Dear Hank & John - 4: What's in a Name?
Episode Date: June 29, 2015Will a nickname change who I am? Are the bees OK? Should I go to a fancy college? And is it OK if you don't feel as sad as you think you should? Hank Green and John Green have answers!If you're in nee...d of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams and an exclusive weekly podcast at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
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How do I welcome to Dear Hank and John?
Goor as I prefer to think of it, Dear John and Hank.
The podcast where we answer your questions,
provide dubious advice and give you all the
weeks news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
But first, John, do you have a poem for us?
I do have a poem for you. I don't know, so I was thinking that we're kind, John, do you have a poem for us? I do have a poem for you.
I don't know.
I was thinking that we're kind of like missing a segment from the podcast where we just
where I ask you how you're doing.
I find out what's, you know, how things are.
So how are you?
Oh, well, I was expecting a poem and now I have a question being thrown at me.
I'm great.
I mean, a poem will come in the fullness of time.
I just wanted to know if there's anything going on with you,
if you're up to anything.
Well, I'll say I want to talk about myself,
but I know it's polite to let you talk about yourself first.
When this podcast comes out, I will be in France,
and I will have been in France for about a week.
And hopefully I'm having a good time there
on a little mini vacation that started out with work with the nice I stayed in France.
Congratulations to the future you on getting to visit France. I was just in France very recently as part of you know I.
It occurs to me that lots of people don't know that we are not just professional podcasters with the podcast sponsored by shirt tails shirt tails, the 1980s children's cartoon
that changed lives, including ours.
No, we are not just professional podcasters,
we also have other jobs, Hank is an internet entrepreneur,
vlog brother, crash course, co-created,
Lizzie Bennett Diaries, which one an Emmy,
SciShow, lots of things.
What else do you do, Hank?
I can't remember.
VidCon, DFTBA Records, I make videos with you on this channel called Vlog Brothers Crash Course.
I mentioned several of those things, but clearly you weren't listening to me.
Yeah, so mostly I am the tale to Hank's comment, but I also have this other job, which is
that I write books.
Or I guess, maybe I should say that I used to write books since I haven't written one
in more than three years.
And one of the books that I wrote, Paper Towns, is being turned into a movie that comes
out in a few weeks. And so I have been traveling constantly. So I actually
spent 22 hours in Paris, Hank. I left the hotel precisely twice. Mostly, I was in Europe
for five days. I spent almost all of my time in hotel basements, which are lovely. I mean, some of the lovely hotel basements that Europe has to offer doing press junket stuff,
but I did leave the hotel twice in Paris once to visit the dentist because no visit to Paris
is complete without a dental appointment.
And then once to do a signing that was supposed to be at a bookstore, but turned out to be just
sort of in a large public square. But from what I could gather, Paris is lovely. It has some of the very best hotel
basements that you can find in all of Europe. So enjoy your time in France. That's what I'm
saying. Can I get to the poem part of the day?
Yeah, you can tell us about now. It sounds really exciting. And I look forward to your new blog
hotelbasementreviews.com. Oh my god, there's some great ones. Which reminds me by the way that Dear Hank and John is sponsored
by Paper Towns. Paper Towns, the new movie coming out in July 24th in the US and other times
elsewhere in the world. This is a poem that by Walt Whitman, it's designed to make Hank angry
and it's called When I Heard the Learned Astronomer. When I heard the Learned Astronomer, when the
proofs, the figures were ranged in columns before me, when I was shown the charts
and diagrams to add, divide, and measure them. When I, sitting, heard the astronomer
where he lectured with much applause in the lecture room. How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick, till rising and gliding out, I wandered
off by myself in the mystical moist night air, and from time to time, looked up in perfect
silence at the stars.
Eh, you know, that doesn't make me angry.
I just think that what Whitman could enjoy both of those things in different ways.
Those are both wonderful things.
I like listening to Learned Astronomers myself and looking at the stars in the mystical
mists or whatever he said it was.
Well, I think it's the debate between whether there's value to mystical experiences and whether
science can damage that value.
This is a poem where I disagree with Walt Whitman.
He has a few of those, because I do believe that science only improves our sort of like
mystical relationship with the stars.
I mean, the more I know about the stars, the more kind and massive and overwhelming they become.
That's very close to the feeling of the mystereum, the tremendous fear and awe and overwhelm
and overwhelmness that a company's experience is with the divine or with the radically other
or whatever.
But I still love the poem.
It's a funny thing about poems, Hank. Sometimes I disagree with, with the argument of a poem, but I find it's
language and, but I find it's a language and rhythm so compelling that I can't, I can't
help but like it, you know? Yeah. Oh, absolutely. Except for the part, except for the part
where I don't really get poetry,
because it, well, I actually, I like it a lot more
when you're reading it to me.
