The Books By Josh Audio Immersion

Episode 104 - The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent

15 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 104 - The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent

Descripción

Episode 104: The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent Why It’s Hard to Think Clearly Anymore The internet changed everything. It changed how we communicate, how we learn, how we shop, how we work, and even how we think. In many ways, it made life easier. We can access information instantly, connect with people across the world, and create things that would have been impossible only a few decades ago. But somewhere along the way, convenience slowly became expectation, and expectation turned into urgency. In this episode, I reflect on what it feels like to live in a world where everything competes for your attention at all times. From short-form videos and endless scrolling to social media comparison, productivity pressure, instant gratification, and AI-assisted workflows, modern life increasingly feels designed to keep us moving without ever slowing down long enough to think clearly. This is not an episode about rejecting technology. It is about recognizing the psychological pressure that comes with constant access, constant stimulation, and constant comparison. The internet gave us incredible tools, but it also made patience feel unnatural. What We Talk About How short-form content changed attention spans Doomscrolling and endless algorithm-driven feeds Streaming culture and the loss of patience Social media comparison and unrealistic expectations Fake online success, influencers, and curated lifestyles Productivity pressure in the age of AI and digital tools Why convenience reshaped modern behavior Instant gratification and the difficulty of waiting The importance of delayed gratification and long-term growth Sitting quietly with your own thoughts in a hyperconnected world Why This Episode Matters A lot of people feel mentally exhausted without fully understanding why. We live in a time where notifications never stop, entertainment is endless, and every platform is designed to keep our attention for as long as possible. Even moments of silence are now interrupted by alerts, recommendations, and constant updates. The result is a culture where people feel pressured to always be productive, always informed, always entertained, and always moving. This episode explores how that pressure affects our ability to think clearly, stay patient, and appreciate slow progress. Real growth still takes time. Real success still requires consistency. And sometimes the healthiest thing we can do is step back long enough to hear our own thoughts again. Final Thoughts The internet is one of the greatest tools humanity has ever created, but every tool changes the people who use it. Convenience is helpful, but when everything becomes instant, patience begins to disappear. And when patience disappears, so does our ability to slow down, reflect, and think clearly about what actually matters. Maybe the answer is not disconnecting completely. Maybe it is simply learning how to exist without needing constant stimulation every second of the day. About the Show The Books By Josh Audio Immersion is a reflective podcast focused on perspective, growth, and the quiet lessons we often overlook. Each episode is an invitation to slow down, think differently, and explore ideas that don’t always fit into neat categories.

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112 episodios

Portada del episodio Episode 107 - Follow The Money?

Episode 107 - Follow The Money?

Episode 107: Follow the Money? Last week, I talked about what happens after reaching a goal you’ve been chasing for a long time. This week, I’m looking at a different question: should we follow the money, or should we follow something deeper? Money matters. It pays bills, creates stability, and can give us the room to build the life we want. But money can also pull us into jobs, businesses, trends, and choices that don’t align with who we are. In this episode, I reflect on moments from my own life where I had to decide whether the money was worth the cost. From sales and security work to side hustles, writing, and creative decisions, I talk about the difference between using money as a tool and letting money become the thing that controls your direction. In this episode, I discuss: Why chasing money alone can lead you away from your values The importance of integrity in work, sales, and business Knowing when a higher-paying opportunity is not the right opportunity How burnout can happen when money becomes the only reason you stay The difference between using a job as a stepping stone and letting it trap you Why side hustles and trends are not always as simple as they appear The danger of copying someone else’s path just because it looks profitable Building a financial foundation without losing sight of the life you actually want Sometimes following the money makes sense for a season. But the goal should be knowing what you’re building toward, so the money serves your life instead of becoming your life. I’d love to hear your thoughts. Have you ever taken a job, opportunity, or side hustle just for the money? Was it worth it? The Books By Josh Audio Immersion is a reflective podcast focused on perspective, growth, and the quiet lessons we often overlook. Each episode is an invitation to slow down, think differently, and explore ideas that don’t always fit into neat categories.

