Pod Save America - Offline: Jenny Odell on How to Do Nothing
Episode Date: January 23, 2022This week, Jenny Odell teaches Jon how to unplug and, almost literally, smell the roses. Pulling from lessons outlined in her book “How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy,” Jenny makes... the case that our attention is precious and what we choose to focus it on doesn’t always need to be productive.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The thing that I feel like I've learned in the last year, especially, is that there's like kind of an opposite loop where somewhere in there you break the cycle.
You know, that could be anywhere, really.
Put the phone down, just cut it off.
Yeah.
Compared to like even a year ago, it's like I really I have zero desire to look at the feed of any social media.
I just I actually don't want to.
That's I want to get to that point.
That's my, that's my North Star right there.
I'm Jon Favreau.
Welcome to Offline.
Hey, everyone.
My guest this week is Jenny O'Dell, an artist and writer whose first book became a New York
Times bestseller and something of an aspirational manifesto for this show.
It's called How to Do Nothing, Resisting the Attention Economy.
It should be fairly obvious by now that I have absolutely no idea how to do nothing.
I have never been able to sit still.
I've had a fear of missing out on just about anything since I was a kid.
I've been a workaholic and a political news junkie since graduating college,
and I rarely relax for more than a couple hours. Emily might say a couple minutes. But I picked up Jenny's book this summer
when I was feeling particularly anxious, exhausted, and just burnt out by how much time I was spending
staring at screens, scrolling through bad takes, going from one awful news cycle to the next.
And it completely changed the way I think about how I spend my time.
As Jenny explains in our conversation, the title is more tongue-in-cheek than literal.
Nothing isn't really nothing. It's just not the hyper-connected, hyper-productive existence that
so many of us have become accustomed to. In Odell's view, stepping out of that world isn't
about quitting social media or disconnecting from the internet completely. It's about learning to redirect more of our attention toward the people and places around us.
I found Jenny's perspective especially valuable because she's got a different background than
most of our guests so far. She's an artist and a nature lover who's found offline fulfillment
watching birds or just sitting in a local park. We talk about how her book was a reaction to the
2016 election,
why she thinks that social media news cycles are like sleep deprivation torture,
what it means to resist the attention economy,
and her advice to me on how I can start doing a little more nothing.
As always, if you have questions, comments, or complaints about the show,
feel free to email us at offline at crooked.com.
Here's Jenny O'Dell.
Hi, Jenny. How are you? Good. How are you? I'm good. Thank you for taking the time to do this.
I've really been looking forward to this conversation. I bought your book a few years ago,
but I didn't read it until last September
for one of the very reasons that you wrote the book,
which is that it's become harder for me
to pay attention to anything longer than a tweet.
But, you know, it happens.
But I finally took it on a brief vacation in September.
I left my phone in the hotel room
and then I just found myself
like highlighting full paragraphs of the book.
So I really wanted to thank you for writing it because it's, it's changed the way I think
about how I spend my time. That's awesome to hear. Yeah. You start by telling the story of why you
wrote How to Do Nothing, which was partly a reaction to the 2016 election. Can you talk about
how that reaction led to a book on resisting the attention economy?
Like what was the connection to Trump winning? Yeah, I mean, it kind of started out in a almost
happenstance way in that I live about five minutes away from this municipal Rose Garden in Oakland.
And I found that around that time, I was just without really thinking about it consciously, I was going there pretty much any chance that I could get.
I was teaching at the time, so I had a little bit of a flexible schedule.
But I was just going and kind of like, you know, thousand yard stare, like sitting in the rose garden.
And what has happened? And I, and I think after a while, I started to wonder why I was doing
that and why that felt so different from the rest of my day, a lot of which was like, you know,
doom scrolling, feeling like a lot of anxiety and information overload and not being able to process
anything. And so it kind of just started with that, like, sort of movement from here, you know, where I am in my apartment to this park.
And, you know, the more time I spent there, the more I started to think about how the values that were embodied by this garden were very different as well.
Like, it's, you know, it's volunteer maintained.
It's a space that's very valued by the community, but it's not really productive in the ways that we
would, you know, normally use the word productive. It doesn't, you know, create a profit. You don't
get any results from going there that you could sort of quantify. It just sort of gestures towards
this other kind of value system, other ways of valuing experience, other ways of being like,
I go there, I'm just a person, you know, I'm not a producer of content. I'm not a consumer of content.
I go there, I'm just a person. I'm not a producer of content. I'm not a consumer of content.
And so I just happened to be spending a lot of time there thinking about that. And then I was asked to give a talk at a conference called IO. So I wrote this talk called How to Do Nothing
to give at that conference in the summer of 2017 that is about those things that I sort of thought
about and learned about being in the garden. I did not about those things that I sort of thought about and learned about
being in the garden. I did not expect it to resonate really with anyone outside of that
conference necessarily, certainly not as much as it did. And I also didn't expect it to turn
into a book. That was not my idea. That was suggested to me by someone who was at the
conference. And so, yeah, here I am. And it just came out in Korea.
Wow.
Which is nuts.
So for people who haven't yet read the book, how do you define doing nothing?
Okay, so it's obviously not literally doing nothing. That could be very interesting too,
that you could do that. You know, but I don't necessarily mean, although now during the pandemic, maybe it's different.
I didn't necessarily mean lying on the floor, staring at the ceiling. But I, it's sort of
tongue in cheek, right? It's like nothing is supposed to mean nothing from the point of view
of a very sort of capitalist, cut and dried, you know, objective way of thinking like producing X and Y
results. Kind of to go back to the garden, the maintenance of that garden from the point of
view of producing something looks like nothing. There's so much work that I've learned from being
there. There's so much work that goes into roses all through the year. You have to do all this
stuff. Even in the winter when there's like nothing, it doesn't look like there's anything
going on. And so there's all this stuff that
falls into that category, like care, you know, caregiving, maintenance. I kind of, I have a
fraught relationship with the phrase self-care, but you could put self-care in there as well,
right? So really nothing just means things that don't sort of appear in the value system that we typically have when we talk about productivity or, you know, like producing value.
