Roaming Minds
The loop doesn't stop when you close your laptop. It gets quieter — and then a sensory cue in the kitchen or the hallway pulls it back to the front, and home stops being a place of reset and becomes another place where the loop runs. This episode names the mechanism behind that. The attentional hierarchy doesn't automatically reorganize when you walk through the door. Open loops compete for cognitive priority regardless of where your body is. The presence problem that founders carry into their home environment isn't a discipline failure — it's a structural one. AJ and Carlos examine what's actually happening when work-life balance isn't working: how open loops drain the cognitive resources that home is supposed to restore, what it costs relationally when that reset never fully arrives, and why more time at home doesn't solve a problem that was never about time. If the loop is still running, a session at Enactive closes it structurally. https://theenactive.com/#offer [https://theenactive.com/#offer] If anything in this episode brought something heavier to the surface, support is available. 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline — call or text 988SAMHSA Helpline — 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7)
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