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Portada del episodio Episode 106 - Hit My Goals Now What

Episode 106 - Hit My Goals Now What

# Episode 106: Hit My Goals, Now What? Last week, I talked about finally seeing meaningful progress from my writing after years of effort. This week, I find myself facing a different question: what happens when you actually reach a goal you've been chasing for a long time? After earning as much from my writing in the first week of June as I did during the entire previous month, I started reflecting on the strange feeling that comes after achieving something you've worked toward for years. It's not life-changing money, but it's enough progress to make me stop and think about what's next. In this episode, I discuss: - The unexpected emotions that can follow reaching a long-term goal - Why achieving a milestone doesn't always bring the fulfillment we expect - The difference between creating what sells and creating what you're passionate about - How goals evolve as we grow and change - The importance of having a strong reason behind your ambitions - Lessons from fitness, finances, travel, and creative work - Why success often creates new questions instead of final answers - Building a creative life that can eventually support greater freedom and flexibility Sometimes the hardest question isn't how to reach a goal—it's deciding where to go after you've arrived. I'd love to hear your thoughts. What do you do after you hit a major goal? The Books By Josh Audio Immersion is a reflective podcast focused on perspective, growth, and the quiet lessons we often overlook. Each episode is an invitation to slow down, think differently, and explore ideas that don’t always fit into neat categories.

9 de jun de 202612 min
Portada del episodio Episode 105 - After All These Years Finally Making Progress

Episode 105 - After All These Years Finally Making Progress

🎙️ Books By Josh Audio Immersion — Episode 105 The Moment Effort Becomes Evidence There is a strange feeling that comes when something you’ve spent years building finally begins to show signs of life. Not overnight success. Not a viral moment. Just tangible evidence that the work you’ve been doing all along actually matters. In this episode, I talk about what it feels like to finally see progress after years of writing, podcasting, and creating. Recently, some of my books started gaining traction, readers began discovering my work, and for the first time in a long while, I could point to real results instead of simply believing they might come someday. It is a conversation about persistence, patience, and the emotional reality of pursuing creative goals when there are no guarantees. The truth is that most meaningful things take longer than we expect. Whether it is building a career, growing investments, learning a skill, or creating something you hope will outlast you, there are often years where the effort feels invisible. This episode is about those years and the importance of continuing anyway. What We Talk About • Seeing the first meaningful signs of progress after years of creative work • Publishing books in new genres and experimenting with different ideas • The emotional challenge of tracking sales, reads, and results • Why patience is harder than most people admit • The similarities between investing and building a creative career • The books and authors that inspired my own journey as a writer • Why creating something meaningful matters even if success comes slowly • The importance of continuing when progress feels invisible Why This Episode Matters We live in a world that celebrates quick wins and overnight success stories, but most accomplishments are built quietly over long periods of time. The difficult part is staying committed when the results haven’t arrived yet. This episode is a reminder that effort often compounds beneath the surface. Sometimes the progress is happening long before we can measure it. The challenge is trusting the process long enough to reach the point where the evidence finally appears. Final Thoughts Not every month will be better than the last. Not every project will succeed. But if there is one lesson I’ve learned, it’s that showing up consistently matters more than most people realize. Keep putting in the work. Keep building. Keep creating. The progress may be small, and it may arrive later than you hoped, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t coming. About the Show The Books By Josh Audio Immersion explores ideas about growth, creativity, mindset, personal finance, writing, and the experiences that shape who we become. Each episode is a chance to slow down, reflect, and look at life from a different perspective. The Books By Josh Audio Immersion is a reflective podcast focused on perspective, growth, and the quiet lessons we often overlook. Each episode is an invitation to slow down, think differently, and explore ideas that don’t always fit into neat categories.

2 de jun de 202612 min
Portada del episodio Episode 104 - The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent

Episode 104 - The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent

Episode 104: The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent Why It’s Hard to Think Clearly Anymore The internet changed everything. It changed how we communicate, how we learn, how we shop, how we work, and even how we think. In many ways, it made life easier. We can access information instantly, connect with people across the world, and create things that would have been impossible only a few decades ago. But somewhere along the way, convenience slowly became expectation, and expectation turned into urgency. In this episode, I reflect on what it feels like to live in a world where everything competes for your attention at all times. From short-form videos and endless scrolling to social media comparison, productivity pressure, instant gratification, and AI-assisted workflows, modern life increasingly feels designed to keep us moving without ever slowing down long enough to think clearly. This is not an episode about rejecting technology. It is about recognizing the psychological pressure that comes with constant access, constant stimulation, and constant comparison. The internet gave us incredible tools, but it also made patience feel unnatural. What We Talk About How short-form content changed attention spans Doomscrolling and endless algorithm-driven feeds Streaming culture and the loss of patience Social media comparison and unrealistic expectations Fake online success, influencers, and curated lifestyles Productivity pressure in the age of AI and digital tools Why convenience reshaped modern behavior Instant gratification and the difficulty of waiting The importance of delayed gratification and long-term growth Sitting quietly with your own thoughts in a hyperconnected world Why This Episode Matters A lot of people feel mentally exhausted without fully understanding why. We live in a time where notifications never stop, entertainment is endless, and every platform is designed to keep our attention for as long as possible. Even moments of silence are now interrupted by alerts, recommendations, and constant updates. The result is a culture where people feel pressured to always be productive, always informed, always entertained, and always moving. This episode explores how that pressure affects our ability to think clearly, stay patient, and appreciate slow progress. Real growth still takes time. Real success still requires consistency. And sometimes the healthiest thing we can do is step back long enough to hear our own thoughts again. Final Thoughts The internet is one of the greatest tools humanity has ever created, but every tool changes the people who use it. Convenience is helpful, but when everything becomes instant, patience begins to disappear. And when patience disappears, so does our ability to slow down, reflect, and think clearly about what actually matters. Maybe the answer is not disconnecting completely. Maybe it is simply learning how to exist without needing constant stimulation every second of the day. About the Show The Books By Josh Audio Immersion is a reflective podcast focused on perspective, growth, and the quiet lessons we often overlook. Each episode is an invitation to slow down, think differently, and explore ideas that don’t always fit into neat categories.

12 de may de 202615 min
Portada del episodio Episode 103 - Being Solo In All This

Episode 103 - Being Solo In All This

The Books By Josh Audio Immersion — Episode 103 Being Solo In All This What It Really Costs to Build Everything Yourself There’s a version of creative work that feels more structured than it actually is. From the outside, it can look like there’s a system behind everything—people handling different parts, processes keeping things moving, a kind of quiet support that makes it all feel manageable. But for a lot of creators, especially early on, that version doesn’t exist. In this episode, I talk about what it really looks like to do all of this alone. No editor, no marketing team, no one to hand things off to. Just the work, the decisions, and the responsibility of figuring things out as I go. From recording and editing podcasts to writing books, testing covers, tracking metrics, and trying to build something that grows over time, every part of the process stays with me. There’s a freedom in that, but there’s also a weight that comes with it. Not just in the amount of work, but in the constant shifting between roles, the lack of feedback, and the moments where the results don’t quite reflect the effort being put in. This episode is a reflection on that balance, and what it means to keep going anyway. What We Talk About What it means to build without a team or support system The hidden workload behind podcasts, books, and content creation Constant role-switching between creator, editor, and marketer Learning through trial, error, and real-time feedback The pressure of tracking metrics and questioning your work Finding a rhythm when everything depends on you Why This Episode Matters There’s a side of building something on your own that doesn’t always get talked about. Not the highlights or the finished products, but everything that happens in between. The small decisions, the repeated adjustments, the quiet moments of doubt that show up when you’re responsible for all of it. Doing everything yourself can slow things down, but it also gives you a clearer understanding of the process. You see what works, what doesn’t, and what actually matters over time. That kind of awareness doesn’t come from delegation—it comes from being in it, consistently. This episode matters because it speaks to that space. The part where things aren’t polished, where progress isn’t always obvious, but the work is still happening. Final Thoughts There isn’t a clean or easy way to do this without a team. Some days will feel focused, others will feel scattered. Some ideas will land, others won’t. And when everything depends on you, it’s easy to question whether you’re doing enough. But this is part of the process. Building something on your own means carrying both the freedom and the weight of it. It means learning as you go, adjusting when things don’t work, and continuing even when the results take time to show up. For now, you are the system. And that’s not something to rush past—it’s something to learn from. About the Show The Books By Josh Audio Immersion is a reflective podcast focused on perspective, growth, and the quiet lessons we often overlook. Each episode is an invitation to slow down, think differently, and explore ideas that don’t always fit into neat categories.

5 de may de 202612 min