Forsidebilde av showet Journey of Everything

Journey of Everything

Podkast av Joseph Bogart & Russell Hess

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

Deretter 99 kr / Måned. Avslutt når som helst.

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Ever wondered why we park in driveways but drive on parkways? Or why there's a light in the fridge, but the freezer is left in the dark? These are the little mysteries of everyday life that are impossible to measure or evaluate with simple numbers.We spend our lives looking for answers to these questions, yet we rarely think to ask them out loud because they seem too trivial for an encyclopedia and too baffling for a dictionary. They are the puzzles that keep you up at night, like why you look up when you’re thinking or how a tiny pill "knows" exactly where your pain is.In this collection, we dive into the quirks of language, science, and human behavior that we've all noticed but never quite questioned—until now: Common questions people never think to ask.

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30 Episoder

episode Why We Cry at Happy Endings: The Surprising Psychology of Tears and Emotional Release cover

Why We Cry at Happy Endings: The Surprising Psychology of Tears and Emotional Release

Why do happy endings make us cry the hardest? Discover the psychology behind happy tears, the brain's safety-valve mechanism, and how emotional tears release stress after tension resolves in movies, books, and real life. The hero gets the girl, the family reunites, credits roll—and you're ugly-crying. Why do happy endings hit so hard? Explore the brain's safety valve, emotional tears, and why joy unleashes the backlog of feelings once it's finally safe. Your brain acts as a cautious gatekeeper during stories—holding back fear, grief, and vulnerability while danger looms. The moment safety arrives with a perfect resolution, the floodgates open, releasing a powerful mix of joy, relief, and backlog emotions. This episode explores tear chemistry (stress hormones, oxytocin, endorphins), dimorphous expressions, evolutionary signals, and why films like The Shawshank Redemption, Up, and real reunions trigger cathartic sobs. Unpack storytelling magic, brain science, and the beautiful weirdness of human emotion.

I går - 20 min
episode Do We Really Need Eight Glasses of Water a Day? The 1945 Myth, Forgotten Origins & Real Science of Hydration cover

Do We Really Need Eight Glasses of Water a Day? The 1945 Myth, Forgotten Origins & Real Science of Hydration

Is that constant water bottle sipping actually necessary? Uncover the forgotten 1945 origins of the eight-glasses myth, the real fluid science, and why we all carry refillable bottles today. Practical, myth-busting hydration advice that finally makes sense. Do we really need eight glasses of water a day? This stubborn health myth traces back to a single 1945 sentence that the world conveniently forgot. Discover the actual science of hydration, why the "8x8" rule spread like wildfire, and what your body truly needs. The United States Food and Nutrition Board recommended total daily fluid intake of about 2.5 liters — most of it from food — yet the nuance vanished. Decades later, Heinz Valtin’s 2002 review confirmed no scientific studies support forcing eight glasses of plain water for healthy adults. Your thirst mechanism, kidneys, and water-rich foods do the heavy lifting. Learn practical tips for real hydration that fit your life, activity level, and climate without turning water into a part-time job.

22. mai 2026 - 9 min
episode Why Do So Many Blind People Wear Dark Sunglasses? Practical Reasons, History & Inspiring Stories cover

Why Do So Many Blind People Wear Dark Sunglasses? Practical Reasons, History & Inspiring Stories

Why do so many blind people wear dark sunglasses? Discover the practical, protective, and empowering reasons behind this common sight—plus personal stories of remarkable blind men who lived boldly with them. From ancient Inuit snow goggles and Roman emperors to modern tools against photophobia, glare, UV damage, and everyday hazards, this episode dives into the surprising history and real-world benefits. Meet Frank, the "James Bond of blind guys" with flawless navigation; Joe, who directed a feature film, played guitar, and sword-fought by sound; and the pioneering blind Segway rider. These shades aren't about loss—they're quiet tools of freedom, confidence, and independence that let full lives shine through.

19. mai 2026 - 15 min
episode The Forgiveness Trap: Is It Actually Okay to Never Forgive Someone? An Open Letter to Chad & Karen cover

The Forgiveness Trap: Is It Actually Okay to Never Forgive Someone? An Open Letter to Chad & Karen

What if the most powerful move isn't forgiving the person who shattered your trust—but keeping a polite grudge as a force field? We rip open the forgiveness trap, challenge toxic positivity, and explore when "never forgive" is self-defense, not spiritual failure. Is it really okay to never forgive someone? Explore the forgiveness trap, where cultural myths push unconditional forgiveness while science, psychology, and religion reveal a more nuanced truth about grudges, boundaries, and personal power. This episode dives into the science showing both forgiveness and strategic non-forgiveness can reduce stress and boost self-esteem, contrasts religious views from Christianity's radical grace to Judaism's teshuvah and Buddhism's detachment, and exposes toxic forgiveness that keeps victims stuck. Discover when holding a grudge acts as healthy boundary technology and how to protect your peace without becoming a grudge goblin. Personal stories, evolutionary insights, and practical wisdom included.

15. mai 2026 - 14 min
episode What Does Barney Rubble Actually Do for a Living? The Flintstones Job Mystery Explained cover

What Does Barney Rubble Actually Do for a Living? The Flintstones Job Mystery Explained

Fred drives the bronto-crane. Barney just… works there. Why does The Flintstones show keep his job so mysteriously vague? A fun, thoughtful look at the unsung flexibility of Barney Rubble’s role in Bedrock—and what it says about real-life work that refuses to be pinned down. What does Barney Rubble actually do at the quarry in The Flintstones? While Fred Flintstone operates the bronto-crane with clear purpose, Barney’s role stays strangely vague—shifting between assistant, reactor, and all-around utility player without ever locking into one job title. This deep dive into Bedrock employment unpacks why the show deliberately keeps Barney’s work ambiguous, how it gives him storytelling flexibility, and what it reveals about real-world roles that don’t fit neat job descriptions. From prehistoric suburbs to modern workplaces, discover why “being useful” can be more resilient than a clearly defined title. Includes the classic “Hey Fred!” energy and plenty of laughs along the way. If you’ve ever struggled to explain what you do for a living, this episode is for you.

12. mai 2026 - 11 min
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