Well, it also seems like it's defined in opposition to sort of the habits that the attention economy has sort of incubated in all of us.
Yeah, right. Which is, i know the subtitle of your
book is resisting the attention economy yeah definitely i mean i think in the context of the
attention economy it's so reactive right it's like do you like this or do you not like this
do you hate this or do you not hate this and then there's like this other option of like
what if i just wasn't there?
Like, what if I, what if I just walked away from this question? Or what if I thought about it some more and put it in some historical context or something? And what if I talked to a friend
about it? Do I really need to be in this state of constant reaction? Which I think is what I was
feeling around the election was like, I had gone so deep in the sort of the rabbit's fur, right? That I couldn't
get any perspective on, on myself. Like, I honestly think it's a really interesting exercise
even now to like, when you're in that state, just like pretend you're a fly on the wall and look at
yourself. You're like probably in a little ball, you know, and your face is really strained.
I think about this all the time. Sometimes I catch myself because when
I'm like really into Twitter or I'm reading the news and like hours pass, I think like if I was
looking at myself right now, I would just see someone staring at a screen scrolling and my jaw
would constantly be clenched. I do that a lot too, especially when I'm like stressed out and I would look like a,
I would, I would look like a crazy person. Like it's not. Um, so it's like, why do I do that to
myself? I mean, what, what were your, so, so much of this is about social media and the internet,
um, which is what our show is about. Like what were your social media habits? Like when you
first started thinking about, uh, why you should try to change them?
started thinking about why you should try to change them? They were, so they were pretty bad by my current standards. I will say in my defense that I taught digital art at Stanford.
So I had to be kind of aware of things that were happening. And a lot of, you know,
a lot of my friends were making new media work. So we're kind of like in that world.
But I definitely, you know, it would be really interesting to go back and look at like journals from that time because I actually have no idea.
I have no idea like what my screen time was at the time.
But I definitely was feeling like it's like I'm sure many people know this feeling.
It almost feels like you're sick, right? Like you're just like, your heart rate is kind of weird or you're like, you feel
too hot or you just like, it's just bad. It's bad. You feel really bad. And I, it got bad enough
that I think I was trying to feel my way out of that. Like it finally reached a point and everyone
has their point, I think, even if you come back later, but there reached a point and everyone has their point i think even if you
come back later but there is a point where you're like this feels so intuitively bad that i need to
change something it's a little too like either if you've ever eaten too much in a setting or
drank too much like it feels like you it feels fine while you're doing it, but like the second you stop, you just start feeling bad.
You know, it's like there's a hangover effect to using social media that even as you keep scrolling and scrolling and scrolling, it's just like at some point you don't feel very fulfilled as you just keep trying to scroll more and more and more information.
It's like too much.
Yeah.
Yeah.
more and more and more information.
It's like too much.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, this is sort of a weird comparison,
but during the pandemic, I played this video game called Stardew Valley.
It's very popular.
I don't know if you've ever seen it.
I'm not a big video game person, but yeah.
But okay.
So it's, you know, you're like living on a farm
and you have your little farm or whatever,
but the days in the game are seven minutes long,
which means that you always think you have time for another day. Seven minutes, right? It's not
that long. And the game only saves at the end of a day. So if you start a day, you have to finish it
because otherwise you're going to lose everything that you did. And when I started playing it,
my boyfriend was like, you got to watch out. Those days are going to get you. And I had no
idea what he was talking about. And now I do, or I'm like, oh my God, you just always fall into the next one.
And then what was interesting to me was that it's exactly physically, it's the same feeling
that I remember from before. Like, oh, this is just the same thing, but like devoid of like,
maybe like some forms of like terror, but, but in terms of like how it actually just like feels
in my head and like in my body,
it kind of really reminded me of that. And I was like, oh, this really is just like the hamster
wheel, like dopamine thing. Like here I am. It's the same. I'm trying to figure out when it all
changed because just before this interview, I was thinking about when the iPhone first came out,
one of my close friends got it first and I was asking him about it. And it was like,
what's the big deal with this thing
is you know different than a typical cell phone you know and he said we will never be bored again
he goes that's how I can explain the iPhone he's like now that you have an internet in your pocket
whether you're standing in line whether you're waiting around whether you're by yourself there
will always be something to do and at the time I don't like being bored. No one likes being bored.
And so I thought, this is perfect. What a wonderful invention that I'm never going to
be bored again. And now it's like a careful what you wish for kind of thing. Because now,
what do you think the difference is between doing nothing and being bored,
which has more of a negative connotation?
Well, actually, it's funny you should say about being bored.
I guess maybe this is like one way of illustrating it.
I was recently given something that I would describe
as something where you're never bored.
And it's a jeweler's loop.
I don't know if you've ever seen a jeweler's loop.
It's like a little, I wish I had it so I could show you,
but it's a little 10x lens that folds out. And people use it to look at moss. It's like one of, I wish I had it so I could show you, but it's a little 10X lens that folds out.
And people use it to look at moss.
It's like one of the common uses for it.
So a friend of mine who had one and was like raving about it and saw how much I liked using his, he got me one for Christmas.
And you're just going to have to take my word for it or find somebody who has a loop.
Because you could look at anything.
for it or find somebody who has a loop because you could look at anything like you could look at like this tissue or I don't know like anything like you know moss obviously but also like rocks
or your blinds it is just endlessly fascinating like it's not going to be what you think and it
has this sort of element of surprise that I think we're all very addicted to right which is like
you have to get really close to something with the loop. And then all of
a sudden it like pops into focus. And it's like this plant that you thought was smooth. It's like
really hairy or something, you know? And I remember when he gave it to me, I was like, I'll never be
bored again. I'm like, it's exactly what you're describing. But I think the difference is, I mean,
there's a lot of differences. Like one is it fills me with like wonder instead of dread.
