TJP's The Current

Jon Sanchez | Lead Jellyfish

Host Jon Sanchez shares practical frameworks for thriving in uncertainty, managing information overload, and finding calm in constant change. Three episodes weekly: personal reflection, educational deep dives, and current events analysis. Learn to flow with life's currents instead of fighting them. Learn to Find your Chill out here in The current!

Episodes

  1. 11/05/2025

    The Rhythms of Engagement (S01E12)

    You check your phone. Again. Then your email. Again. Then the news. Again. Each time hoping for something different. Each time feeling a little worse. But what's the alternative? Never checking? Complete disconnection? In this first combined-format episode of The Current, Jon Sanchez explores one of the most powerful concepts in information hygiene: the rhythms of engagement - finding your sustainable pulse and pause with information. Jon shares his personal burnout story from constant connection and his journey to discovering a more sustainable approach - not endless consumption or complete disconnection, but intentional rhythms of engagement and recovery. Discover the science behind why rhythmic engagement works, from neuroscience research on cognitive load to attention restoration theory. Learn the Four Rhythms Framework - daily cadence, weekly wave, monthly cycle, and seasonal shift - that creates a complete system for sustainable information consumption. Get practical guidance on designing your own personal rhythm based on your unique needs, constraints, and preferences. Address common challenges like workplace expectations, social pressure, and the fear of missing out. Plus, get a simple but powerful Pulse-Pause Experiment to try this week. This isn't about restriction - it's about liberation. It's about reclaiming your attention, energy, and agency in an information environment designed to capture and keep them. New episodes every Wednesday.

    35 min
  2. 10/27/2025

    Pillar 1 Reflection - The Journey Through Crisis (S01E10)

    In this episode: Just over five weeks ago, we began a journey together to understand the information epistemic crisis - why it's so hard to know what's true, why we can't agree on basic facts, and why information feels overwhelming. Today, we pause to reflect on that journey, celebrate how far we've come, and prepare for what's next. The Journey So Far: Week 1: Introduction to the epistemic crisis and The Jellyfish PhilosophyWeek 2: Sitting with confusion and exploring truth vs. trustWeek 3: The exhaustion of verification and filter bubblesWeek 4: Navigating different realities and motivated reasoningWeek 5: Intellectual humility and historical perspectiveWhat's Changed For Me: Jon's personal reflection on how this understanding has transformed his relationship with informationThe difference between intellectual understanding and lived applicationThe challenges that remain despite greater understandingThe unexpected gifts that have emerged from this journeyWhat We've Built Together: Understanding why we can't agree on basic facts (truth vs. trust)Recognizing why verification is exhausting (the system changed)Seeing how echo chambers form (algorithms plus human psychology)Understanding why smart people defend wrong positions (motivated reasoning)Discovering why saying "I might be wrong" is strength (intellectual humility)Learning how we've survived this before (historical perspective)The Milestone Moment: Completing Pillar 1: The Information Epistemic CrisisWhy understanding the problem deeply mattersHow this foundation will support the solutions to comeA celebration of sitting with complexity when most can'tLooking Ahead: Preview of Pillar 2: Information HygieneHow we'll transition from understanding to doingThe practical tools and frameworks coming in the weeks aheadThis Week's Practice:Complete the "Pillar 1 Integration" exercise at jellyfishphilosophy.com - a guided reflection on how these concepts apply to your life. Coming Next:Wednesday's episode will synthesize everything we've learned into your personal epistemic framework - a complete system for navigating information uncertainty

    18 min
  3. 10/22/2025

    Historical Epistemic Crises: What We Can Learn from the Past (S01E09)