I have a hard time reading poetry
because it doesn't have the normal line breaks,
and it's taken me long enough to be able to read words
the way that they're normally presented
that when they're presented differently.
I have a very hard time with reading comprehension,
and I've just completely lose track of what's going on.
So I think that all poetry should be read to me by someone,
but preferably John Green, if that's an option.
Can we get to the questions?
Yes, yes, of course, Hank.
Liv asks, do you, John, and Hank,
are you worried about the disappearance of the bees
and do you know of anything people can do
to help save the bees?
This is obviously more of a Hank question than a John question,
but I just want to jump in real quickly here in St. Liv.
As far as I can tell from my backyard,
the bee situation is, I'm not concerned
about the bee situation in my backyard.
Is this a moment where maybe anecdote is not
the singular of data?
And that's sometimes just because you see bees doesn't mean there isn't a larger B issue.
There's a larger B issue. There is definitely a larger B issue. The B issue that we're having is
mostly an economic sort of commercial B issue. So there are Bs all across America that are driven
around to crops and they are planted outside of the crops
during the pollination season,
and then brought to new crops
when it's time to pollinate those crops.
And the B farmers who do this are paid to do it,
and then they, at the end of the year,
also have honey that they can sell.
And it is a job that people have.
It's not so much a wild B problem. It's more of a commercial B problem, and it is a job that people have. It's not so much a wild bee problem.
It's more of a commercial bee problem.
And it is a huge problem because commercial bees,
in addition to providing jobs for those
left-leabie keepers and honey for all of us,
also produce all of the crops by pollinating them
and crops that don't get pollinated
do not turn into food and that's bad. Andinated do not turn into food, and that's bad.
And they do not turn into seed for next year's harvest, and that's bad as well. And colony
crops disorder is basically a huge widespread, unknown phenomenon in which the beehive just suddenly
dies, and that is happening to a huge percentage of commercial beehives. And the reasons for this are not well-known,
though they are being increasingly well studied,
and likely have something to do with sort of a combination cocktail of pesticides
that should not and are not being sprayed on the crops that bees are currently pollinating,
but maybe being sprayed on nearby crops or
maybe just be still on those crops after longer than we thought they were sticking around.
And the way that all of these things are combining, maybe, this is still, you know, like being
studied, is basically lowering the immune system of the hive as a whole and allowing
for outside pathogens to get in. And the pesticides aren't what's killing the bees.
It's just sort of a general lowering of the health of the bees that then allows for pathogens
to kill the bees.
This is a problem, but the good news is that it is an economic problem and capitalism
is good at solving those problems
because it says, oh God, we need to continue selling our crops and having our bees. So we need,
like, so research is easy to fund study and colony collapse disorder, which is why there is lots
of research being done on it. The fingers crossed is that it will get figured out and we will modify
or cease our use of certain pesticides and that will allow for bees to not collapse in
their colonies. And that is a thumbs up. The feeling that bees in general are in trouble
You know, the feeling that bees in general are in trouble
is not really what's happening. It's more of a humans are in trouble situation.
And we're okay at solving those
because we like being us
and we like selling things to each other.
Hank, one of the things I think about a lot
is this new word that's emerged in the last few decades
the Anthropocene and Thropocene.
I don't even know how to say it for sure. You know what word I'm referring to though? Yeah, I think Anthropocene. Yeah, the Anthropocene and Thropocene, I don't even know how to say it for sure.
You know what word I'm referring to, though?
Yeah, I think Anthropocene.
Yeah, the Anthropocene, the idea that we're living
in this new geological age
where suddenly one species, specifically humans,
is having an outsize impact on kind of every facet
of life on earth.
And we're still getting used to this power that we've suddenly had since
the Industrial Revolution to make or break Earth. It freaks me out to think about, but
we do need to start thinking about it. And I think when we live in denial of the fact
that we're living in this new geological age when humans can make a break, lots of different things on Earth, choosing which species survive, choosing what
the carbon levels of the planet are, etc.
Yeah, when we kind of put our heads in the sand and just pretend that we don't have that
power, I think it's very dangerous indeed.
Indeed.
The interesting thing about the anthropocene is that it is often stated as the age in which
humans are the dominant power, but in fact what it is more like is it is an age in which
future geologists would be able to tell a sharp difference in things like climate and
species diversity in the geological record and be able to say like this is marks
a new beginning of something new. We are the cause of that new beginning, but the anthropocene
will continue to exist for theoretically a very long time. And that age may not have
humans as its dominating factor for that whole time.
It may just be that humans were the thing that changed, like that created that defining
moment.
And then over time, it was, you know, the Anthropocene continued to exist, but either one
humans stopped existing.