Yeah.
And another really big
difference is it's i'm looking at something that's actually in front of me um not something that is
you know being said by a stranger far away out of context right like one is hyper contextualized
it's in front of your body like in your eyes and the other one is really not yeah and i think that
those like lead in two very different directions. Well, that brings up, you know, you argue that the internet
and the idea of social media aren't inherently bad. What do you think is bad about them? Or what
has become bad about them? I mean, there's obviously, I mean, I think like the biggest thing is the whole sort of business model of social media runs on constant maximum engagement, which already is a problem. platforms are structured, but also just kind of unspoken rules that people kind of learn about what gets engagement tend to favor certain types of expression, like outrage. There's a lot of like,
I find like mic drop kind of statements, you know, it's not really inviting dialogue. It's like every
statement has to be a mic drop. Yeah. And, and so it just a lot of louder for the people in the back kind of stuff.
Yeah.
And I, and I'm like, I'm, I'm so sick of that.
I'm just, it was making me hate myself because it was like, I think that's what I realized.
Like, you know, in changing my habits was like, you're going to feel the way that, that
people treat you, right?
Like you hang out with friends who, who treat you the way that you want to be seen.
So if you're spending all your time reading statements
that no, they're not personally addressed to you,
but you're reading them that way.
And they're all talking down to you.
And they're all like, you know,
written in this kind of like sanctimonious shaming tone.
Like you're going to develop so much shame.
That's what happened to me.
I mean, there's so many, you know, problems with it,
but I think that's a really big one. And unfortunately, I think that just kind of emerges from like the structure of the the implicit goal of this game is to get the most engagement.
Right. Like, yeah, of course, you could go on there and not do that. But that would be I don't know, that'd be like going to a soccer field and like not trying to get the ball in the goal like you're just kicking the ball around or something i mean one of one of the many places in the book where i
found myself nodding furiously was um where you compare uh social media driven news cycles
to the uh sleep deprivation tactics that the military uses on detainees and you're you're
right that uh quote one of the most troubling ways social media has been used in recent years is to foment waves of hysteria and fear, both by news media and by users themselves.
Whipped into a permanent state of frenzy, people create and subject themselves to news cycles, complaining of anxiety at the same time that they check back ever more diligently.
Why do you think, what is it about us that keeps checking back in, even though it makes us more anxious?
do you think what is it about us that keeps checking back in even though it makes us more anxious you know i think i have an even worse opinion of this than i did when i wrote the book
i think i i thought it was like well no i still do think it's like an emotional thing of wanting to
wanting to know what's going on and then wanting to be seen and heard right like wanting to be
connected to other people especially when something dangerous is going on right that's a natural thing right but i but i've
sort of come recently more to think that it's like like i said it's just the sort of like hamster
wheel like dopamine thing like it just turns out that like we love checking things yeah like it
could really be that simple it's just that um that's just something that our brains like to do.
It's like a loop that you get into.
Yeah.
And it's like, it's sort of like this addiction to new information all the time.
Like, has anything changed?
Is anything new?
Is there an update?
Which I don't know why I thought about this a lot.
Like, why do I always need some kind of new piece of information to keep going?
Why can't I just be like happy with what is right now?
Yeah.
Well, and sometimes I wonder if that's not even necessarily a problem.
Like, OK, this could, you know, this is just me, but I am obviously a nature enthusiast.
Right.
Like I write about that in the book.
I think, you know, people might think of being outdoors.
It's like very peaceful.
It's neutral.
You're like,
it's quiet.
Like nothing's going on.
It's not like that to me.
It is an absolute riot.
It's like,
you know,
and even more if you have this loop thing,
right.
But even without the loop or binoculars or whatever,
I think,
and I think that's what I was trying to get at in the book was like,
that you can train your attention to be able to look for these kinds of
changes.
And I don't want to call them updates,
but there are,
you know,
I'm looking at my window right now.
This update is like a guy just walked up the street.
Right.
So like, maybe there's nothing wrong. I was just thinking this, you know, last week I at my window right now. This update is like a guy just walked up the street. Right. So like maybe there's nothing wrong.
I was just thinking this, you know, last week I was in the mountains and I was like, maybe this is like the one place where I'm never bored is actually here.
Was it always like that for you?
Or you talked about sort of training your attention to focus on those kind of changes?
Or was this just were you always just a nature enthusiast and this came natural to you?
of changes or was this just were you always just a nature enthusiast and this came natural to you i think i i don't know necessarily about the the nature context i think i sort of i'm familiar
with that from childhood and i i came back to it but i think what i i always had was i've always
been very curious and that's just sort of an orientation that you know no matter what you
sort of direct that at,
you're going to be looking closely and waiting for things to change and seeing that things are
changing. And so, I actually, it's like you hear people say, oh, people need to learn how to be
bored again. And I don't know that I agree. I think it's more just like you should embrace
your desire to learn new things and perceive new things.
And maybe the problem isn't that.
The problem is the context in which you're applying it and the fact that it's being exploited by a social media platform.
But in itself, I think that's like a lovely thing.
It means you're like alive and you're paying attention to things.
Offline is brought to you by Kariyuma.
It's the middle of winter and time to get real about layers,
lining, everything that's going to keep you warm
and comfortable when you head out the door.
Kariyuma is always coming up with ways to evolve
their sustainable sneakers, like the brand
new weatherproof high tops they just
launched a few weeks back.
Kariyuma says cozy shouldn't come at a cost to the
planet. That's why they created Katori
and Akatherma, winter boots disguised as high tops made with 100% vegan and Kariyuma says cozy shouldn't come at a cost to the planet. That's why they created Katori and Aka Therma,
winter boots disguised as high tops made with 100% vegan and recycled materials
and produced in a way that's ethical and transparent.