    You think this is the first time humanity has panicked about information chaos? In 1938, Americans thought Martians were invading Earth—because of a radio broadcast. In 1517, a monk with a printing press triggered religious wars across Europe. In 1960, how two men LOOKED on television changed who became president. Every major communication revolution has created the exact chaos you're experiencing right now. And every single time, we survived. In This Episode: Join Jon on an energetic journey through four major information crises in human history. This isn't heavy philosophy—it's storytelling with purpose. Each crisis reveals the same pattern: disruption, chaos, panic, adaptation, and ultimately, survival. Discover how societies adapted when: The printing press democratized information and destroyed the church's monopoly on truthRadio broadcasts couldn't be distinguished from realityTelevision made image matter more than substanceThe internet and social media created infinite competing realitiesThe Four Crises Explored: The Printing Press (1450s-1600s) - How mass-produced books led to religious wars, then the EnlightenmentWar of the Worlds Panic (1938) - When radio was too new for people to tell fiction from newsTelevision Era (1960s-1970s) - How moving images changed politics and trust foreverViral Hoax Era (1990s-2020s) - From chain emails to "fake news," and where we are nowThe Pattern (Repeated Every Time): Stage 1: New technology democratizes informationStage 2: Old gatekeepers lose control, everything feels unreliableStage 3: Society fractures, panic sets inStage 4: New literacy develops, standards emergeStage 5: Stability returns, crisis becomes historyKey Insights: "We are currently somewhere between Stage 3 and Stage 4. And that's actually good news—because we know what comes next." "The printing press crisis lasted over a century. Radio and television took decades. The internet is maybe 30 years old. We're still early in the adaptation phase." "Every medium eventually develops credibility markers, ethical guidelines, and evaluation frameworks. We're currently in that trial and error phase." Six Historical Lessons: Chaos is normal during information transitionsAdaptation takes time (decades, not years)Literacy is learned, not innateStandards emerge through collective trial and errorWe don't go back, we move forwardThe crisis feels permanent until it doesn't This Week's Homework:The Historical Hope Exercise - Research one past information crisis and see how convinced people were that civilization was ending. Then look at what actually happened. Find three things that give you hope. Resources and historical timelines at jellyfishphilosophy.com Why This Matters: After four weeks of exploring why our current information environment feels overwhelming, this episode offers something rare: perspective and hope. Not false optimism, but historical evidence that humanity navigates information chaos and comes out stronger. If you're feeling overwhelmed, cynical, or worried we won't survive this—this episode is medicine. Next Monday: We reflect on everything we've learned in Pillar 1. Then Wednesday, we synthesize it all into your personal epistemic framework before moving to Pillar 2. The Current podcast - Navigate information chaos without losing your mind. New episodes Monday and Wednesday. Based on The Jellyfish Philosophy by Jon Sanchez.

    25 min
  4. 10/20/2025

    Intellectual Humility In A Certain World (S01E08)

    If you've ever felt like you lost an argument even though you had the better point, this Float is for you. In a culture that rewards certainty and punishes doubt, intellectual humility feels like weakness. But what if the strongest people you know are the ones willing to say "I might be wrong"? This week, Jon reflects on what it means to hold beliefs firmly enough to act on them, but lightly enough to change them when you encounter better information. In This Episode: Join Jon as he explores the courage it takes to practice intellectual humility in a world screaming for certainty. Through personal stories and cultural observations, discover why changing your mind isn't flip-flopping—it's wisdom. You'll hear about: The fail-fast methodology and how it applies beyond software developmentA powerful social media moment that demonstrates humility in actionWhy "news was news" before it became entertainmentThe cost of tribal epistemology on our ability to update beliefsFive questions to examine your beliefs with genuine curiosity Notable Quotes: "Intellectual humility is holding your beliefs firmly enough to act on them, but lightly enough to change them when you encounter better information." "The best response to attacks on your character is living in a way that makes those attacks obviously false." "Real strength is saying 'I'm going to follow the evidence even if it leads me somewhere uncomfortable.'" Key Concepts: Fail-fast methodologyIntellectual humility vs. weaknessTribal epistemologyLocus of controlStrategic resource allocationThis Week's Practice:The Belief Examination - Five questions to help you hold your beliefs with both confidence and humility. Not to abandon what you believe, but to understand why you believe it. Find the Belief Examination worksheet at jellyfishphilosophy.com Why This Matters: We've spent four weeks understanding the epistemic crisis. This week marks a shift—from diagnosing problems to developing the mindset needed for solutions. Intellectual humility isn't just a nice idea; it's the foundation for everything that follows in Pillar 2. If you're tired of conversations that go nowhere, if you're exhausted by certainty culture, if you want to be the person who models something better—start here. Next Wednesday: We explore historical information crises and discover we've faced information chaos before. Spoiler: We survived every time. The Current podcast - Navigate information chaos without losing your mind. New episodes Monday and Wednesday. Based on The Jellyfish Philosophy by Jon Sanchez.

