Humans with Josh Levent

Josh Levent

The podcast for people who want the world to slow down and become more human. Josh Levent creates a space for empathetic connections to people on the other side of the planet through biographical interviews of ordinary people. Take a moment to catch your breath, hit pause on life and curl up on a sofa with Humans in your earbuds. We all need to take a moment to nurture our inner child, heal our wounds and enjoy the real-life stories of others. With his break-out podcast, Josh creates a Gezelligheid (sense of cozy togetherness) for all of us. If you’ve ever felt a sense of sonder (the sudden realisation that every stranger has a life as complex as your own) you’ll find that Humans makes you feel less alone. For more information visit joshlevent.com

Episodes

  1. Playful Curiosity, Exploring the World Headfirst: Meet Christofer Lövgren

    10/12/2021

    Playful Curiosity, Exploring the World Headfirst: Meet Christofer Lövgren

    Christofer Lövgren calls himself the irrevocably curious d******d. Born and raised in Sweden, he grew up playing with Legos, Gameboy and Trading Cards. When he was 5 he picked up the guitar from his granddad and fell in love with it. He only gave it up at age 19, when his workout addiction led to extreme pain in his hands and forearms making guitar-playing impossible. Luckily he’s now again at a place where he can play guitar and is even playing with a band. Christofer is someone who loves conversations. He told me that exploring the outer world doesn’t interest him much, because he is so fascinated by his own and others’ inner worlds, which he can tap into through conversations. One of the places he does this is on his podcast, Do Explain, which he started 2 years ago to explore the work of David Deutsch and Critical Rationalism more broadly. At school, Christofer loved maths when he had fun textbooks until 6th Grade. At that point the serious textbooks with fewer interesting pictures and colours, and a separate book for doing the work made him lose interest. He now says that anyone having fun is learning, even if just on an inexplicit level. While we also talked about serious and difficult topics related to mental and physical health, at the end, we had a lot of fun recording this episode and you will hear us laughing a lot. And at the end that encapsulates Christofer’s personality completely for me. He is deep, and a great conversationalist for serious topics, but he will always make it fun as well. On today’s podcast: How Christofer go introduced to the guitar by his grandfatherHow he managed to rack up 7 concussions in his life so farHow he used to hide on the toilet so he could spend more time playing on his GameboyHow he used to torture his Spiderman action figuresHow he loved math when it was fun, but lost interest when he got the more serious textbooks for teenagersThe tragedy of thinking that learning and fun are opposites in some wayHow he learns more in a weekend on YouTube than he did in 3 months at UniversityHow the most intensely curious and intelligent people often also have a silly side and can be so fun to be aroundReading Harry Potter in childhood and not much fiction sinceNever feeling like you belongBecoming self-conscious at age 12, which lead to a weight-lifting addiction at age 16Having a panic attack trying to decide how to split up a workoutBurning out at age 19 from working out too much, not sleeping enough and generally being in a highly stressed stateSpending 3-4 years looking for ways to workout that didn’t feel like it was destroying himselfThe identity crisis of losing the two things he loved most (guitar and working out)How Christofer decided that if he was going to be miserable, he would be a miserable drunk and began drinking whiskey which he hatedThe difficulty of treating the consequences of his burnout which doctors shrugged awayDeveloping a panic disorder from the untreated traumaHow things can be extremely traumatic for you personally even if it doesn’t look that bad from the outsideHow he hit rock bottom while in a foreign country in a new relationship Finding help from functional therapists 5 years laterTrying freedom business entrepreneurshipLearning how to separate pain from suffering and enjoying life even when things don’t always feel greatHow he decided to go to university at age 25 to get a degree in cognitive scienceHis interest in how we make progress We bond over our love of David Deutsch and share how we discovered his booksLinks Twitter: https://twitter.com/ReachChristoferYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/DoExplainWebsite: https://www.doexplain.org/