One thing you should know about Kariyuma
is that they're obsessed with comfort.
Even their insoles are lined with vegan shearling,
whatever that may be.
When you can leave the parka at home,
Aka is just right.
15,000 five-star reviews,
tens of thousands of waitlisters,
even your favorite celebrities
love this versatile, crazy, comfortable
shoe, like Tommy Vitor.
If Aka looks familiar, you're not wrong.
You're not wrong. This is Kari Yuma's new
school take on a classic sneaker.
Crafted with durable canvas and ultra-soft
responsibly sourced suede.
Kari Yuma ships all their sneakers free and fast in the USA
and offers worldwide shipping and
60-day free returns.
They deliver right to your front door using single box recycled packaging.
For a limited time, offline listeners can get an exclusive 15% off your pair of Kari Yuma sneakers.
Go to cariuma.com slash offline to get 15% off.
That's cariuma.com slash offline for 15% off only for a limited time. Offline is brought to you by Magic Spoon.
It's the new year and Magic Spoon is perfect for meeting your goals,
whether it's eating healthier or saving more time in your morning routine.
How's your Magic Spoon experience been?
As always, it's been fantastic.
You know that I love the peanut butter Magic Spoon.
It's a go-to snack in the evening when you're trying to avoid a horrible dessert decision.
I could do some right now. It's 4 o'clock in the afternoon on a tuesday yeah i could really use a bowl of i need
cereal o'clock i'd be into a new flavor wow i'd be into a new flavor i don't need anything with
the peanut butter i mean i love the frosted i love the cocoa i love the cookies and cream i
love the peanut butter like you said maybe i just need to mix some peanut butter and cocoa.
Maybe so.
A little peanut butter chocolate kind of thing.
Spice of life, you know.
Zero grams of sugar, 13 to 14 grams of protein,
only four net grams of carbs in each serving,
only 140 calories a serving.
It's keto-friendly, gluten-free, grain-free, soy-free, and low-carb.
You can build your own box, available flavors,
to build your very own custom bundle
or cocoa, fruity, frosted, peanut butter, blueberry, cinnamon, cookies and cream and maple waffle.
Go to magicspoon.com slash cricket to grab a custom bundle of cereal and start your new year off right.
And be sure to use our promo code CROOKED at checkout to save $5 off your order.
Magic Spoon is so confident in their product, it's backed with 100% happiness guarantee.
So if you don't like it for any reason, they'll refund your money.
No questions asked.
So if you don't like it for any reason, they'll refund your money.
No questions asked.
Remember, get your next delicious bowl of guilt-free cereal at magicspoon.com slash crooked and use the code crooked to save $5 off.
Thank you, Magic Spoon, for sponsoring this episode.
Offline is brought to you by Helix.
Everybody's unique and Helix knows that.
So they have several different mattress models to choose from.
They got soft, medium, and firm mattresses.
Mattress is great for cooling you down if you sleep hot.
Mattress is great for spinal alignment
to prevent morning aches and pains.
And even a Helix Plus mattress for plus-size sleepers.
Love it took the Helix quiz.
What'd you get?
You got that Dawn Lux.
I have a Dawn Lux.
The firm mattress, it's great.
I've been sleeping better.
It's very comfortable.
It's very plush and nice,
but it's also firm because I sleep on my side,
on my stomach.
Very much recommend it. Helix is awesome, but you don't need to take our word for it don't take our
word for it number one best overall mattress pick of 2020 by gq and wired magazine how about that
how about that helix has been recommended by multiple leading chiropractors and doctors of
sleep medicine as a go-to solution for improving sleep just go to helixsleep.com slash crooked
take their two-minute
sleep quiz, and they will match you to a customized mattress that will give you the best sleep of your
life. Of your life. Helix is offering up to $200 off all mattress orders and two free pillows for
our listeners at helixsleep.com slash cricket. I'm interested in your distinction between connectivity and sensitivity.
Can you talk about that a little?
Yeah.
So that, I should say, is not my distinction.
It's a theorist, Franco Bifo Berardi, made this distinction in a book called After the Future.
The way he summarizes that is basically connectivity.
You could almost think of it as like ports in a computer, right?
Like it's either compatible or it's not.
And if it is compatible, the information goes through.
So with people that would be like, you know, you and I have the same preferences on paper where, you know, we sort of checked all the same boxes. So when I recommend something to you,
it's not even really like you just sort of accept it
and I didn't change in the transmission of that information
and you didn't change.
So that's pretty cut and dried.
And it happens quickly.
It can happen really quickly.
Sensitivity is more like you have these two
kind of like oddly shaped,
maybe incompatible people, bodies, whatever you want to call it, entities.
And they are communicating, but it's much more of a process.
Like they both might change in that interaction and the information might change in the interaction. So, like, you know, really easy example would be if you have a long
conversation with a friend or someone you know who you respect, but you don't agree on something.
And it might be really fundamental. So, the example that I give in the book is someone who
is Catholic. And then I'm basically, I don't know what I am anymore. But at the time, I described
myself as an atheist, right? And that's kind kind of how she saw me and we would have these long evening conversations i was at a residency about science
and um and religion and like the meaning of life you know and we didn't we didn't come to what we
would call like an agreement but we did have an exchange and we were both changed by it and my
mind was changed and her mind was changed.
So that would be an example of sensitivity,
obviously not favored by social media.
Understatement of the century.
When I got to that part of the book,
that's when I was like, you know,
sort of furiously highlighting
because I'm interested in a lot of how this connects up
to politics and democracy.
And I think, like, there
is no sensitivity on social media, like, it's just not built for those conversations. But I think
sometimes there's the illusion of that, right? Because we're all connected to each other via
social media. And so we're having these conversations, but you don't really get to
have conversations with sort of the nuance or the context where you're allowed to
disagree or you're allowed to change people's minds you try to change people's minds like
that sort of all disappears and i kind of wonder what that does to all of us yeah it can't be good
i i mean i i suspect that people approach social media with a lot of fear about how they look.