    18 min
  5. 10/15/2025

    The Psychology of Motivated Reasoning: Why Smart People Believe Wrong Things (S01E07)

    What if you're wrong about something important right now, and your brain won't let you see it? Not because you're stupid. Because of how human cognition works. Monday's Float explored the pain of loving people in different information realities. Today we explore WHY - the psychological mechanisms that make smart, good people end up believing incompatible things. What we explore: The research: Dan Kahan (Yale): Identity-protective cognition and why smarter people are MORE polarizedJonathan Haidt: Moral foundations and why groups apply different frameworksDaniel Kahneman: System 1 vs System 2 thinking and the backfire effectReal examples across domains: Business decisions (my own motivated reasoning disaster)Sports fans watching the same play differentlyReligious belief systemsFlat Earth believers (including those who died trying to prove it)Key insight: Intelligence doesn't protect you from motivated reasoning - it makes you BETTER at it. Smart people are better at constructing convincing arguments for what they already want to believe. Seven signs of motivated reasoning in yourself: Instant certaintySelective skepticismAsymmetric standardsFinding reasons vs seeking truthEmotional reactions to evidenceCan't articulate the other sideNever changing your mindEight strategies for better thinking: Separate identity from beliefPre-commit to criteriaSeek best counterargumentsConsider opportunity costsConsult your past selfUse disagreement as dataCreate accountability structuresPractice small updatesThis week's practice: The Belief Audit - pick one strong belief and honestly assess whether you're truth-seeking or position-defending. Episode Length: 31 minutes w/ Bonus Song Bonus Song: Riding Elephants Part of The Current podcast - educational deep dives every Wednesday on navigating the information age.

    32 min
  6. 10/13/2025

    When Your People Are in Different Realities (S01E06)

    When Your People Are in Different Realities For the past three weeks, we've been exploring the information epistemic crisis from a structural perspective: how algorithms work, why verification is exhausting, how echo chambers form, why we can't agree on truth anymore. Today gets deeply personal. We're talking about what the epistemic crisis actually feels like in your relationships. In your family. With people you love. In today's family and friends network you are almost certain to have someone you used to interact with where that interaction has changed. Eggshells may now be part of your every interaction. Today we explore a personal experience within my own network where this has impacted how we interact as a unit, and how we've all had to make changes to accommodate this new dynamic. But perhaps more importantly, how we're able and allowed to grieve over the loss of those connections. The person is still there. The love and respect is still there. But the connection - the ability to think through the world together - that's gone - or at least, not the same. And it hurts in a way that's hard to explain to people who haven't experienced it. The Grief is Real This isn't just "different opinions." This is loss. The loss of: Being able to think togetherMutual respect for each other's thinkingShared concern about the same thingsTrust in each other's judgmentThe future you imagined with this personAll of these losses are real. And they deserve to be honored, not minimized. Why This is So Hard It threatens your identity (relationships are part of how we understand ourselves)It feels like betrayal (even though it's not)It's invisible to others (no one can see this grief)There's no resolution (it doesn't get better with time like other grief)You're helpless (you can't make them see what you see) What Doesn't Work I share what I've tried that hasn't worked: What Might Help Not solutions - because there aren't easy solutions. But approaches that have helped me find some peace: The Grief Acknowledgment Practice: Pick one person you're experiencing this division with. Write down (just for yourself): What am I grieving about this relationship? Be specific.What do I still have with this person? What's still good?What's one small way I can connect this week that doesn't require shared reality?Connection doesn't always require conversation. Sometimes it requires shared experience, shared silence, shared presence. This episode is for you if: You've lost the ability to have real conversations with someone you loveYou feel grief over a relationship that's still physically there but emotionally distantYou're tired of surface-level conversations when you used to go deepYou wonder how someone you respect can believe things that seem so wrongYou're carrying invisible grief that nobody else seems to understandWednesday: We explore the psychology of motivated reasoning - why smart, good people believe things that seem obviously wrong to us. We'll look at confirmation bias, identity-protective cognition, and how our tribal affiliations shape what we can even hear. It won't solve the problem. But understanding might lead to compassion. grief, relationships, family division, political division, epistemic crisis, information bubbles, echo chambers, connection, boundaries, emotional wellness, mental health, family dynamics, disagreement, shared reality

    27 min
  7. 10/08/2025

    Echo Chambers & Filter Bubbles (S01E05 )

