Eric Goode
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Oh, it's beautiful up there.
Oh, it's beautiful up there.
Oh, it's beautiful up there.
We don't even know what it's like. I would imagine if you went to a city, your average city, like a New York City or Los Angeles, the average person there, what percentage of them spend any time at all alone in the woods? Very few.
We don't even know what it's like. I would imagine if you went to a city, your average city, like a New York City or Los Angeles, the average person there, what percentage of them spend any time at all alone in the woods? Very few.
We don't even know what it's like. I would imagine if you went to a city, your average city, like a New York City or Los Angeles, the average person there, what percentage of them spend any time at all alone in the woods? Very few.
Not really. No, not really.
Not really. No, not really.
Not really. No, not really.
Because I like interesting things. It's really interesting. The fact that so few people engage in it is also interesting to me because I'm fascinated by the โ Just whatever the pull of urban life is.
Because I like interesting things. It's really interesting. The fact that so few people engage in it is also interesting to me because I'm fascinated by the โ Just whatever the pull of urban life is.
Because I like interesting things. It's really interesting. The fact that so few people engage in it is also interesting to me because I'm fascinated by the โ Just whatever the pull of urban life is.
Like, what is the gravity of urban life that's changed us into these soft, non-self-sufficient beings that is completely relying on some strange system that's ultimately polluting the world and decimating of its resources? Like, what are we? Like, we're weird. Yeah. The time I spend in the woods, in the wilderness, just being out there, you get a different sense of what life actually is.
Like, what is the gravity of urban life that's changed us into these soft, non-self-sufficient beings that is completely relying on some strange system that's ultimately polluting the world and decimating of its resources? Like, what are we? Like, we're weird. Yeah. The time I spend in the woods, in the wilderness, just being out there, you get a different sense of what life actually is.
Like, what is the gravity of urban life that's changed us into these soft, non-self-sufficient beings that is completely relying on some strange system that's ultimately polluting the world and decimating of its resources? Like, what are we? Like, we're weird. Yeah. The time I spend in the woods, in the wilderness, just being out there, you get a different sense of what life actually is.
It's so extraordinary to see wild animals in the wild, like wild deer and elk and bears, see them existing. It's incredible. It's better than any movie. It gives you a vitamin that you didn't know you needed.
It's so extraordinary to see wild animals in the wild, like wild deer and elk and bears, see them existing. It's incredible. It's better than any movie. It gives you a vitamin that you didn't know you needed.
It's so extraordinary to see wild animals in the wild, like wild deer and elk and bears, see them existing. It's incredible. It's better than any movie. It gives you a vitamin that you didn't know you needed.
You know, like the feeling that you get when you go out in the sun, like maybe you've been indoors in the winter and then there's a nice sunny day in the spring and everybody's outside in the park like, ah, give me my vitamins, right? Doesn't it feel like that? You're lying down like, give me my vitamins. That's what it feels like on a nice sunny day in Central Park, right?
You know, like the feeling that you get when you go out in the sun, like maybe you've been indoors in the winter and then there's a nice sunny day in the spring and everybody's outside in the park like, ah, give me my vitamins, right? Doesn't it feel like that? You're lying down like, give me my vitamins. That's what it feels like on a nice sunny day in Central Park, right?