By
Viewed
1,735,886

Please choose the correct answer for each question below:

Questions: 0/258

Correct: 0

Translate:
(gentle music)
- [Narrator] Ah, what a lovely weekend in the neighborhood.
Susan is out walking the dog,
Frank is hard at work writing his new book,
and Billy is...
(bird chirping)
Ah, yes, a classic Billy Saturday.
Waking up late, his mind filled with dread.
There are so many things he could do,
so many things he should do,
but it all just seems so hard for Billy.
His obligations crush him.
So he does what seems easy.
He passes the time on frivolous things
that take little to no effort to do.
He thinks of his neighbor, Frank,
industriously engaged in his pursuits,
always so focused and calm.
He seems to fill his days and weeks with productive,
healthy activities.
Going for walks with his dog, exercising daily,
and making an impact at work, constantly getting promoted.
- Hah, gee, Frank is just built different.
He must have more willpower than I do.
How does he stay focused on difficult things
for long periods of time?
I wish I enjoy doing healthy things
as much as Frank seems to.
- [Narrator] And that mindset right there
is the exact reason why you never will.
You've fallen for the illusion of should.
Isn't it strange that some people
seem to genuinely enjoy having a healthy
and well-balanced life,
full of activities that are good for them,
and have seemingly no problem focusing
on challenging things for long periods of time?
Overall, it seems that these people
just have it figured out.
It's almost like they know something that most of us don't.
What is the secret?
Like Billy, many of us are stuck,
beating our heads against a wall,
hoping for lightning to strike,
providing us with the magic motivation we need
to suddenly like doing the things that are good for us
and hate doing the things that are bad for us.
But fret knot, just like Frank,
you too can spend far more time doing healthy things
and you don't have to wait.
No willpower is needed.
Just a simple shift in your mental framing,
and you too can be just like Frank.
- I can?
- [Narrator] Yes, Billy.
But first, you must realize that you've been lied to
your whole life.
- I've been lied to?
Oh no.
By whom?
Was it the Democratic Party?
- [Narrator] No, silly Billy.
It wasn't the Democrats. It's you.
- Me?
- [Narrator] You have managed
to gradually brainwash yourself
with considerable help from advertising
and societal conditioning
into thinking you actually enjoy doing degenerate things
and that things that are good for you are hard and painful.
- [Narrator] I did?
- Yes, Billy.
But the simple fact is that good things are not painful,
and you know this through experience.
Consider all the times you've had a deadline
for something important, like a school paper.
And after days of avoidance, agony, and stress,
you managed to scare yourself into productivity
due to a looming deadline.
What do you remember feeling
when you finally started making headway on that paper?
- [Billy] Well, I reckon I felt quite relieved.
I remember thinking to myself,
"Why did I put it off this long?
I should do this more often."
- [Narrator] Yes, Billy, you brilliant bastard.
You are beginning to understand
every time you do what is good for you,
it in fact feels good too.
This is undeniable evidence that you do genuinely enjoy
doing the things that are good for you.
On the flip side, Billy,
recall how you feel on the days
you lack that fire within you
and you spend all day doing low-value things,
bored out of your skull,
days where it seems like you ran out of things
to do on that silly contraption of yours
as you melt into a sad, sorry little blob.
During these moments, how do you feel?
- [Billy] Well, I reckon I felt quite rotten,
a little bit anxious as well.
Like I ought to be doing something more important
with my life.
- [Narrator] Yes, Billy.
And is that an enjoyable feeling?
- Not in the slightest.
- [Narrator] Well, Billy, by the sounds of it,
it seems like you genuinely do not enjoy
spending time in this way.
Doing what is bad for you feels bad as well.
- But why does it feel just so gosh darn unappealing
to do what I need to do before I do it?
- [Narrator] Ah, Billy,
you've asked the most important question of all.
Let me introduce to you the sinister nature of should.
You see, highly ambitious people are rebellious by nature,
wanting to rise above mediocrity and not be a sheep.
This rebelliousness means we don't like it
when somebody says, "You should do this."
When an ambitious person
hears authoritative language like this,
they tend to do the opposite.
- I don't let anyone tell me what to do.
- [Narrator] We know, Billy, you are very strong and cool.