    Chapters: 00:00 INTRO HOOK 01:00 PART ONE: THE CATCH-UP 03:03 PART TWO: ECHO CHAMBERS VS FILTER BUBBLES 07:02 PART THREE: THE CONSEQUENCES 09:52 PART FOUR: BREAKING OUT 15:31 PART FIVE: THE JELLYFISH APPROACH 17:58 CHALLENGE & THE WEEK AHEAD 20:52 BONUS SONG: FALSE OATH (Rock) "Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles: How Algorithms Create Parallel Realities" Try this: Open your news app. Look at the top 5 stories. Now ask a friend (especially one who thinks differently) to do the same. Compare what you see. I bet you're looking at different realities. This week on The Current, we dive deep into how algorithmic personalization creates echo chambers and filter bubbles—and why most of us don't even realize we're in one. You'll learn: The difference between echo chambers (your choice) and filter bubbles (algorithmic)How we got from shared reality to parallel information universesWhy algorithms optimize for engagement, not accuracyThe attention economy and how your feed is designed to keep you scrollingHow personalization works and why it's invisibleThe real consequences: epistemic closure, false certainty, radicalizationThe Bubble Check: How to recognize you're in one8 practical strategies for breaking outFeaturing insights from: Eli Pariser (who coined "filter bubbles")Tristan Harris (former Google designer on the attention economy)Practical Tools: The Bubble Check (5 diagnostic questions)Weekly Perspective RotationThe Bubble Comparison ExerciseReality Check Network buildingAlgorithm manipulation strategiesKey Insight: This isn't a conspiracy. It's a business model. Social media companies optimize for engagement because engagement equals revenue. Echo chambers are just the side effect. This Week's Challenge:Find someone in a different information bubble. Ask them: "What are the top three news stories in your feed?" Compare with yours. Don't argue—just observe the difference. Episode Length: 25 minutes This is The Current—educational deep dives every Wednesday on navigating the information age. This Week's Challenge: The Bubble Comparison Exercise Find someone in a different information bubbleAsk: "What are your top 3 news stories right now?"Compare with yoursDon't argue—observe the differenceAsk: "What's one source you trust that I should check out?"Actually check it out Key Quotes: "You think you're seeing 'the news.' You're actually seeing 'your personalized engagement-optimized content stream.'" "Different bubbles are talking about completely different 'everyones.'" "You're in a bubble. I'm in a bubble. We're all in bubbles. That's not a moral failure—it's the architecture of modern information systems." "Awareness creates options. Understanding your bubble is the first step to navigating beyond it." Expert References: Eli Pariser - Filter BubblesTristan Harris - Attention Economy / Center for Humane Technology What's Next: Monday's Float: The emotional experience when people you love are in completely different information realities. The grief of division and how to maintain connection. Wednesday: The psychology of motivated reasoning—why smart people believe things that seem obviously wrong. Episode Tags: echo chambers, filter bubbles, algorithms, social media, personalization, epistemic crisis, media literacy, critical thinking, information bubbles, Eli Pariser, Tristan Harris False Oath Lyrics Serpent tongue Words like knives Twisting truth Shattering lives Whispers bloom Secrets kept Control is all False oath! Believe nothing False oath! Information is power False oath! Trust no one Blind faith Empty shell Crush the weak Cast them to hell Shattered bone Written & Produced by: Hopskotia Music

    25 min
  8. 10/06/2025

    The Exhaustion of Verification (S01E04)