And the Anthropocene would continue, because future geologists will look at it and say
this age continues, and species diversity did not come back
and carbon levels did not decrease.
In fact, even without people,
carbon levels will probably continue to increase
because as things get warmer,
carbon dioxide production increases,
it's a feedback loop, it's bad.
And, or it could be that we will have less of an effect,
but we will continue to see
the, those effects continue, despite the fact that we are having less of an impact
on the earth in the future through, hopefully, technology and intelligence.
But the changes that we have made will continue.
They are not something that we can turn back the clock on.
Yeah, this is a great comedy podcast.
We've got another question, Hank.
This one's from Samantha.
She writes, dear John and Hank,
would you rather know what happens after you die
or know everyone's secrets?
I would not.
Maybe like to know either of those things.
Well, yeah, no, obviously in a perfect world,
you wouldn't know either of those things.
So I see.
So I think you agree with you.
I have no desire to know what happens after I die
and I have no desire to know everyone's secrets.
But I do have a preference.
And I think that's what the question is.
What is your preference if you were forced to choose
between the two, what would you choose?
And for me, that's easy.
I would want to know everyone's secrets.
I think that this question is in fact,
those are both good things.
And phrased it in that way,
I think some people would like to know
both of those things, but maybe not.
We are just old, stodgy, crimudgens,
and both of those things sound awful,
but to many people that might sound lovely
to know what happens after you die.
Yeah, I find your philosophical rambling is interesting,
but again, Samantha's question is a value-free,
would you rather know what happens
after you die or know everybody's secrets?
And to me, that's a, that,
Yes, I would rather know what happens after I die
because knowing everybody's secrets would be crushing and awful. No, no, that, that, Yes, I would rather know what happens after I die because knowing everybody's secrets would be
crushing and awful.
No, no, no, no, no, everyone's secrets would fall.
And it would completely, it would completely
remove my ability to be a human in the world.
No, first off, knowing everyone's secrets
would be incredibly helpful and useful
in terms of navigating the world
and you would quickly become a billionaire
and then you would be able to do something about malaria.
So it's a clear win to know everyone's secrets.
You just exploit and abuse other people's secrets to get billions and billions of dollars,
which you then use to fight global poverty.
Obvious.
For instance, I could probably use knowing everyone's secrets just to bet on, you know,
like to bet on future you know, like to bet
on future sporting events or whatever
because I would know who's secretly injured.
Um, versus knowing what happens after I die,
that's going to ruin the rest of my life
because I'm just going to be too focused on it.
I'm gonna be thinking about it too much.
What I wanna be thinking about is what is happening now
while I'm alive that I can do
to abuse other people's secrets to become
a billionaire who then cures cholera. Ah, I, uh, yeah, I think that I would be very little affected by
knowing what happens after I die. Well, but you also think you do know what happens after you die.
I do think I know what happens after you die. You're right. So I think that might be slightly
biasing you here on the question. Um, anyway, long story short listeners, try to find out everyone's secrets.
What's next, Hank?
We have a question from Loyal.
Loyal says, dear Hank and John, I'm going to college soon, so I have a lot of choices
to make.
Not only must I decide what to study, but I'm also toying with the decision to start going
by a nickname.
I really do like my name, but I hate introducing myself
because my name is also an adjective
and people think I'm describing myself
plus I'm socially awkward.
And even though loyal is a boy's name,
I'm a girl, and et cetera.
Beyond that, I've started to question
if changing what people call me will change me as a person.
So my question is this, how much does a person's name
shape their identity?
And do you think I should start going by a nickname in college?
I have always gone by a nickname. My name is William Henry Green and they call me Hank.
My parents called me Hank from the day I was born, which is a fate that I would never suggest a parent
bestow upon their child because it results in the bank often saying,
this check is not for you and me saying,
oh please, please, please give me my money.
But I think that loyal question is very interesting,
specifically the-
First off, can we just pause and note
that loyal has a fantastic name?
Yes.
And in my opinion, it's not a boy's name or a girl's name.
It's just a great name.
Correct.
Top notch name.
So, I mean, first, shout out to your parents oil or whoever named you because that's that's some good naming right there
I
I I have a lot of a background in the field of choosing your own nickname because I tried to do it throughout middle school
I don't know if you know this about me Hank. No, yeah, so I
Wanted a nickname, but nobody would give me a nickname because like nobody was even kind of aware of my existence.
So they didn't know me by my name or by my nickname.
So my nickname only existed in my head.
But in sixth grade, I tried to get this nickname going shrimp.
I really wanted people to call me the shrimp or just shrimp.
Because I was a smaller person.
And it was something of a derogatory nickname,
but it was at least a nickname.
At least then I would be a nicknamed person
instead of just a kind of non-existent person.