Yeah.
Because that's, you know, what social media is all about.
And there's so much about, you know, likes and, you know, upvotes and downvotes.
It's so numerical, right?
It's like a score and you want your score to be good.
And it's almost like a credit score or something.
and it's almost like a credit score or something.
And so like, I think people are already kind of approaching these topics and spaces
with like a lot of fear and a lot of defensiveness.
And I'm just so struck by the difference
between the way like a disagreement might play out
in social media versus like the times
that I've had close friends or
like just someone I know say something to me that only maybe even like years later, I realized that
was like a very deep critique of something about what I thought. Like that was really like, it's
not a sort of surface level thing, right? It's like, I think you're wrong about something. And
I think, you know, I And I think your politics are wrong.
But when I go kind of remember that moment, that's not how it felt.
It felt like a conversation.
It felt like a respectful conversation where I learned something.
And it's like only later do I realize like, oh, actually, that was actually someone seriously
disagreeing with me.
Well, and it is incredibly rare to find that these days. And I know that because,
you know, like I had done some episode the other couple of weeks ago and, you know, the negative
comments were like five words in a tweet that just sort of, I brushed off at this point or I didn't
pay attention to. And then you remember like someone did like a, you know, seven part tweet thread was like, hey, I went into this conversation open-minded,
but I didn't like this and I disagreed with this. And I sort of like took that critique to heart,
right? And I thought, I understand that. And I want to learn from that. And that's interesting
that the person pointed that out. And it's just so much more effective than someone saying like,
I saw that you did that do better.
And then that's it.
Yeah.
What are you supposed to do with that?
What am I supposed to do with that?
That's not persuading me.
Yeah.
And I honestly,
I think that's part of the mic drop effect,
right?
It's like,
it's like,
you almost don't think about how the person continues to exist after you said
something.
Right.
Yeah.
It's like,
I'm just going to leave this here and walk away. That's like, that's what everything is. Right. It's like, I'm just going to leave this here and walk away.
That's what everything is, right?
It's like, no, well, I'm still here and I need help understanding this.
Right.
So you want, yeah.
I first learned about your book because it was on Barack Obama's book list, my former
boss.
And I was like, I was wondering why he was so into this book.
And then when I got to this line in the book, what if we spent less time shouting into the void and being washed over with shouting in return and
more time talking in rooms to those for whom our words are intended? I was like, that's why Barack
Obama really liked me. But I do think it's sort of the way that social media operates really is
just a lot of people shouting past each other all the time. And there's just not a lot of sort of one-on-one conversation,
but that's the way we are most of the time.
Yeah.
And I,
and I just,
I get that frustrates me because I think if you look at it from a kind of
like crass,
like numbers point of view,
right.
It's like if you,
if you make a statement and it gets,
you know,
thousands of whatever retweets or likes or whatever, like that is a measure of something.
Right.
That's not nothing.
But then I think about things like, you know, if someone, this is really like overdetermined example, but like if someone wrote, made a zine, right?
Yeah.
And they only mailed it to 20 people but those were the 20 right people
like and those are 20 people who are gonna like sit down and spend time with this and talk to
other people about it yeah maybe write something in response and then they respond and then you
get somewhere right there's traction i don't know like that's a different way of measuring
i guess like impact like i don't even know what to call it but like that's a different way of measuring, I guess, like impact. Like I don't even know what to call it, but like that's also something that feels like substantive to me.
And I'm kind of more and more interested in that and bored with the other thing.
Yeah, well, it's intentional and it's designed to try to persuade people to make people think or act differently, which I think is sort of the basis for, you know, a democratic society. I mean, we've been talking a lot about sort of the effects of social media
and overconnection on individuals, right? It can make you anxious, it can make you feel bad,
it can make you distracted. But you point out that a social body that can't concentrate or
communicate with itself is like a person who can't think or act. And I have been thinking
about this a lot more is like, what does it mean for the country as a whole if we're just all so distracted all the
time? And what does that mean for social movements? What does it mean for labor movements? What does
it mean, you know, like for civil rights movements? Because I think, as you point out in the book too,
because I think, as you point out in the book too,
that sort of collective action requires discipline and organization and a lot of attention.
And I wonder if we're sort of losing that capacity.
Yeah, I mean, it's hard to say.
I don't know, but I mean,
I was just reading an article actually a couple hours ago
where it was basically organizers talking about this and saying that, you know, like they were comparing it to going door to door and having conversations with people and finding out that, you know, if you actually tell someone what something is beyond a slogan, they'll oftentimes maybe not agree with you.
But it'll be something other than
the like, no, like door in your face. Right. And it's, and so I think, yeah, definitely like the
capacity to listen is, is probably getting eroded. I mean, I talk about deep listening in the book, which is Pauline Oliveros' term
from music, but deep listening requires like a stance basically that is, would, you know,
be described as almost like passive or nonjudgmental or whatever. But it's basically
like, let me actually like hear this thing first before I jump into like analyzing and all of that. Not to say everything
needs to be listened to, but just that, you know, that there's, if you want to have an encounter
that involves like that sensitivity and the exchange that requires you not to do the mic drop,
basically. So you wrote this book a year or so before the pandemic, and I've seen some people say that it was, you know, well-timed to a period where doing nothing was forced on many of us.
But I actually found that being stuck at home during the pandemic made doing nothing in the way you define it even harder.
It's like I was glued to my screens and social media, and it made, made like even a news addict like me feel even
worse than usual um what what was your experience like during the during the pandemic what has your
experience been like since i guess unfortunately we're still in it yeah it's well i feel like
summer of 2020 i kind of started approaching a point that was reminding me of the moment that had spurred
how to do nothing where I was like oh this feels familiar you know yeah and that was a rough summer
that was like the the protests plus the wildfires in California plus the pandemic it was just
everything I couldn't I couldn't walk because the air was too bad. And it was just, yeah, I was feeling very, very sort of trapped in that.
