Playing Books

Playing Books

Arnold Schwarzenegger's Revolution: Seven Tools for Useful Life And Everything You Wanted to Know.

48 min · 23 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio Arnold Schwarzenegger's Revolution: Seven Tools for Useful Life And Everything You Wanted to Know.

Descripción

Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the memoir episode of the podcast. You made a great choice. This episode is largely about desiring a quality life, dreaming it, and going to work with everything you’ve got to make it a reality. We discuss Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life, one of the most unexpectedly raw, refreshingly honest, and genuinely life-changing books to come out in years. Yes, that Arnold, the BIG MUSCULAR, HEAVY WEIGHT BODYBUILDER, with the last name, Schwarzenegger, that is hard to pronounce. Schwarzenegger went from a small, cold-water farmhouse in rural Austria, where ambition itself felt illegal, to becoming the greatest bodybuilder on the planet, the highest-paid movie star in Hollywood history, and the Governor of California's $2.7 trillion economy. Three completely different worlds. Three mountain peaks. One man: Arnold Schwarzenegger. That's not luck. That's not genetics. That's persistence, determination, focus, and intense desire. In Be Useful, Arnold breaks down the exact mental tools he forged as a young man with nothing but a dream too big for anyone around him to take seriously. And here's the thing that hits hardest: he doesn't sugarcoat a single word. This isn't a celebrity memoir dressed up as a self-help book. It's a no-nonsense, blunt, almost uncomfortable conversation about vision, hard work, resilience, and one lesson his father never let him forget: be useful. Not famous. Not rich. Useful. What makes this book feel different? Arnold doesn't just tell you what to do, he shows you how it cost him, in failures, near-disasters, and defining moments he's never spoken about publicly before. He talks about purpose the way a man talks about something he fought for, not something he stumbled into, accidentally. Too many of us are stuck. Waiting. Spinning in self-pity, scrolling instead of building, hoping someone will arrive with the answers. Arnold's message, delivered in that unmistakable, no-filter voice, is both a cold splash of water and a warm hand on the shoulder: no one is coming to rescue you. But the good news? You're all you need. If you've ever felt like your life has more in it than what's currently showing up on the surface, this episode and this book are for you. Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life is an invaluable addition to your library. You can purchase the book on Amazon [https://amzn.to/4u45w6a], at your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library. However you get it, just get it. Please, we love to hear from you. What tool from Arnold's life hit closest to home for you? Feel free to drop your thoughts in the comments; your perspective might be exactly what another listener needs to read today. If this episode added something to your day, share it with someone who's ready to stop waiting and start building. And if you haven't already, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to anyone who believes that the right book at the right moment can genuinely change a life. Because it can, we've seen it happen. Connect with our community of readers, thinkers, and dreamers: playingbooks.org [http://playingbooks.org] YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@playingbookspodcast] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/worthscope/] Twitter [https://x.com/worthscope] TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@playingbookspodcast] Thank you for being here. Truly. In a world full of noise, you chose to spend your time with words that matter, and that says everything about who you are and who you're becoming. We'll see you in the next episode. Keep reading. Keep growing. Keep being useful.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Playing Books!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

109 episodios

episode America’s Secret Cyber War Story Finally Told and Everything You Wanted to Know - Fred Kaplan. artwork

America’s Secret Cyber War Story Finally Told and Everything You Wanted to Know - Fred Kaplan.

Welcome back to Playing Books, the show where extraordinary stories reshape how you think, live, and participate in the world. Thank you for tuning in to the cyber episode of the podcast. In this episode, we discuss Fred Kaplan’s Dark Territory: The Secret History of Cyber War, an explosive account of cyber warfare from its classified origins to its terrifying present day. Listening to this episode equips you with a sharp understanding of modern conflict. Instead of bogging you down in dense technical jargon, we focus on the gripping human drama that shaped our digital reality. By tuning in, you will gain exclusive insights into: The Surprising Origins of Digital Warfare: Discover how cyber war actually began with profound confusion rather than a genius hack, as generals misunderstood code and programmers ignored military language. The Key Players and Hidden Decisions: Meet the innovators who anticipated the threat, the skeptics who dismissed it, and the silent operators who defend the systems you rely on every day. Real-World Vulnerabilities: Learn about the historic breaches that forced governments to act and the terrifying gap that still exists between public knowledge and classified threats. This discussion carries immense weight today in 2026, an era where cyberattacks actively shape elections, disrupt critical infrastructure, and force every major institution to scramble for defense. Kaplan wrote this book as both a warning and a history lesson. You will leave this episode understanding that cyber warfare is no longer a future threat because it is already here and accelerating. Fred Kaplan’s Dark Territory: The Secret History of Cyber War exposes how warfare works and the dark sides of our digital age; consequently, you should be more proactive. We recommend you consider purchasing it on Amazon [https://amzn.to/4f5GteQ], at your regular bookstore, or get it through your local library. We believe you care about the cyber welfare of your family members, friends, colleagues, and others. This episode and Fred Kaplan’s Dark Territory: The Secret History of Cyber War can help them navigate the digital landscape knowledgeably. So, share this episode around, please.  Could you also subscribe, follow, and like the Playing Books podcast, and leave your comments and questions? playingbooks.org [http://playingbooks.org] YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@playingbookspodcast] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/worthscope/] Twitter [https://x.com/worthscope] TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@playingbookspodcast] Thank you for your time and for listening to the episode.

