Speaker 2
So actually this is a good opportunity for me to talk about the bigger meeting with me personally, and why it's been so helpful. There was a jordan peterson lecture that i listened to hat had a lot of impact on me. And i reallise jordn peterson's controversial. There's some things she says that i think ar ridiculous, as other things he says i think like, well, this is very enlightening. And one of the lectures he gave was about humans and ar very unique propensity to aim. And so that's why i use the word aim very, very, very specifically, because it's not even about hitting the target. It's about, in the same way that we have evolved to not stand out in the group, like the whole lynchpin lizard brain conversation that we had, wehave also evolved from our thinking, our emotions, and even like our eyesight and even how our bodies work, to know exactly what it is that ike we are focused on. If you look at your eyes, like quite litter the inside of your eyes, it's your brain paints these pictures to make it seem like your vision is a wats the word, like tother side of you, your perifrial vision is ot at you. But in reality, you're only ever looking at one very specific focal point at a time. It's the same reason why kids start throwing things at our early age. And this is really interesting. Like even the world wide culture, for cultures that, if it was ten thousand years ago, didn't even know each other existed, we all celebrate this idea of having good aim.