    Chapters: 0:00 Intro Hook 00:50 Part One: The Verification Spiral 06:05 Part Two: Why Verification has become Impossible 09:25 Part Three: The Emotional Toll 11:47 Part Four: Permission and Practice 15:24: Closing 17:47: Bonus Song: Drift With The Tide The Setup: Last week on The Current, we explored the epistemic crisis—why we can't agree on what's true anymore. We talked about the distinction between truth and trust, how algorithms create parallel realities, and why verification has become so difficult. Today gets personal. We're talking about what it FEELS like when you try to verify information in 2025. The Story: I tell you about my three-hour verification spiral—trying to check one simple statistic and ending up with seventeen tabs, contradicting fact-checkers, paywalled research, and more confusion than when I started. It's a story you'll recognize because you've lived some version of it. What We Explore: The Verification Spiral: Starting with a simple questionThe citation mazeContradicting fact-checkersThe meta-problem of verifying your verificationThe emotional aftermath of failureWhy This Has Become Impossible: Volume: Too much to verify, information moves too fastAccess: Paywalls, technical language, unavailable sourcesExpertise: Can't really assess sources outside your fieldSophistication: Misinformation has gotten really goodMultiplication: The more you look, the more complicated it getsThe Emotional Toll: The anxiety of uncertain groundThe guilt of not doing enoughThe cynicism that comes from repeated failureThe loneliness of uncertainty in a certain worldPermission Structures: I offer five permissions that might feel radical: You don't have to verify everything - It's literally impossible, so stop feeling guilty"I don't know" is a complete sentence - You don't owe everyone your opinionTrusting imperfect sources is okay - Build trust consciously, not perfectlyChanging your mind is strength - Update beliefs when new info emergesMental health > maximum information - Sanity matters more than completenessThis Week's Practice: The Verification Triage - Before trying to verify something, ask: Does this require action from me?Do I have the time and expertise to verify this properly?Will verifying this improve my life or decision-making?This isn't intellectual laziness. It's strategic wisdom. The Deeper Practice:Sitting with uncertainty. Practicing being okay with not knowing. Holding questions lightly instead of gripping them tightly. Key Quotes: "Three hours. No answer. Just exhaustion. And I felt like a failure." "Having access to information and being able to verify information are two completely different things." "'Do your own research' has become almost a joke—not because research is bad, but because genuinely rigorous research is impossible given time, access, and expertise constraints." "Uncertainty, in our current information environment, is often the most truthful position available." "You're not stupid. You're not slow. You're not failing. You're demonstrating more intellectual honesty than most people." What's Next: Wednesday: We explore one of the biggest reasons verification is so hard—algorithmic echo chambers and filter bubbles. How the algorithms create parallel realities and what you can actually do about it. Episode Tags: verification exhaustion, information overload, fact-checking, epistemic crisis, digital wellness, mental health, uncertainty, intellectual humility

    20 min
  9. 10/02/2025

    Truth, Trust, and the Epistemic Crisis (S01E03)

    S01E03 - The Current: "Truth, Trust, and the Epistemic Crisis" Chapters: 00:00 Intro Hook 00:37 The Setup from Monday 02:11 Part One: The Old World vs. The New World 06:18 Part Two: Why This Creates Such Division 10:02 Part Three: Real-World Application 15:12 Part Four: Connecting to the Framework 19:35 Bonus Track - Riding the Tides - Physalis Mix The Setup from Monday: On Monday's Float, we talked about sitting with confusion and why "not knowing" is a perfectly rational response to our current information environment. We explored the discomfort of uncertainty and gave ourselves permission to say "I don't know enough about this yet." But I made you a promise: we were going to explore something that would change how you see information forever. Today's Deep Dive: Here it is in one sentence: We're not having a truth problem. We're having a trust problem. Think about the last time someone said they didn't believe a news story. Were they saying the facts were verifiably false? Or were they saying they didn't trust the source? Most of the time, it's the latter. In this episode, we unpack exactly how this happened and why it matters so much. What We Cover: Part One: The Old World vs. The New World How information ecosystems used to work (gatekeepers, shared sources, institutional trust)The flaws of the old system (and they were real)What the internet and social media fundamentally changedThe attention economy: why algorithms prioritize outrage over accuracyAI and the death of "seeing is believing"The personal algorithm problem: why you're not seeing "the news" – you're seeing YOUR news Part Two: Why This Creates Such Division The trust spiral: how we end up in different realitiesThe verification paradox: why "doing research" often makes things worseMotivated reasoning: Dan Kahan's research on how intelligence can make bias worse (yes, really)When experts disagree: how do we decide which experts to trust? Part Three: Real-World Application Recognizing your own information environment (the week-long tracking exercise)Source triangulation: finding sources you wouldn't normally trustThe Thanksgiving Table scenario: why Uncle Bob isn't crazy, he's just in a different information streamThe 48-hour rule for major events (and why hot takes age poorly)Decision-making framework for when you actually need to form an opinion Part Four: Connecting to the Framework How acceptance, adaptability, and mindfulness naturally emerge from these practicesWhy this isn't passive – it's strategically powerfulHow the Jellyfish Philosophy helps you navigate epistemic uncertainty Bonus Track: Riding the Tides - Physalis Mix

    24 min
  10. 09/29/2025

    Sitting With Not Knowing (S01E02)