But as you know, just like finally writing that paper,
what we think we should do
is often what we want to do anyways.
It actually feels good to do what we need to do.
So telling ourselves we should do it
is no help at all, is it?
What would you rather do, Billy?
What you should do or what you want to do?
- I want to do what I want to do.
- [Narrator] Yes, Billy.
And what if it is the same thing?
What should you call that thing to make sure you do it?
- I don't get it.
- [Narrator] Goodness gracious, Billy,
you are so close, son.
All I'm saying is that you don't have to play
this silly little game with your mind anymore.
You can simply do what you want.
- I can?
- [Narrator] Yes, Billy.
- I can do what I want.
- [Narrator] Billy?
Billy, wait.
(gentle orchestral music)
(transition whooshing)
(gentle orchestral music continues)
(transition whooshing)
(cash register rings)
(gentle orchestral music)
(gentle orchestral music continues)
(electric static hissing)
(electric static hissing continues)
(VR headset crunching)
(electric static hissing continues)
(electric static hissing continues)
- Hello?
Are you still there?
- [Narrator] Ah, Billy.
Nice to see you again.
Are you having fun?
- I don't feel so good.
- [Narrator] Well, Billy, what happened?
- You said I could do what I wanted, so I did what I wanted.
- [Narrator] And how did it feel, Billy?
Do you feel good now?
- I just-
- [Narrator] Do you feel good
now that you've put more time into that thing?
- You said I could-
- [Narrator] Circling the lamp like a good little moth,
trying to drink the light,
but your wings grow heavy as you flitter and flutter,
alone in the dead of night.
- What?
(narrator clears throat)
- [Narrator] Sorry.
Billy, don't you see?
You are confusing your true desires in life with compulsion.
Companies all around the world
spend billions upon billions of dollars every single year
to make things seem enticing on the surface.
But these things make you feel worse
after having done them instead of better.
Doesn't sound very enjoyable to me.
You see, Billy, they are traps of compulsion.
But if you can identify these traps, you can avoid them.
It's quite simple, Billy.
You get it now, don't you?
Let's go back to Frank, who you admire so much.
Frank is able to properly identify
what activities are truly fulfilling.
He recognizes the difference between compulsion
and genuine satisfaction.
He fills his time
with things that make him feel good as a person.
He knows that draining five hours
into a manufactured entertainment contraption
actually doesn't make him feel good,
despite what the marketing might say.
So it's not that Frank has less fun, he actually has more.
More satisfaction, more self-assurance, more happiness.
When you have this proper context, when you see the truth,
then you can simply do what brings you happiness
and fulfillment through and through.
Reflect on what these things are for you and your life
and dive into them fully, guilt-free,
free from the burden of fruitless moral imperative.
You will naturally want to do the things
you originally thought you only should do.
You'll begin to realize that you don't need more willpower
to be like Frank.
Willpower has nothing to do with it.
It's simply living with clarity, with truth.
When you do what you want and what you want feels good,
you will know that you have unbrainwashed yourself.
It will feel better to be you.
The world is simply a better place
when people aren't so confused about what makes them happy.
Do you understand now, Billy?
B, where?
Oh, Billy, you are capable of so much more.
(transition thuds)
If you found yourself enjoying this video,
then do me a favor and hit that Like button.
Because when you hit the Like button,
the algorithm blesses me,
and it shoves my bald head into other people's homepages,
helping them out, which also helps me out.
So it's just a win-win for everybody involved.
And while you are at it, you might want to grab
the Inaction Is A Slow Death merchandise
before it's all gone.
We might not have your size anymore.
And once it's gone, it's gone.
For now, thank you so much for watching,
and we'll catch you in the next video.
- Yeah, boys, our stock portfolios increasing.
- Cheers!
- Yeah. I love stocks.
- But wait a minute, check out these burgers.
Are you ready? Watch this.
Oh, dude, that's sick. - Cool!
- Dude, there's this new one named Apple
that is like literally, you're not gonna like-
- Yeah, I know, right?
- Not gonna cheer at least?
- Right.
- Oh, fuck yeah.
- Yeah, I know. (indistinct)
(everybody laughing)
Damn.
(cameraman laughing)
- [Cameraman] I actually really like how Billy.

Related Songs