So I really tried hard to establish this identity of shrimp.
I would ask people to call me shrimp.
I would behave in ways that I thought were shrimp-like.
By the way, I do like shrimp.
I think they're fantastic.
Animals are the animals?
Yes, they're, if I got are the animals.
I just love the idea of watching middle school
John act in shrimp-like ways.
Whatever that means, I'm picturing it in it.
I'll tell you Hank, as you can probably imagine,
it was not a stretch to be shrimp-like.
I mean, I wasn't trying to act like the animal shrimp.
I was trying to act like the slang word shrimp,
which was kind of slang for a person who was maybe weaker
and a little bit less masculine and et cetera.
So it wasn't that much of a stretch for me.
And then, when I was in high school,
I, again, I desperately wanted a nickname
and I never got one until the last couple was in high school, I, again, I desperately wanted a nickname and I never
got one until the last couple years of high school.
And I really loved having a nickname and in some ways I miss it.
Like I loved being known for something other than my given name.
And I've always been fascinated in my fiction by the relationship between like given identities
and chosen identities.
Like a lot of my characters
have nicknames, but also, you know, generally I'm fascinated by the way that in Adolescence
and the first years of adulthood, we're trying to find ourselves, and part of that is like
finding a name for ourselves.
So in high school, I was called Cuffs, KUFFS,-F-S, because one time I said that Christian Slater,
who was an actor, never made a bad film.
And it turned out that he had been in a cop buddy comedy
named Cuffs, in which his buddy was a police dog
named Cuffs with a K.
And I really enjoyed being called Cuffs,
even though it was like making fun of this stupid thing
that I'd said.
So anyway, well, I think it's totally cool to have a nickname. I think it's cool. I think you
have a great name as it is, but I also think that if you want to have a chosen identity
as well as your given identity, then that's wonderful. We are the things that we're given.
We are many of the things that we're born with, but we also get to choose a lot about what
we are. So I think it's awesome. Go for it. Hank, do you have any nicknames suggestions for loyal?
No.
I think that it's difficult to give yourself a nickname because it's always going to be
awkward to introduce yourself as something that you're not used to introducing yourself
as.
And I don't think so.
I could totally do it.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, but you're John Green and you're very confident in an adult.
So there's no, no, no, no, no. I could have done it on my freshman in my freshman year of college.
Like somebody walks up to me, they asked me what my name is.
Instead of saying, John, I say, I don't know, I'm trying struggling to think of a nickname for myself.
You got anything?
Cuffs.
I say, oh, yeah, my name is Cuffs.
Cuffs green.
Good to meet you.
Actually, you're right.
That would have been difficult just because Cuffs was such a specific nickname.
But if it had been a nickname, like, I don't know,
Daisy Pants.
And people were like, I'd just been like,
oh, my name's Daisy Pants Green.
People, I think people would have accepted that over time.
Yeah, no, I think they'll accept it.
I just think it would be difficult for me to do personally.
The thing I want to say to loyal is that it is actually
really valuable to have a weird
name.
Like there's something like as a hank, there's something nice about having a name that's
pretty unusual.
And like people remember my name, which is good.
People do not remember like Catherine's name, for example, because it's normal, or, and people, I think, feel like,
remember me more. And being remembered is advantageous in general in life. So I think that there's,
I think there's a lot good about loyal. And in fact, a little bit sounds like it already is a
nickname. And that might be part of what makes it awkward to introduce yourself as that people
think that you're giving them a nickname or a, you know,
something that you've chosen for yourself
and you feel weird about that.
But I think that comfort in one's identity
is one of the greatest things that we can achieve
as people and it is very difficult to achieve.
So whatever you can do to achieve it is worth attempting.
So Hank, ultimately what you're suggesting is that loyal,
remain loyal to loyal.
Oh dang.
The nice thing about when you talk for like three minutes in a row
is that I get to think of puns.
Ah, yes, that's, that is really how puns happen.
You just have to let a friend monologue for long enough.
We've got another question.
This one is from Emma.
Emma says, dear Hank and John,
there are a lot of accredited colleges online.
Lots of these places let you get college credit
for taking tests like AP or CLEP exams.
I'll be a high school senior next year.
I've been home school since kindergarten,
so I'm used to being self-taught
if I can get a college degree using one of these resources
along with things like Crash Course, sponsor of today's episode of Gear Hanging John for
Test Prep.
Why should I go to a brick and mortar school?
Is the real life experience worth it?
Well, I think that there is a real value to in-class room education.
I think that there is a value to person to person physical interaction.
And I know that that sounds like a double entendre. And it is. This is a comedy podcast.
But I do. I think that there's something valuable about classroom experiences,
about IRL classroom interactions, and about IRL experiences with really, really excellent professors.