    What if the confusion you're feeling isn't your failure — but the system's overwhelm? In our hyper-connected world, we're drowning in incomplete information, contradictory narratives, and the crushing pressure to have instant opinions about everything. Breaking news spreads faster than facts. Six different explanations emerge before investigations even begin. And somehow, we've made it shameful to simply say, "I don't know." In this deeply personal episode, host Jon Sanchez shares his own struggles with uncertainty—from navigating excruciating medical mysteries to processing the chaos of our current information ecosystem. Through intimate storytelling and practical wisdom, he reveals why embracing confusion might be the beginning of genuine understanding. You'll discover: Why your brain feels overwhelmed by today's news cycle (hint: it's not designed for this)The hidden gift of "beginner's mind" and why experts often get stuckA simple practice that transforms anxiety-inducing uncertainty into wise engagementWhy "I don't know" is actually the foundation of wisdom, not weaknessThe truth? You don't have to process every piece of information. You don't need opinions about everything. You don't have to know it all to be wise. This episode is your permission slip to sit with uncertainty—and discover the profound strength that comes from honest not-knowing. Perfect for anyone feeling exhausted by information overload, pressured to have takes on every topic, or wondering how to stay sane in an insane news cycle. Featured Practice: "Sitting with Not Knowing" - a week-long experiment in curiosity over certainty 🎧 Part of "The Current" podcast series - navigating life's turbulent waters with jellyfish wisdom 📖 Resources & guided exercises: jellyfishphilosophy.com Duration: 15 minutes + 2 min bonus Song "Shatter the Mirror" Best listened to: During quiet reflection time, walking, or when feeling overwhelmed by current events "Confusion isn't failure. It's honesty. And honesty is the foundation of wisdom." - Jon Sanchez

    17 min
  11. 09/17/2025

    TJP's The Current: The First Cast

    Feel like you're drowning in information chaos? Constantly reacting to news, social media, and life's endless demands? You're not alone, and you're not broken - you're just swimming in currents no human brain was designed to handle. In this launch episode of "The Current," host Jon Sanchez introduces a revolutionary approach to modern overwhelm: The Jellyfish Philosophy. Drawing from 25 years of navigating tech industry upheavals, personal challenges, and information overload, Jon shares how three simple principles - acceptance, adaptability, and mindfulness - can transform chaos into harmony. What You'll Discover: How algorithmic feeds create personalized realities, making intelligent people see completely different worldsThe difference between strategic response and emotional reactionThree core principles inspired by Jellyfish YOU can applyWhy your confusion isn't personal failure - it's environmental overwhelm Meet Your Guide:Jon Sanchez isn't your typical self-help guru. He's a tech executive who's been through industry consolidations, startup failures, personal crises, and chronic illness - all while learning to stay calm in the storm. Author of "The Jellyfish Philosophy: Embracing Tranquility for a Stress-Free Life," he's distilled decades of navigating constant change into practical wisdom anyone can use. What Makes This Different:Unlike other podcasts that either ignore current events or get lost in them, "The Current" teaches you to engage with modern chaos without losing your peace. You'll learn to process information strategically, respond rather than react, and find harmony in an information-saturated world. Over the coming months, we'll explore three foundational pillars: Pillar One: The Information Crisis - Why we can't agree on truth anymore and how to navigate epistemic chaos with wisdom rather than anxiety. Pillar Two: Information Hygiene - Practical strategies for staying informed without getting overwhelmed, including source evaluation and mental health protection. Pillar Three: The Jellyfish Framework - Deep applications of acceptance, adaptability, and mindfulness to relationships, work, parenting, and every area where life gets complicated. This Episode Is Perfect If You: ✓ Feel overwhelmed by constant information streams ✓ Find yourself constantly reacting to news and social media ✓ Want practical wisdom for uncertain times ✓ Struggle with anxiety about world events you can't control ✓ Seek ancient wisdom applied to modern problems ✓ Are tired of fighting currents you can't change Key Takeaway:The goal isn't to have perfect information or control every outcome. The goal is to navigate imperfect information with wisdom, grace, and strategic thinking. Learn to flow with life's currents instead of exhausting yourself fighting them. Ready to stop fighting the ocean and start flowing with purpose? Subscribe now and join the schools of jellyfish learning to navigate modern chaos with ancient wisdom. Resources Mentioned: "The Jellyfish Philosophy: Embracing Tranquility for a Stress-Free Life" by Jon Sanchezjellyfishphilosophy.com for show notes and additional resources

    10 min

About

Host Jon Sanchez shares practical frameworks for thriving in uncertainty, managing information overload, and finding calm in constant change. Three episodes weekly: personal reflection, educational deep dives, and current events analysis. Learn to flow with life's currents instead of fighting them. Learn to Find your Chill out here in The current!