7,530 palabras1,066 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPCIÓN COMPLETA

0:00

(ambient music) (people murmuring)

0:07

- [Narrator] How to buy the best maps in 2025.

0:09

You're doing it wrong.

0:10

You're still using this to navigate life.

0:13

Embarrassing. (people chattering)

0:15

(light music)

0:17

- I'm so bored right now

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and I truly hate the way it feels.

0:21

You're probably bored too.

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You clicked on this video trend to feel less bored

0:24

and all you've got is a guy scrolling on his phone

0:27

alone in a room.

0:28

Here, let me see if I can help with that.

0:32

(coins chiming)

0:32

Is this better?

0:33

(coins chiming)

0:35

Good. It's not just you and me.

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It's everyone.

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(pensive music)

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Boredom is on the rise,

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even at a time when we're in the golden age of content.

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Boredom isn't simple,

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it's not trivial, it's not benign.

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It's actually a painful emotion

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that quietly haunts our sense of meaning and purpose.

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It's more like pain or disgust.

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We've been going deep on this.

1:01

There's a lot of great new science.

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My producer, Alex, read like five books on the topic.

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In all of this literature,

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I am starting to see a clear story that explains

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why all of us are more bored than ever,

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but I'm also seeing something that I didn't expect.

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Something that's quietly hidden

1:15

within the feeling of boredom.

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How this really unpleasant feeling, boredom,

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might actually be key

1:20

to living a more purposeful, creative life.

1:24

(inquisitive music)

1:27

Your life is like a road trip.

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Stick with me while I build this analogy

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because it's actually really useful

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for understanding the real meaning of boredom.

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It's a road trip in the dark.

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In this analogy, the most important parts are,

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first off, your headlights.

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This is your attention.

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Your ability to pay attention and what you pay attention to.

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And the second most important part is this fuel tank.

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We're gonna look at this a lot.

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This represents your sense of meaning and purpose.

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It helps motivate you,

1:53

pushes you along the journey of your life.

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Attention and meaning are vital

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for how humans navigate their lives,

2:00

how they make decisions on where to go

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with the constraints of their everyday experience.

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These determine the route that you take on this road trip.

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So you're going along your life,

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you're taking turns,

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you're making decisions on how to spend your time.

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You spend time with friends, you pay attention to this.

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And look, your tank is filling up with meaning and purpose.

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For a lot of us, friendship is fuel.

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You go for a walk, maybe in nature.

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You listen to music that is meaningful to you.

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Maybe you watch a good movie,

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you shine your attention on that,

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and that is actually pretty fulfilling.

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But life is heavy and hard,

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and sometimes your fuel runs out.

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Your attention fractures or fades,

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and then this happens.

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(audio warbling)

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Lights out.

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(switch clicks) This is boredom.

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The state where your sense of purpose

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and meaning is on empty.

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And consequently, you don't really have the ability

2:50

to muster the energy to pay attention to something

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that would change the situation.

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Real quick before we go on.

2:57

Have you noticed

2:58

that one way you might cure your boredom is email.

3:01

Knocking out a few emails makes you feel productive.

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Doesn't take that much work sometimes,

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but if you look closely,

3:06

you might note that a lot of the emails you're knocking out

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are actually junk.

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Like they shouldn't have been there.

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You don't want them there.

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You never signed up for them.

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The same thing extends to robocalls

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and all of those text messages you get,

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and even junk mail being sent to your house.

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It's sort of a constant low-level buzz

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and one that I kind of hate.

3:23

I'm telling you all this

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'cause it has to do with our sponsor today, Incogni.

3:26

Incogni has woken me up

3:28

to just how extensive a industry the data broker market is.

3:33

These are companies

3:33

who make a lot of money off of collecting your information,

3:36

your address, your shopping habits, your birthday,

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your court records,

3:40

and selling it to anyone willing to pay,

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marketers, credit agencies, insurance companies,

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you name it.

3:45

I actually heard about Incogni a few years ago.

3:47

I signed up.

3:47

I gave them permission to act on my behalf

3:49

and then they went out to these data brokers

3:51

and say to them in some legal language,

3:54

"Hey, take Johnny off your lists."

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And it has worked hundreds of times, actually,

3:58

automatically, without me having to do anything.

4:00

I actually just get to sit back

4:01

and look at this fancy-looking dashboard,

4:03

see the status of all of the requests that have been made

4:05

and the ones that have been successful,

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which, at this point, there's like hundreds of them.

4:10

Let me do a little update right now.

4:11

Incogni,

4:13

what is my current number of...

4:15

Dude, 744 total requests to these data brokers?

4:18

And of those, 612 have been completed.

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That's very satisfying.

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132 are in progress.

4:23

Man, this is great.

4:24

Just this month, there have been more than 10.

4:27

You just see all of this. It's very satisfying.

4:29

They just launched this unlimited plan,

4:31

which now allows you to request removal from any site,

4:35

including those creepy people search sites

4:37

that post your info online for anyone to see.

4:40

So if you wanna try this out,

4:41

go to incogni.com/johnnyharris.

4:43

Clicking that link helps support this channel.

4:45

If you use the code, johnnyharris, at checkout,

4:47

you get 60% off the annual plan.

4:49

I do the annual plan because, like I said,

4:51

like every month there are more lists that I get added to

4:54

and Incogni scans them and takes me off of them.

4:56

So thank you, Incogni, for sponsoring today's video,

4:59

for allowing us to do this work.

5:00

With that, let's dive back into why we are so bored.

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The most surprising thing that I've learned so far

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while researching this is

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that boredom is not this trivial, mundane feeling.

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It's actually a pretty strong emotional experience,

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and it kind of sucks.

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- I define boredom as meaning withdrawal

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as a sense of discomfort,

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telling you that your need

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for personal meaning is not being met.

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- Your brain's way of telling you,

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you need to change what you're doing

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because what you're doing is unsatisfying.

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You find it hard to focus.

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- And that feeling of like,

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"I can't do anything about this.

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I don't have any agency here."

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Or, "What's the meaning of all of this?"

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You're just kind of stuck there.

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- [Lars] I'd say that the experience

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of boredom is an experience of unfreedom,

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an experience of being trapped in the present

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without meaning.

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- [Nathaniel] Time seems to slow.

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- [Lars] It's like you're in a situation where,

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"I don't care about this.

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This really doesn't stimulate me in any way."

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- [Alicia] Tolstoy described boredom

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as like a desire of desires.

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- I also remember a friend of mine,

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he worked with the postal services when we're students,

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and his job was to take mailbags and turn them inside out

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to see if there was any letters remaining in there.

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And one day he told me,

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"Yesterday at work, I just started weeping."

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I mean this was "The Myth of Sisyphus,"

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the eternal recurrence of the same.

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There is no end to it.

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There will always be another mailbag coming in

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that would have to be turned inside out.

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No progression, just the same over and over again.

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And he started weeping at work.

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Though being a good Protestant,

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he continued to turn mailbags inside out

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while he was weeping.

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(person sobbing)

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- For me, this happens usually on a Saturday at like 3:00 PM

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This is when my kids are occupied playing with friends

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or playing Nintendo, or whatever.

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I have time.

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I usually don't have time,

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but Saturday at 3:00 PM,

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I have precious free time that I don't get during the week.

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And I have all this stuff that I want to do,

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but then this emotion just hits me.

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