That said, there's also lots of other things
that are valuable about college that you can get online.
So when Hank and I were designing Crash Course,
we imagined it as an educational material
that didn't try to replace classrooms,
as opposed to everything else that was being done,
which sort of was trying to replace classrooms,
because I think we both really believe
in the classroom experience and classroom education
and in the power of teachers.
That said, I think that there are lots of values
to online education, and even
if for me at least it's not as complete an educational experience, it is still very much
a good and valuable educational experience. So that is my way out of answering your question.
I also, this probably is just in my mind because we were just talking about identity, but
I think that college is a great time to sort of come to better understand yourself.
And that is most effectively done
by interacting a lot with peers
and being able to have these intense years
of peer interaction and friend interaction.
And there are certainly other ways to find that as well.
But for a lot of people,
you know, higher education is really the time when you get to hang out with people who are adults,
but who are not busy or like stuck with big other life things like, you know, marriage and
kids and jobs and stuff. So it's, you know, those relationships
are extremely valuable in my life,
and I know that they are in a lot of other people's lives,
and not just then, they were very valuable then,
but they continue to be valuable now.
So there's good stuff about college.
There's good stuff about having four years or so
where you are really concentrating on personal growth,
not just academically, but also all the rest of the ways.
Plus, it's usually where you meet your college girlfriend
who will later crush your soul.
So that's not without value.
That's John's experience.
I got married to mine.
Well, I mean, maybe she's just gonna crush your soul later
than all relationships and Hank either in breakup divorce or death.
Oh, well, God, I love this comedy podcast.
Um, why on earth did you make this a comedy podcast?
All of our negative reviews in the iTunes store are like perfectly enjoyable, but not particularly funny.
Anyway, I don't mean to focus on the negative, but it's also the only thing that I know how to focus on. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha will print and why? uh... smurf
maybe something maybe a smurf well you can get smurfs
maybe an action figure
but i think what i like print a smurf when you can like a shirt tail shirt tails
the nineteen eighties children's television program that sponsored today's
episode of dear john and hank what was i think you're absolutely right now i
would i think i might print a snork
all got our heads i have such fond memories of the snorks.
In fact, when I was thinking of that shirt-tailed joke,
I was trying to think of the snorks.
It's funny because Henry watches a show,
Octonauts, that is today's snorks.
Like, he will remember it the way I remember the snorks,
but I really remember the snorks as the first
and in some ways most important narrative experience I've ever had.
That's really weird.
I think for me that was a show called Cities of Gold, which was not popular and not on
for a long time, but I was really obsessed with it.
I'd get up every morning at like seven in the morning on Saturdays to watch it, and I had
a huge crush on the cartoon girl.
Well, I think Josiah's question has been answered,
but not in the way any of us expected it.
No, you didn't answer, you want to snork as well?
No, I don't think I would print a snork.
I think the first simple object that I would print
would probably be a mechanical hand
that could sign my name for me,
because that's something I spend a lot
of my leisure time doing.
That might not be qualifying as simple.
What about an Xbox controller?
Because mine is always breaking.
Is that simple?
No, I'm just kidding.
Of course, my first 3D printing project would be a Bobblehead version of Hank.
I'm no dummy.
I just want a Bobblehead Hank in my life.
I have a Bobblehead you in my life already.
I'm looking at him right now.
He looks a little weird,
because you have a Bobblehead Hank or a Bobblehead John.
Yeah, yeah, Bobble John over there.
He looks a little weird,
because his head fell off once
and now it doesn't quite rest correctly.
So your chin sort of like leans on your,
like that your right shoulder kind of,
and it's like, you okay there buddy?
And it's like a I had a long night.
Yeah, my other big issue with the Bobblehead Johns,
which I think were produced in 2008 or 2009,
is that I'm a little concerned that Bobble Johns
look significantly younger and thinner than current John,
and it hurts my feelings sometimes
to look at my Bobblehead self, which I'm doing right now.
I'm just like, who's that handsome young, large-headed human?
Yeah.
That's enormous.
That's not used to be that guy.
You've got to be OK with the skin that you're in, John.
Oh, man, that's good.
That's good dubious advice, Hank.
We've got another question.
This one is from Leah.
She writes, I'm heartless. Am I a bad person for not being completely devastated for longer than a couple days about the death of someone I loved so much?
This has been constantly on my mind and I would really appreciate an answer.
This sounds like a John Green question to me.
Leah, you are fine. There are lots of ways to grieve and there are lots of kinds of grief and
judging your grief or other people's
does not do you any good.
You are not heartless.
If you were heartless, you would have an already, you would already know.
It's perfectly possible that your grandmother with a long and full and rich life
and that you feel very grateful to have had the time with her that you had and that you've integrated the sadness
that you feel about her death into your life and that it's part of your life, but not
a consuming part.