And so I had sort of like moment number two of I can't do this.
And ever since then, you know, I'm on social media.
I will like check for messages.
And, you know, I'll kind of, yeah, I'll dip in
once in a while because there are important things like the fact that people who read my book often
connect me to other things that I would like to read. That, you know, it's like I find out about
this other stuff that's in conversation with what I'm doing. And that's really important to me.
However, I religiously avoid feeds of all
kinds, all kinds. Like I will not look at the Twitter feed. I will not look at Twitter moments.
Wow. I will not look at the Instagram feed. I can't look at my Facebook feed because I have
something called Facebook newsfeed eradicator, which I highly recommend. Yeah. That's if I went
on Facebook, I would use that. Yeah. I, I, I barely look at
Facebook anymore because that's turns out if you don't have a newsfeed, then there's no reason to
be on it for more than two minutes. So, yeah, so that's, I kind of had, I had almost like a
second moment of reckoning. I'd love to hear your thoughts on like what you think we can all do to
resist the attention economy, both as individuals and
as a society. I mean, I think it's important to point out that you don't, you don't believe we
should all just stop using social media. You know, you, you point out that you're less interested in
a mass exodus from Facebook and Twitter than a mass movement of people regaining control of our
attention and redirecting it together. Can you talk about what that means and what it might look like? Yeah, I think it's maybe helpful to think of it in terms of feedback loops. So there's a bad
feedback loop, and then I like to think there's a good feedback loop. The bad one is the one that
is sort of being exploited right now, which is there's a lot to be upset about and scared, just like deeply frightened, right? Like there's
so many sources of dread. And we're also, you know, a lot of people are still pretty isolated,
you know, they're more isolated than they would be. So you go to social media because you want
to feel some connection and you want to feel, maybe you want to feel validated. You want to
feel seen and recognized. You go there, you don't get that. You get something else.
you want to feel seen and recognized you go there you don't get that you get something else there's something else that you get makes you feel more lonely and disconnected and have more
anxiety so you go back and i mean i've literally read papers in like travel journals where like
tourism people like know about this loop and they name it and they're like we need to figure out a
way to use use that to drive ticket sales for like when people see other people's vacations like they're gonna have low self-esteem so like how
do we get in there and have there be a button where you can like buy your ticket right like
this is very known um so that's that's the bad that's the bad feedback loop and it's sort of
self-reinforcing the thing that i feel like i've learned in the last year, especially, is that there's like kind of an opposite loop where somewhere in there you break the cycle. You know,
that could be anywhere, really. Put the phone down, just cut it off. Yeah. Facebook News,
Feudal Advocate or whatever. Whatever you have. Yeah. Or you get a loop, get the jeweler's loop
and go outside and look at a bush. Somewhere you break the cycle and then you get the opposite which is like you find other sources of
meaning and belonging and being seen and that makes you feel more stable and then because you
feel more stable you don't feel the need to go to social media anymore because you're not going to
social media anymore you feel more stable right like this is what's kind of been happening to me. Like I have a joke that my social media is,
you know, on iMessage,
you can pin like people to the top of your iMessage.
Yeah.
So I have like nine people
and they all have different animal photos.
And so I was calling it like animal net.
And when something goes viral on animal net,
it's just me sending it to every single person,
like one at a time. And like, I get news from animal net it's just me sending it to every single person like one at a time
and like i get news from animal net like people tell me about stuff you know like in whether it's
like something happening to them or the news or something that they saw that was funny like
you know it is a little mini kind of like some of them are group chats so um and i find that like i
actually get what i wanted i originally wanted from that and from, you know, interactions with just individual people.
It could be like friends or it could be other writers.
It could be whoever, you know, either like one-on-one or kind of like small groups.
And, you know, a lot of that's been on my phone because it's the pandemic, right?
But it's very different than sort of broadcasting or being on on a feed and it's really like it's it's amazing like I I compared to like even a
year ago it's like I really I have zero desire to look at the the feed of any social media I
I just I actually don't want to that's uh I want to get to that point that's my that's my north star right there
offline is brought to you by keeps a lot of things should not follow you into the new year
i can think of a few myself all the bad vibes from 2021 how about that yeah how about that
you know what should follow you into 2022? Your hair.
Yeah, it should follow you.
Your hair.
Or it could follow the water in your shower down the drain.
Yeah, don't pick that one.
Keep it.
More than 50 million men in the U.S. suffer from male pattern baldness,
but Keeps can help.
Keeps offers a simple stress-free way to keep your hair.
Convenient virtual doctor consultations and medications
delivered straight to your door every three months. You don't have to leave your hair. Convenient virtual doctor consultations and medications delivered straight to your door every three months.
You don't have to leave your home.
There are low-cost treatments that start
at just $10 per month and Keeps offers
generic versions. It's basically
how do you want your hair to leave your house?
Through the front door with you or through the sewer?
That's your options.
Is this for offline?
Yeah. There's discreet packaging and
proven results. don't even know
who's on this episode keeps has more five-star reviews than any of its competitors prevention
is key treatments can take four to six months to see results so act fast ladies gents and everyone
in between if you're ready to take action and prevent hair loss go to keeps.com offline to
receive your first month of treatment for free that's keeps.com offline to get your first month of treatment for free. That's keeps.com slash offline to get your first month free.
keeps.com slash offline.
Offline is brought to you by Future.
Future is the new workout experience that provides unlimited personal training
and custom workouts for one fixed price wherever you like to work out,
all through the Future app.
When you sign up for Future, you're paired with your own fitness coach
who custom builds a workout program that is delivered straight to your phone every week.
You'll hop in a FaceTime call with your coach and blueprint out any goals, injuries,
where you like to work out, and any equipment available to you.