25 de may de 20261 h 1 min
episode What Is Intelligence? Lessons from AI About Evolution, Computing, and Minds - Agüera y Arcas. artwork

What Is Intelligence? Lessons from AI About Evolution, Computing, and Minds - Agüera y Arcas.

Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. Thank you for tuning in to the intelligence episode of the podcast. The episode asks a question as old as humanity and as urgent as the age of Artificial Intelligence (AI): What is intelligence, really? Today, we’re sitting with Blaise Agüera y Arcas’s What Is Intelligence?: Lessons from AI About Evolution, Computing, and Minds, an inspiring and revealing book that refuses to give you the same old answers. Instead, it invites you into a living conversation about how minds form, how systems learn, how evolution computes, and how intelligence might be far more fluid, emergent, and interconnected than we’ve ever allowed ourselves to imagine. This episode is for anyone who has ever wondered why AI feels both familiar and alien, why human creativity can’t be reduced to code, and why the future of thinking, human and machine, depends on humility, curiosity, and a willingness to rethink everything we assume about cognition. We talk about pattern‑making, meaning‑building, the strange parallels between neural networks and natural selection, and the uncomfortable truth that intelligence may not be a ladder but a landscape. If you’re building, designing, parenting, leading, or simply trying to understand the world you’re living in, this conversation will give you frameworks you can actually use. Blaise Agüera y Arcas’s What Is Intelligence?: Lessons from AI About Evolution, Computing, and Minds challenges many assumptions and reveals new insights that lead to better questions and answers. We recommend the book. Consider purchasing it on Amazon, from your favorite bookstore, or requesting it from a local library. It’s worth having on your shelf and in your mind. Intelligence lives in many minds and lips in schools, workplaces, newsstands, libraries, and other such places as AI continues to dominate. Please share your thoughts. Comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to someone who loves big ideas and brave conversations. We leave you with a parting question: Do you consider yourself intelligent? Please connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.org [http://playingbooks.org] YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@playingbookspodcast] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/worthscope/] Twitter [https://x.com/worthscope] TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@playingbookspodcast] Thank you for listening, for thinking with us, and for being part of the Playing Books family.

24 de may de 202631 min
episode Meg-John Barker’s Revolution: The Psychology of Sex and Everything You Wanted to Know. artwork

Meg-John Barker’s Revolution: The Psychology of Sex and Everything You Wanted to Know.

Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning in to the sex episode of the podcast. We're exploring one of the most misunderstood aspects of human experience: sex. This episode focuses on Meg-John Barker’s The Psychology of Sex (The Psychology of Everything). What can psychology teach us about sex? How do different bodies and brains respond sexually? How can we prevent people from being stigmatized for their sexuality? Many such questions are explored in this episode and in Meg-John Barker’s The Psychology of Sex.  On the side, we love to hear your take on this: how is Artificial Intelligence (AI) influencing sex today? What will the future of sex be like? Barker takes us on a remarkable tour of how psychologists have created and sustained certain understandings of sex and sexuality. Since so much of our sexual relationship happens in the mind, understanding where our ideas about sex come from becomes essential. We discuss cultural concerns around sexualization, pornography, and sex addiction while drawing on cutting-edge research from sexual communities and the applied field of sex therapy. In this episode, we reveal how psychology reshapes your understanding of desire, attraction, and intimacy. You should discover the surprising ways your brain influences your sexuality, challenge the narratives you've absorbed, and gain permission to question what you've always been told. This practical episode helps you navigate your own sexual identity, build healthier relationships, or simply be curious about human sexuality. This episode should shift how you think about this subject. Meg-John Barker’s The Psychology of Sex (The Psychology of Everything) deserves close reading and thoughtful engagement with Barker’s expository approach to this subject. We recommend it from Amazon [https://amzn.to/4eCuCEJ], your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library. The author would greatly appreciate your support, and the publishers who wager on such matters. How was sex regarded in your childhood? Do you take the Scriptural or liberal view on sex and gender, male and female? What is your stance on sex before marriage? Is protection during sex enough to prevent sexually transmitted diseases? Which gender and race loves sex the most? Please, we love to hear your thoughts. Comment, share this episode, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast for more racy conversations like this. Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media:  playingbooks.org playingbooks.org [http://playingbooks.org] YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@playingbookspodcast] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/worthscope/] Twitter [https://x.com/worthscope] TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@playingbookspodcast] Thank you again so much for your time and for listening to our sex episode of the podcast.

9 de may de 202640 min
episode The Unfragile Mind: Rethinking Mental Health and Human Nature. artwork

The Unfragile Mind: Rethinking Mental Health and Human Nature.

Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the mental health episode of the podcast. Today’s conversation centers on a book that feels urgent, humane, and quietly revolutionary. The Unfragile Mind: A Physician’s Call for Restoring Hope and Humanity to Mental Health Care by Gavin Francis is not just another title in the mental‑health space. It’s a reminder, delivered with clarity, compassion, and clinical honesty, that people are not diagnoses, and care should never feel mechanical, rushed, or stripped of dignity. In this episode, we talk about what it means to build a mind that bends without breaking, a mind strengthened by connection, meaning, and the simple act of being seen. Francis writes with the rare combination of medical authority and human warmth, and his message lands with force: mental health care can be better, kinder, and more hopeful, and we all have a role in shaping that future. This is a conversation for anyone who has felt overwhelmed, overlooked, or misunderstood. Anyone who wants a mental health system that treats people as whole beings, anyone who believes that with a positive attitude, and wants to fight many dilutions and isolations that follow mental health misdiagnosis, and the like, should consider listening to this episode as many times as possible. Learn how the quote, ‘the map is not the territory’ applies to mental health and other surprising tips for sound mental health from the book. Consider purchasing The Unfragile Mind on Amazon [https://amzn.to/4dbEjrc], at your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library. Mental health is getting discussed more today. What is your call on Gavin Francis’ The Unfragile Mind: A Physician’s Call for Restoring Hope and Humanity to Mental Health Care, and this episode? Please comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books podcast to someone who might need a moment of clarity or encouragement today. Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media:  playingbooks.org [http://playingbooks.org] YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@playingbookspodcast] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/worthscope/] Twitter [https://x.com/worthscope] TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@playingbookspodcast] Thank you again so much for your time and for listening to our mental health episode. Please, take a preventative approach to your mental health and don’t let anyone shame you for your temporary mental health challenges.

8 de may de 202644 min
episode Arnold Schwarzenegger's Revolution: Seven Tools for Useful Life And Everything You Wanted to Know. artwork

Arnold Schwarzenegger's Revolution: Seven Tools for Useful Life And Everything You Wanted to Know.

Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the memoir episode of the podcast. You made a great choice. This episode is largely about desiring a quality life, dreaming it, and going to work with everything you’ve got to make it a reality. We discuss Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life, one of the most unexpectedly raw, refreshingly honest, and genuinely life-changing books to come out in years. Yes, that Arnold, the BIG MUSCULAR, HEAVY WEIGHT BODYBUILDER, with the last name, Schwarzenegger, that is hard to pronounce. Schwarzenegger went from a small, cold-water farmhouse in rural Austria, where ambition itself felt illegal, to becoming the greatest bodybuilder on the planet, the highest-paid movie star in Hollywood history, and the Governor of California's $2.7 trillion economy. Three completely different worlds. Three mountain peaks. One man: Arnold Schwarzenegger. That's not luck. That's not genetics. That's persistence, determination, focus, and intense desire. In Be Useful, Arnold breaks down the exact mental tools he forged as a young man with nothing but a dream too big for anyone around him to take seriously. And here's the thing that hits hardest: he doesn't sugarcoat a single word. This isn't a celebrity memoir dressed up as a self-help book. It's a no-nonsense, blunt, almost uncomfortable conversation about vision, hard work, resilience, and one lesson his father never let him forget: be useful. Not famous. Not rich. Useful. What makes this book feel different? Arnold doesn't just tell you what to do, he shows you how it cost him, in failures, near-disasters, and defining moments he's never spoken about publicly before. He talks about purpose the way a man talks about something he fought for, not something he stumbled into, accidentally. Too many of us are stuck. Waiting. Spinning in self-pity, scrolling instead of building, hoping someone will arrive with the answers. Arnold's message, delivered in that unmistakable, no-filter voice, is both a cold splash of water and a warm hand on the shoulder: no one is coming to rescue you. But the good news? You're all you need. If you've ever felt like your life has more in it than what's currently showing up on the surface, this episode and this book are for you. Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life is an invaluable addition to your library. You can purchase the book on Amazon [https://amzn.to/4u45w6a], at your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library. However you get it, just get it. Please, we love to hear from you. What tool from Arnold's life hit closest to home for you? Feel free to drop your thoughts in the comments; your perspective might be exactly what another listener needs to read today. If this episode added something to your day, share it with someone who's ready to stop waiting and start building. And if you haven't already, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to anyone who believes that the right book at the right moment can genuinely change a life. Because it can, we've seen it happen. Connect with our community of readers, thinkers, and dreamers: playingbooks.org [http://playingbooks.org] YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@playingbookspodcast] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/worthscope/] Twitter [https://x.com/worthscope] TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@playingbookspodcast] Thank you for being here. Truly. In a world full of noise, you chose to spend your time with words that matter, and that says everything about who you are and who you're becoming. We'll see you in the next episode. Keep reading. Keep growing. Keep being useful.

23 de abr de 202648 min