And that's not unhealthy.
You're okay.
I promise.
I wasn't that sad when my grandma died and I was very close to her as well.
So yeah, does that make me sound heartless, Hank? Now I'm concerned. And I was very close to her as well. So, yeah.
Does that make me sound heartless, Hank? Now I'm concerned. Now I'm feeling exactly
what Leah felt. No, you do not sound heartless. And I thought your answer was very good.
I think a lot of times I like to judge our grief for other people's grief, but yeah, your
grief is yours and it's okay. It really is. It's also okay if in three months you find
yourself suddenly extremely sad about that loss. Like, one of the difficult things that I go through a lot is like judging my own feelings and
making my life worse by judging them. So I'll be like, I'm sad. And also I'm angry at myself for
being sad. And also I'm angry at myself for being angry about being sad. And then,
that I'm pretty far away from where I should be, which is I'm sad.
And that happens sometimes.
Yeah.
Great answer, John.
Not as good as your answer about the bees, which was full of information that I did not
know.
Can I tell you a funny story about bees, Hank?
You want to tell me a story about bees?
If you don't mind, do you have a second?
I do.
So, my son is in preschool and I got an email a few weeks back and in all capital letters,
the subject line of the email was the B incident.
And then the email itself was like, the first sentence was, I just want to reassure all parents that our students and heroic teachers are all fine.
And I was like, what the hell has happened?
And it turns out that two students and three heroic teachers were stung by a nest of ground
bees in the playground on the campus of the school itself.
But to read this email, you would have thought
that there had been a catastrophe
on the scale of the lucetaneous sinking,
that like not since the Titanic itself
has humanity struggled with such a catastrophe.
And then the last sentence of the email was,
I would again like to thank all of our heroic teachers.
So yeah.
That's life in the contemporary American preschool
these days.
That's just good management.
She's making everybody feel good.
The B incident.
This question is from Bailey, Bailey asks,
dear Hank and John, if given the choice, would you rather know virtually
nothing but be incredibly happy? Or would you rather know
everything but be incredibly miserable? Oh, Bailey.
We seem to like answering these hypothetical questions, Hank.
I've never taken a ton of value in hypothetical questions. I'm not sure how our
podcast became the hypothetical question podcast, but I'll answer this question.
This is a, you know, it's a bit of a Faustian dilemma, right?
Like, there's the character, not just in Gert's Faust or Dr. Faustis or anything, but also
in the little mermaid.
There's always a character in a Faustian dilemma
who makes a deal with the devil in exchange for knowledge.
And then of course the deal with the devil comes full circle.
And as a result of your knowledge,
you have to suffer some terrible fate,
possibly including hellfire.
And then on the other hand, you've got the great examples
of the sort of happy, happy,
but ignorant people of, I don't know, say John Barnes is novel, lost in space.
You can take a drug that makes you increasingly happy as you know less and less.
You become happier and happier.
I don't know, Hank, what would you rather do?
I would rather know everything but be incredibly miserable because then other people could be
happy because of my knowledge that everything is a lot of things. And I think you probably
would be incredibly miserable if you knew everything, but if you knew everything, then
you could make a lot of people's lives better, and that would be an okay trade-off.
Yeah, that's a really good point actually because you could probably cure cancer if you knew everything. Yeah.
Yep, you could. Yeah, I mean knowing everything would be so incredibly valuable, not just to the human species,
but to the universe as a whole, to like the idea of life,
that you would almost be a bad person,
not to take that choice, you know,
not to make that sacrifice.
On the other hand,
the one question is,
if you are incredibly miserable,
are you able to help anyone at all
because of your incredible misery,
or do you become Dr. Manhattan,
and you're just like,
I'm incredibly miserable and I understand how to make
people happier but why even bother?
That's a great question because if you're so miserable,
yeah, yeah, on the other hand,
I don't think that being happy is particularly
the point of being alive.
Right, yeah.
I remember I was dating a girl once.
I don't know why this is the ex-girlfriends episode of Dear John and Hank,
but I was dating a girl once, and she was talking to me about how I was very unhappy
and I should be more happy.
And I realized in the conversation that I don't value happiness particularly highly.
I value productivity and connectiveness and attentiveness.
And I certainly value, you know, love and loving relationships and everything.
But I don't know that I really seek happiness as such.
Maybe I should. Maybe I've been underrating happiness this whole time.
Now I'm having an existential crisis in the middle of a comedy podcast.
That's not unusual here.
Dear Hank and John, I value happiness fairly highly myself.
I think that it is a lot of the point of life and I think that it guides you in good ways.
What is happiness really?