Your coach will then develop a comprehensive training plan
taking into account any and every factor you'd like to fit in.
Your coach will be there to keep you motivated by making sure there's variety in your workouts while also making progress toward your goals. Future has over
3,000 five-star reviews in the app store. Future members love the experience and say this is the
most consistent they've been with their fitness in years. Here's one five-star review. It's from me.
Oh, wow. Five stars from John.
I started using Future in the new year when they became a sponsor.
Have the app.
They send you an Apple Watch.
What?
Yeah.
And I was like, why do I need an Apple Watch for?
You'll find out.
You need it for Future.
You'll need it.
I got my personal trainer now.
My coach, Gabe, told him what I'm looking to do.
Told him the equipment I have in my pool house.
And now I go there every morning.
I don't have to think about signing up for classes.
I don't have to be scheduling something with a personal trainer. I have the workout in my there every morning. I don't have to think about signing up for classes. I don't have to be scheduling something with a personal trainer.
I have the workout in my phone every morning.
I do it with the equipment I have.
It feels great.
I love it.
Great.
If you're ready to invest in your long-term health and wellness,
you can get started with your future coach right now
with 50% off your first three months at tryfuture.com.
Again, that's tryfuture.com slash crooked. Again, that's tryfuture.com slash crooked.
I've been thinking even before reading your book that I sort of wanted to redirect more of my attention away from social media and towards real life interactions with people.
I'm an extrovert.
I get energy from other people.
I hadn't thought about redirecting my attention toward the place that I live, which you write about a lot. You know, so much of your book is about your connection
with nature. What is it about nature that you find important and fulfilling?
I think, I mean, maybe the most basic part of it is kind of illustrated by the part where I talk about the crows. Although
I realize that crows are getting out of hand in a lot of places. I was just reading or someone,
I think three different people on Animal Net sent me an article about like using like lasers to
control crows. Anyway, because the crows are getting out of hand in San Jose. But, you know,
I have that description in the book of like, crows can
recognize human faces. So, I befriended these crows. The crows are looking at me. I'm looking
at the crows. Crows are not human, but they're like regarding me in some way, right? And it's
this reminder that I am also an earthbound animal who, from their point of view, I sort of emerged
from this little box every day and then I go back inside. And so it's a very, um, kind of, it's like almost
like moves the center of gravity out away from you. And I was finding that very therapeutic at
the time because the other thing that I think social media does is it kind of like hyper
stimulates your ego. Like you really get into
like the center of your head and it's like very dense in there. And for me, just being reminded
that there are these like kind of other societies that are just outside, like I've lived in the same
neighborhood for long enough. I know like the bird neighborhoods, like I know that like the
chickadees are always in that one tree or like, I just,
I just noticed two weeks ago, there's a, a sap sucker, which is like a type of woodpecker that
makes these little holes in a very dense pattern. It's always in this one tree between 10 AM and
noon. And I'm like, there he is at work, you know, I passed this bird and it's very inspiring to me
because then I go home and I like do my work. But I think it's just something about being reminded of a different
context for yourself. Right. And it's pretty insistently like physical context. I can see
why it might be useful because I have been trying to go on walks where I like, like, don't look at my phone the entire walk.
And I don't listen to anything either.
Right.
I don't even listen to a podcast.
I just want to walk and look around.
But sometimes, at least at the beginning, I noticed that as I'm walking, I'm still thinking
about all the things I would think about if I was scrolling through Twitter.
Right.
So I'm thinking about political issues of the day.
I'm thinking about things I have to do.
Like your mind's still racing. And I think part, you know, you write about this too.
I think when you're focusing, when you redirect your attention on something else, like nature,
like birds, like the trees, right? Then you sort of get out of your own mind and you don't just
leave the scrolling and social media behind. You leave sort of all the stuff that comes with it,
which is thinking about
all that shit constantly which continues to give you anxiety even if you're not staring at the
screen yeah totally and i think it also has like very concrete lessons at least that that i have
learned from observing and learning about ecology in particular um you know one of the things i write
about in the book is that in ecology there there are very few hard boundaries. So like there are bioregions and they have identifiable characteristics, but there's not like you're in Oak Savannah and then all of a sudden you cross a line and you're in a redwood forest, right? Like it just doesn't work that way.
out that everything is affecting everything else all the time. And for me, that was meaningful because I'm biracial and it really resonated with that idea that you could have something be
multiple with identifiable parts, but they're not so easily pinpointed. And I think actually,
it's interesting to bounce back and forth between contexts. If you take those lessons and then you come back to something you know like
a political situation right maybe you look at it differently like you see for me it becomes easier
to see things like oh this is a knot of strands one of which started in like the 1800s or something
right like something that's a little bit more complex than like the Twitter moments of the day. Like it just
allows you to like zoom out or sort of like change your focus a little bit and, and like appreciate
and like sit with complexity because I think that's everywhere. I mean, one of, one of the
first things I did after I finished your book is I started looking up books about the history of
Los Angeles, which is where I live. And like,
I moved here in 2014. And I always think to myself, oh, I just moved to LA. And I've been here
eight years now, seven, eight years now. And because I live such a hyper connected life,
and I'm working so much, and I'm online so much, I was like, I finished your book. I'm like,
I don't even know that much about the place that I live, like the history of the place that I live, you know.
And I wonder like the more that we're online and you can be sort of online anywhere and the Internet is just this big global space that has like a lot of nothingness around it.
You do sort of forget that like you live in a physical place with history and tradition and culture and nature
and all that kind of stuff. Like it's, it's wild. Yeah. Although I should point out that,
you know, similar to the fact that, you know, I say that social media just as, as the idea of
like a network of people who are in communication is not necessarily a bad thing in and of itself.
I think similarly, you know, let's say like, let's say you move to a new place and you want to learn more about it.
