Save your marriage — learn proper articulation. Chair Tai Chi makes you the most desirable 50-plusser in the room.
Words are what matter. Online language courses keep selling, even when they don’t save shit. They just make the same old failures sound more eloquent.
I failed as an ESL teacher because I sold mechanical English like it was salvation. I never asked what language my students actually needed to articulate their real lives.
Evy Poumpouras treats words as weapons. Patrick Winston said success is determined by the quality of your speech, your writing, and your thoughts — in that order.
They’re both half right. But if every conversation is war, you stop listening for meaning and start scanning for threats. If success is only about sounding good, who gives a damn about the thinking underneath?
Language is not a tool. It is the operating system of being human.
Most people aren’t stuck because they lack answers. They’re stuck because they cannot name what they’re trying to move toward — or why they’re moving at all.
They’ve swallowed self-help, positive thinking, and mountains of motivation. But the words feel hollow when they’re not yours.
I’m talking to the person who knows something is deeply wrong — in their relationship, their work, their soul — but can’t name it. Because they can’t name it, they can’t move.
Movement begins the moment you name it.
This podcast won’t start with sugary bullshit: “Hi everybody, this is Matt…”
Nope. That ain’t flying here.
Don’t cushion your points. Never over-explain. Say it once, cleaner. Keep only what only you would say. Make the listener meet you.
Push back on me. Loudly. If it holds up, you’re on the next episode. If it doesn’t, we’ll tear it apart together.
Hypocrisy sucks. That’s the deal.