Glen Phillips
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
and where we're being emotional, and especially in places... And my ex-wife, actually, my first wife, told me years ago to examine very closely places where I feel righteous indignation, and that the places, the people who make me the most angry, the things that make me feel the most keenly aggravated are places where I probably need to look at myself. first.
and where we're being emotional, and especially in places... And my ex-wife, actually, my first wife, told me years ago to examine very closely places where I feel righteous indignation, and that the places, the people who make me the most angry, the things that make me feel the most keenly aggravated are places where I probably need to look at myself. first.
and where we're being emotional, and especially in places... And my ex-wife, actually, my first wife, told me years ago to examine very closely places where I feel righteous indignation, and that the places, the people who make me the most angry, the things that make me feel the most keenly aggravated are places where I probably need to look at myself. first.
And that practice has helped me a lot in compassion to people in difficult situations and to see where I'm getting angry at something that I'm actually really mad at myself for not being better at or a place where I feel weak or incompetent or not as moral or together. It's like my own weaknesses are the things that I will find the most aggravating in others. I don't know.
And that practice has helped me a lot in compassion to people in difficult situations and to see where I'm getting angry at something that I'm actually really mad at myself for not being better at or a place where I feel weak or incompetent or not as moral or together. It's like my own weaknesses are the things that I will find the most aggravating in others. I don't know.
And that practice has helped me a lot in compassion to people in difficult situations and to see where I'm getting angry at something that I'm actually really mad at myself for not being better at or a place where I feel weak or incompetent or not as moral or together. It's like my own weaknesses are the things that I will find the most aggravating in others. I don't know.
That was a lot of word salad.
That was a lot of word salad.
That was a lot of word salad.
And I would say the podcast sphere to me, and I found it a very fascinating and frustrating place to look, is, you know, the fundamental attribution error. Yeah. And it is the greatest field of fundamental attribution error ever.
And I would say the podcast sphere to me, and I found it a very fascinating and frustrating place to look, is, you know, the fundamental attribution error. Yeah. And it is the greatest field of fundamental attribution error ever.
And I would say the podcast sphere to me, and I found it a very fascinating and frustrating place to look, is, you know, the fundamental attribution error. Yeah. And it is the greatest field of fundamental attribution error ever.
And a fundamental attribution error being that when I do a bad thing or somebody I love does a bad thing, it is because we are complex people and it was a complex situation. And that when you do a bad thing, it's because you're evil and bad. And that basic thing of, I don't know. I mean, right? Just Jesus. You count the speck in someone else's eye and ignore the log in your own.
And a fundamental attribution error being that when I do a bad thing or somebody I love does a bad thing, it is because we are complex people and it was a complex situation. And that when you do a bad thing, it's because you're evil and bad. And that basic thing of, I don't know. I mean, right? Just Jesus. You count the speck in someone else's eye and ignore the log in your own.
And a fundamental attribution error being that when I do a bad thing or somebody I love does a bad thing, it is because we are complex people and it was a complex situation. And that when you do a bad thing, it's because you're evil and bad. And that basic thing of, I don't know. I mean, right? Just Jesus. You count the speck in someone else's eye and ignore the log in your own.
And we are, man, this is the time for that in a way that I think no other time has ever been in the podcast sphere is like ground zero. Well, I mean, there's no one holding a lot of people accountable.
And we are, man, this is the time for that in a way that I think no other time has ever been in the podcast sphere is like ground zero. Well, I mean, there's no one holding a lot of people accountable.
And we are, man, this is the time for that in a way that I think no other time has ever been in the podcast sphere is like ground zero. Well, I mean, there's no one holding a lot of people accountable.
I mean, you can have academics who've never published a paper claiming that they have revolutionized the entire world of physics and that the only reason they haven't won a Nobel Prize, I don't know who I'm talking about here, the only reason they haven't won a Nobel is because of professional jealousy.
I mean, you can have academics who've never published a paper claiming that they have revolutionized the entire world of physics and that the only reason they haven't won a Nobel Prize, I don't know who I'm talking about here, the only reason they haven't won a Nobel is because of professional jealousy.