Well, now I'm starting to think that not only have I been undervaluing happiness all of
this time, but that in the last like five or so years,
I've secretly been valuing happiness more than I thought,
which is maybe part of the reason why I've been doing
more work that I enjoy and generally feeling better
about being alive.
Now I'm thinking that I've been under appreciating happiness,
but I've also, I've been secretly appreciating happiness.
It's getting too meta-hank.
We've got to go to another question.
I feel like maybe dear, dear Hank and John
has become really good talk therapy for you.
It is becoming good talk therapy for me.
Could we talk about how I was bullied in middle school?
That's the number one subject of my therapy sessions.
Also, actually Hank, while dear John and Hank
is becoming a therapy session for me, I want
to share with you this question from Julia, that is of great personal interest to me.
Dear John and Hank, ever since I was a seven or eight, I've had a couple strange habits.
I talk to myself, wear my nostrils, and sometimes bulge out my eyes, not all at once, without
even realizing what I'm doing.
I've noticed people being really creeped out by it
and expressing concern for my mental health
because of it as well.
I pretend I don't care, but I do.
It's annoying and it's something I really hate about myself.
I will soon start my junior year of high school,
which means I will soon start the college looking
application process.
And I don't want to have these really creepy things
sort of hanging over me for the rest of my life.
Any advice on how to stop?
Well, Julia, this is a question that I can relate to.
Maybe in a way that isn't going to be helpful to you.
But first, I want to say that dear John and Hank
is a podcast full of dubious advice.
And that if you want actual good advice,
you should definitely talk to a health professional.
In this case, a mental health professional, which
I would probably recommend anyway, just because this seems
to be something that's really upsetting to you
and really difficult for you to deal with.
When I was in high school and before that
and well after that, I had these composions, I guess.
I have OCD and one of them was actually talking to myself,
like I needed to talk to myself very quietly
and in a way that I think ultimately
wasn't that distracting to people around me,
but I did need to do it sometimes.
I don't know if that's what,
similar to what you're going through.
I don't know if these feel like things that you have to do.
I don't know if they're ticks or compotions or just habits
and it's impossible for me to know.
But I guess what I would say is that,
A, I'm sorry that you feel so uncomfortable
with these parts of your life,
and B, it's really, really difficult to know what's going on
when you're kind of stuck inside of your own head,
and that's why I think it is really useful
to talk to someone for whom this is an area of expertise.
Yeah, and if it annoys you,
that is the main thing to be concerned about.
If you are perceiving the annoyance of other people,
you may be perceiving their feelings incorrectly.
And oftentimes, I have friends who have weird fun habits,
and I just think of that as how they are,
not as something that is, you know, annoying
about them.
All right.
So, we are about to head into the news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon, but first, we have
a correction from a couple podcasts ago.
One of our sponsors was the Orlando Solar Bears, which I referred to as a defunct international
hockey league team from the 1990s.
This was, in fact, a true statement
because the international hockey league team,
the Orlando Solar Bears, does no longer exist.
But, and the part of the reason for that
is that the international hockey league
does no longer exist.
But there is an American hockey league team
that started in 2012 called the Orlando Solar Bears
that took over the legacy of the IHL's Orlando Solar Bears.
And they do exist.
The Solar Bears are a current team,
and they play at the TD Waterhouse Center,
or whatever the arena in Orlando is now called.
I have not lived there in a while.
And you can go watch them.
They have an attendance of roughly 6,000 people per game,
so there are seats available.
The Orlando Solar Bears are a real thing.
They just weren't for about a decade.
Did they really sponsor our podcaster?
Was that part not?
No, they did not actually give us any money.
No one gives us money.
Did they sponsor our correction?
No, a person on Twitter told me this.
That's disappointing.
Thanks to the Orlando Solar Bears, however, for re-existing.
They are one of the great sporting memories of my childhood speaking of great sporting
memories.
Let's talk about the news from AFC Wimbledon this week.
Hank, as always, it's an incredibly exciting week for AFC Wimbledon.
They just drew their first round, the capital one cup.
The capital one cup is a competition in which all the teams
in the football league play each other.
So in the first round, AFC Wimbledon will be playing Cardiff City.
It's fascinating matchup for Wimbledon for a couple of reasons.
First off, our manager, Neil Ardley, used to play for Cardiff.
Also used to play for Wimbledon.
And he began his coaching career there.
But also Cardiff City is a great, more recent example
of the same process through which AFC Wimbledon kind of came to exist.
So Hank, as you know, there was a team that played in Wimbledon for 120 years called Wimbledon
FC that was moved by, I try to be as objective as I can here and not biased, but it was moved by greedy, actively evil owners to Milton
Keans, where it became the filthy ponskum currently known as MK Donz.
