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The Books By Josh Audio Immersion

Podkast av Joshua A. Rodriguez

engelsk

Kultur og fritid

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Les mer The Books By Josh Audio Immersion

Welcome to The Books By Josh Audio Immersion, where books meet real-life lessons. Joshua Rodriguez takes you beyond the pages with honest stories, practical insights, and thought-provoking discussions. Each episode is crafted to spark reflection, inspire action, and entertain along the way. If you’re someone who loves learning, improving, and hearing a fresh perspective, you’re in the right place.

Alle episoder

109 Episoder

episode Episode 104 - The Internet Made Everything Feel Urgent cover

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. mai 2026 - 15 min
episode Episode 103 - Being Solo In All This cover

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. mai 2026 - 12 min
episode Episode 102 - My Recent Books cover

Episode 102 - My Recent Books

Episode 102: My Recent Books Why I Don’t Stay in One Lane There’s a version of creative work that people usually see—the finished piece, the story as it’s presented, the final result that feels complete. What doesn’t get seen as often is everything behind it. The ideas that didn’t fit anywhere at first, the shifts in direction, and the moments where something pulls you into a completely different lane than what you were just doing. In this episode, I take some time to talk through the books I’ve recently written and released, not just in terms of what they are, but where they came from. Moving from a darker, more introspective project like Rehab of a Writer into mystery and suspense with Retirement Bloodbath, and then into romance with Beneath the Surface and Borrowed Time Together, the path isn’t linear—and it’s not meant to be. What We Talk About The idea behind Rehab of a Writer and exploring the unseen side of creativity Returning to mystery and suspense with Retirement Bloodbath Writing across genres, including romance with Beneath the Surface and Borrowed Time Together Why not every project is meant for the same audience The mindset of following ideas instead of staying in one defined lane Why This Episode Matters There’s a tendency to think that once you find something that works, you should stay there. But creative work doesn’t always move that way. Sometimes the next idea takes you somewhere completely different, and the value comes from exploring it rather than forcing it to fit what came before. This episode reflects on that process and what it means to keep creating without limiting the direction. Final Thoughts Not every project will land the same way, and not every idea will connect with the same number of people. But even the smaller projects can matter in ways that aren’t immediately visible. Sometimes it’s enough that the work exists, and that it reached the people it was meant to reach. 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.

21. april 2026 - 9 min
episode Episode 101 - A Day As Josh cover

Episode 101 - A Day As Josh

Episode 101: What This Actually Looks Like Day to Day There’s a version of consistency that sounds clean when people talk about it. Structured. Focused. Productive. But living inside it doesn’t feel like that. In this episode, I step away from the idea of consistency and walk through what it actually looks like in my day to day life. Not the polished version, but the real one—recording, writing, planning, switching between projects, and doing work that doesn’t always feel like progress while you’re in it. Because most of the time, it isn’t one big effort. It’s a series of smaller things that repeat. Tasks that don’t feel important on their own, but still need to get done. What We Talk About What consistency looks like beyond the idea of motivation Managing multiple podcasts and creative workflows Turning audio into writing across different platforms The difference between quick tasks and slower creative work Writing when the output isn’t consistent Using tools to support the process without replacing it Balancing structured work with more open-ended projects Building multiple things at once without a clear finish line Why most of the work feels repetitive while you’re doing it Why This Episode Matters A lot of advice focuses on what to do—be consistent, stay disciplined, keep going. But it rarely shows what that actually looks like in practice. This episode is a look at the middle of the process. The part that doesn’t feel significant while you’re in it. The part that’s easy to underestimate because nothing about it feels like a breakthrough. Final Thoughts It’s easy to think progress should feel different. More obvious. More defined. More rewarding. But most of the time, it’s just this. The routine. The repetition. The work that keeps moving, even when it doesn’t feel like much is happening. 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.

7. april 2026 - 18 min
episode Episode 100 - The Part Where You Didn’t Quit cover

Episode 100 - The Part Where You Didn’t Quit

Episode 100: The Part Where You Didn’t Quit There are moments where stopping would make sense. Not dramatic moments. Not failures. Just quiet points where nothing feels like it’s working, and continuing feels optional. In this episode, I reflect on the difference between almost doing something and actually staying with it long enough to see where it leads. Because most people don’t quit all at once. They drift. They check out. They tell themselves they’re still trying, even when the effort has already started to fade. Episode 100 isn’t really about the number. It’s about what it represents. The part where you didn’t quit. The part that didn’t feel important at the time, but might have mattered more than anything else. What We Talk About Why quitting is often quiet, not dramatic The difference between stopping and mentally checking out Creating and working without seeing results The reality of inconsistency, burnout, and starting again Why most people don’t fail—they just stop The importance of having a real “why” behind what you do Breaking goals into smaller, achievable pieces Tracking small wins when progress feels invisible The difference between saying “I almost did it” and “I did it” Why This Episode Matters This episode connects the ideas from recent episodes—burnout, invisible progress, and long-term consistency—but shifts the focus to something simpler. Not what changed. Not how far you’ve come. Just the fact that you didn’t stop. And sometimes, that’s the only part that actually matters. Final Thoughts There are always going to be reasons to quit. Lack of progress. Lack of validation. Lack of clarity. But the part where you kept going—even when it didn’t feel like it mattered—that might be the part that defined everything. You just didn’t recognize it at the time. 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.

31. mars 2026 - 18 min
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