    1h 29m
  2. Becoming Yourself Again: Meet Kai Christen

    09/12/2021

    Becoming Yourself Again: Meet Kai Christen

    Kai Christen was a shy, sensitive child, who found school stressful. It’s something you might not see in him when you meet because he radiates confidence, extraversion and a sense of peace with himself. Kai was born and grew up in Aargau, Switzerland. In high-school he intentionally tried to be cooler but never felt successful at it. At age 16 he discovered personal development through Dale Carnegie and thought “I don’t have to be broken any longer”. Now he doesn’t like that framing anywhere and laughs about the idea of being broken. But pursuing personal development was one of the most important drivers in his life. When Kai went to university he felt like he fit in a lot more. But he still describes himself as a bad student who didn’t pay attention in class, and was more interested in partying. He always found school unengaging and now that he teaches at universities himself he thinks hard about how to make class interesting for his students. I met Kai in 2014 when he was working on his first personal development conference and we quickly became friends and business partners running two conferences together. This conversation was recorded in December 2018 and is finally seeing the light of day. Today Kai runs personal leadership modules at universities around Switzerland, and generally follows his curiosity and passion on new business ventures.   On today’s podcast: How Kai’s mother was smuggled out of Czechoslovakia through the iron curtain when she was a childBeing disinterest in school and obsessed with video gamesHow he was athletic until he became self-consciousThe transformational experience of moving out of home to a new cityBecoming best friends with your flatmatesLearning to be yourself as an adultBecoming a trainer and coachOnly working with people you enjoy spending time withOrganising two personal development conferencesRadical Honesty and distinguishing between what you know and what you think you knowThree Principles and the story of Sydney BanksTiny houses, minimalism, and living between placesMoving to Berlin and failingVolunteering in Lesbos, Greece, during the refugee crisisWhy helping others is the most selfish thing you can do (in a good way)The detrimental effects of news  Links: Kai’s BusinessKai’s InstagramKai’s LinkedIn

    1h 50m
  3. The Big Picture, Connecting the Dots of Experience: Meet Tinashe Mashungu

    04/16/2019

    The Big Picture, Connecting the Dots of Experience: Meet Tinashe Mashungu

    Tinashe Mashungu was born in Harare, the capital city of Zimbabwe, and he has lived all over the country. His father was an agro-economist, and in many ways, Tinashe has followed in his footsteps, though his path has taken him in many different directions. He studied computer science in high school and came to the US to attend Reed College and study physics. After getting a feel for the program, Tinashe switched his major to maths and economics, writing his thesis on structural adjustment in Sub-Saharan Africa. Though he wasn’t able to see it at the time, in retrospect, Tinashe recognises that all of his education, experiences, and opportunities have given him a unique set of skills and led him to where he is today, with the desire and capability to create change in Zimbabwe, in Africa, and in the world. What makes Tinashe human is his drive to keep going and keep learning even when the big picture isn’t visible yet and the passion he has for using technology to accelerate progress in Africa. On today’s podcast: Tinashe’s early life and boarding school experience began the formation of his character He studied mathematics, physics, computer science; he wanted to be an engineer He changed his major at Reed College to study economics At the World Economic Forum, Tinashe showcased his work and started thinking about bigger problems Tinashe wants to democratise energy provision and create energy inclusion in Africa

    37 min

About

The podcast for people who want the world to slow down and become more human. Josh Levent creates a space for empathetic connections to people on the other side of the planet through biographical interviews of ordinary people. Take a moment to catch your breath, hit pause on life and curl up on a sofa with Humans in your earbuds. We all need to take a moment to nurture our inner child, heal our wounds and enjoy the real-life stories of others. With his break-out podcast, Josh creates a Gezelligheid (sense of cozy togetherness) for all of us. If you’ve ever felt a sense of sonder (the sudden realisation that every stranger has a life as complex as your own) you’ll find that Humans makes you feel less alone. For more information visit joshlevent.com