That left the community of Wimbledon without a football club, so they formed their own
football club, which is entirely owned by its fans, and worked their way up from the ninth tier of English football all the way back into the football league, back into
being a full-time professional team, so that there is now again full-time professional
football for that community to support.
And this is evidence to me that like football clubs are not ultimately businesses owned by
people, They are ultimately
communities. Cardiff City has gone through some of this as well because they were bought
by a guy named Vincent Tan who unfortunately for him looks like a 1970s bond villain, but
also has been acting like a 1970s bond villain. He changed, their cardiff has traditionally been known as the Bluebirds, and he changed the uniform color
to red from blue and started trying to affiliate them
with dragons instead of with bluebirds.
And Cardiff City fans started to boycott games,
and they would sing where Cardiff City will always be blue,
and they would only wear their old blue uniforms to games
and they refused to buy the new red jerseys.
And eventually, the owner of Cardiff City capitulated
and this will be the first season opener game
in several years in which Cardiff City will be playing in blue.
So congratulations to Cardiff and their
supporters on getting to play in blue and getting to be the club that they have historically
been and saying no to their owner. But I hope that you get crushed by the Mighty Machine
that is AFC Wimbledon on August 11th.
That was some really fascinating news from AFC Wimbledon, John.
I am riveted to my seat.
I only wish there.
I can't tell if you're kidding.
We're more.
But we have to get on to the Mars do's.
Well, there is more.
But we have to, but.
Thanks for mentioning it.
There is more.
Calum Kennedy, AFC Wimbledon's left back
has signed a new contract after a recent return to
form. He's, you know, he had a difficult second half of the season, but, but I, he's
showing a lot of promise. He's still a young player.
Calum Kennedy, he's going to be an AFC Wimbledon player again next season. I'm sorry, was there
news from Martin?
But we have to get on to the Mars news. Thank you for your AFC Wimbledon news, John.
Six scientists who were taking part in an eight-month-long Mars simulation mission have been released and are now
part of human society again. They spent eight months in a dome together, a very small area with very
limited privacy and every time they went out of the dome to do science on the slopes of Manoloa in Hawaii,
they had to wear spacesuits. Upon emerging from the dome, they said the things that they missed the
most were their families, peaches, and the feeling of wind, which they did not experience for eight
months, which I can imagine is somewhat upsetting. But they were eight people or six people selected for their
temperament and their scientific knowledge to be a good team
and to be able to spend eight months together and not go nuts.
And they succeeded.
And we now know that that is possible.
Now they're going to do it again.
And at this time for 12 months, I believe where they will have people
basically participating in human experiments to see how people handle living together in close
quarters, being able to shower for only six minutes a week and not go nuts and still be able to do interesting science.
That sounds like my idea of hell.
It does sound awful.
It does sound awful.
You know, colonizing Mars is all fine and good until I can only shower for six minutes
a week.
Let me ask you a quick question about that, though, Hank.
How often were they allowed to take nice comfortable soaking baths? Because I can handle only six minutes of showering
a week but I'm gonna need eight to ten really chest deep baths.
The very hot water. One of the most fascinating things about this is that one of the crew members, Jocelyn Dunn, when she walked out,
she was a little bit afraid to leave the enclosure
without her suit on.
Wow.
And after doing it for eight months,
she was like, can I really go outside?
And is that okay?
Wow.
Which is just terrifying.
Yeah.
I mean, Hank, I don't like to enjoy the news from Mars,
but that actually was interesting,
primarily because it was the news from Earth.
Well, I appreciate your appreciation.
So that's all the news from the world's greatest
fourth tier football club and also all the news
from the solar systems fourth rock from the sun,
which brings us, I'm afraid,
Hank, to the end of our podcast for the day.
What did we learn?
Oh, gosh.
I should probably take notes, because I always forget what we learned.
Well, we learned that the snorks were the greatest television show of the 1980s.
Yes.
We learned that John and I disagree about the implications of knowledge about the afterlife.
And we learned that Hank is very knowledgeable about bees.
I wonder what Hank isn't knowledgeable about.
It's kind of frustrating sometimes.
Well, I stand in front of a camera and am paid to talk about science.
So, even when I don't know about things,
someone has written a script and then I read the script
and then I do know the thing.
And we learned that against all odds,
the Orlando solar bears are still a thing.
Yeah, that's very exciting.
I suggest all our landans get your butts to those games.
Sounds like a good time.
All right, go Solar Bears.
Thank you for listening.
We'll be back again next week.
You can send your questions to deerhankinjohn
at gmail.com or visit us online.
I'm at John Green on Twitter and Hank is at Hank Green.
Yes, thank you to Nick Jenkins for editing this podcast.
And as we say in our hometown, don't forget to be awesome.
Get to be awesome.
you