Like the Internet is actually going to be a huge use to you.
Right.
Well, that's where I looked for books.
Yeah.
And I learned.
I mean, I really got off the ground by using iNaturalist, which is the app that, you know, it's basically Shazam for plants.
Right.
Like you take pictures of plants and it tells you what they are.
Yeah. It's so good. It's like what I've been waiting for. That's utopian technology to me.
But yeah, I think it's like, again, it's almost like the loop versus the iPhone again, right?
It's like, are you using it to actually become more engaged with the place that you are or are
you using it in the opposite direction? And certain platforms or apps or whatever will push you in either direction.
On a societal level,
are there policies or collective actions
you think we should take
in order to help resist the attention economy?
You mentioned in the book that a lot of people have jobs
that don't give them the privilege of trying to do nothing
because they're so busy.
Yeah. I mean, that is kind of something that I am taking up thinking about specifically about time
because, you know, one really obvious response to how to do nothing as a whole, as a book is like,
that's great. I don't have time. And like time is like a sort of very obvious dimension in which like some people have more affordances than others. So anything, you know, that, that opens up more time or not even
more time, but like gives more temporal autonomy to people, I think. Because to be able to, you
know, be curious about things and, you know, go for your walk and whatever, meet with the
local birding group, you know, you have to have the time and the resources to do that. And
I think that's one of the things that I wish that I had made clear in the book was, was that,
you know, distinction between someone who finds it difficult to do nothing because, you know,
they're so steeped in like achievement culture or whatnot.
And then someone who really actually just does not have control of their time.
Right.
I mean, do you think that this great resignation we've seen, you know, throughout the course of the pandemic, a lot of people, you know, sort of quitting their jobs, looking for other things to do, has to do with some of the challenges that you wrote about in the book.
I mean, one sort of overlap that I definitely see is, you know, I talk about kind of like the pause
in the book, like when you take a pause and you shift your perspective. Like I talk about my dad
taking two years off of work when he was in his 30s. And again,
you know, that's a very privileged thing to do. But he he kind of had like all these epiphanies
during that time about himself and his work and what he wanted to do and and what it actually
took for him to, you know, be creative and have like purpose and meaning or whatever. Right.
be creative and have like purpose and meaning or whatever right so i mean i have no way of knowing really but i my sense is that maybe that happened for people where it's like it's this
forced pause everything suddenly looks weird um right like things that were once familiar
look very strange um like even things like buildings getting used for other things.
And, and that's such a destabilizing moment.
And I think that that can be really scary,
but it can also kind of like shake loose these things that you took for
granted or not even necessarily took for granted.
You were just so busy going, you had to take it for granted.
There wasn't a time to stop and think about it.
And now you have to stop and think about it. And maybe your work situation is a
little different. Maybe you work from home and you realize how shitty your boss is or something. I
don't know. Because something has changed. And something becomes clear to you. And then maybe
also, I don't know, but because we've all been living with this hyper awareness
of mortality, like people are dying.
There's this like this possibility of dying was just in the air.
Then maybe that also people were thinking about like, I have one life.
Yeah.
You know, and what am I going to do with this one life?
Am I really going to spend it doing this and just staring at this all day?
So I don't know i that's my kind
of guess look i think that's i've had that experience i think it's a combination of
the trends that you've been writing about which is so everyone being hyper connected on social
media and that leaves you feeling sort of shitty uh and distracted all the time and then something
like the pandemic happens and you stop and think of your own
mortality and you're like, is this how I want to be for the next 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years? It's
just doing this nonstop. Or do I need like a real change here? And that change can be your job. It
can also just be, I think, how you describe really well, just figuring out how to redirect your
attention on a daily basis, just in even small ways.
Yeah, totally. Just something that I've observed among people that I know is
people sort of leaving jobs or contexts and they don't actually know what's next,
but they knew enough that it was wrong that they could leave. And I think that's really
interesting because more and more lately I put such a, I really value intuition and like intuition versus like the kind of objective, like just, I don't know, I don't even know how to describe it.
But like the gut feeling, right?
Like the gut feeling when you're on social media too much is this is bad.
And it's like, how do you learn how on social media too much is this is bad and it's like how do
you learn how to better hear what that is saying and i think maybe people were following that same
intuition of like i'm not happy where i am this isn't fulfilling um i need to find the things
that actually give me some sense of like traction in life yeah uh last question i ask all of our
guests which was partly inspired
by your book. Um, what's your favorite way to unplug right now, uh, now that you're busy
writing another book and, and how often do you get to do it? Um, that's hard.
I mean, I would say maybe currently it's the loop. It's the loop. I'm going to, I'm going to look
into this loop. Yeah. It's, uh, I don't think it's very expensive.'m gonna i'm gonna look into this loop yeah it's uh i don't think
it's very expensive um i think that you can also get magnifying lenses for your phone okay um i
don't know as much about those but um and i'm very lucky i get to do that every day because every day
my boyfriend and i go on basically the same it's your pandemic walk like some variation we've had we've had a few of those yeah
yeah and uh and it's like the loop it's so small and it's such a high magnification that like i'll
never be able to like loop everything on this walk like it's endless so uh i think that's my
current favorite way but i honestly like so many.
I mean, like birdwatching, obviously.
I'm still really into that.
Yeah.
Fantastic.
Jenny O'Dell, thank you so much for joining Offline.
Appreciate the time.
Thanks so much for having me.
Offline is a Crooked Media production.
It's written and hosted by me, John Favreau.
It's produced by Andy Gardner Bernstein and Austin Fisher.
Andrew Chadwick is our audio editor.
Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis sound engineered the show.
Jordan Katz and Kenny Siegel take care of our music.
Thanks to Tanya Sominator,
Michael Martinez, Ari Schwartz, Madison Hallman, and Sandy Gerard for production support.
And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Nar Melkonian, and Amelia Montooth,
who film and share our episodes as videos every week.