Sahil Bloom
Curiosity Chronicle
Delivering curiosity-inducing content every single week. This is the audio version of my newsletter. Sign up at the bottom of the page!
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Episodes
The Life-Changing Magic of Active Optimism 10.07.2026 7:20
There’s an old children’s fable I recently retold to my son about a farmer whose wagon wheel gets stuck in the mud. He calls on Hercules to come to his aid. Hercules appears, but rather than lifting the wagon, he speaks: "Do you think you can move the wagon by simply looking at it? Put your shoulder to the wheel." The farmer did so, and the wagon lurched forward as the wheel easily came unstuck. T...
How to Reinvent Your Life in 30 Days 08.07.2026 14:34
Every single week, I invariably get a handful of emails from readers around the world with a similar general message. Stuck on a path. Living a life they didn’t really choose. Scared it’s too late to make a change. Given the frequency of these messages, I decided it warranted a deeper, more tactical guide. Here’s exactly how I would approach reinvention (at any age or life stage): ••• This episode...
The Frog Pond Effect 03.07.2026 3:24
Have you ever noticed that growth feels like destruction? That getting better feels like getting worse? You're not doing something wrong. You're just experiencing something nobody told you about... ••• This episode brought to you by: DeleteMe - DeleteMe makes it quick, easy, and safe to remove your personal data online. Origin Financial - Your personal AI Financial Advisor. Track your spending, i...
Why Are You In Such A Rush? 01.07.2026 8:08
There’s a beautiful Zen parable that goes something like this: A man is walking across a field when a tiger leaps out from the trees and runs toward him. Fearing for his life, the man sprints away but quickly halts at a steep cliff. Facing a terrifying drop, with the tiger bearing down on him, he grabs hold of a single vine and lowers himself over the cliff’s edge. Looking up, he sees the tiger ab...
The Zipper Test: How to Stop Fooling Yourself 26.06.2026 6:02
My son just turned four. One of the things I love most about the age is the unbridled curiosity with which he explores the world. He's deep in the classic "why" phase, taking me down explanatory rabbit holes that go long past my point of comfort. But one of the most interesting prompts he asked recently was this one: "Tell me all about zippers." On any given day, zipper is replaced by some basic t...
7 Lies I Finally Stopped Telling Myself 24.06.2026 9:05
A few years ago, as part of the research for my first book , I asked a group of centenarians for the advice they'd most like to give to their younger selves. One of them offered this piece of wisdom: "The most damning lie you can tell is the lie you tell to yourself." Those lies dilute your attention, pull you toward distractions, and cut into your confidence. They give you an easy out when the...
The Helsinki Bus Station Theory 19.06.2026 6:47
In 2004, a Finnish-American photographer named Arno Minkkinen gave the commencement speech at the New England School of Photography. In the speech, he offered a powerful thought experiment: Imagine for a moment that you find yourself at the large bus station in the center of Helsinki. There are two dozen platforms at the station, each with several different bus lines departing from them bound for...
The 2 Types of Knowledge: Real vs. Surface 17.06.2026 7:10
In 1918, German theoretical physicist Max Planck won the Nobel Prize for his discovery of energy quanta. After winning the prize, he went on a tour, giving lectures at universities and institutions around the country on his findings. There’s an apocryphal story from that tour that I first came across while reading the transcript of Charlie Munger’s 2007 commencement speech at USC Law School. Max P...
Winner's Game vs. Loser's Game 12.06.2026 4:50
"No unforced errors." At a recent speaking event, I was asked by an audience member to share one piece of advice I wish I could tell my younger self. Specifically, they asked for the non-obvious advice I've found most difficult to internalize and live by, despite knowing its importance. My response: No unforced errors. Three words. And I've spent years learning why they're so hard to live by... ••...
The 4 Types of Professional Time 10.06.2026 10:50
Most people end the day exhausted but can't point to a single thing they meaningfully moved forward. The problem isn't how much you're working -- it's the type of work filling your hours. In this piece, I break down a simple framework that fundamentally changed how I work: The Four Types of Professional Time... ••• This episode brought to you by: DeleteMe - DeleteMe makes it quick, easy, and safe...
The Goal Gradient Hypothesis 05.06.2026 7:54
105.5. That's how many laps you have to run around the first lane of a regulation outdoor track to cover the 26.2 miles of a marathon. And, when I arrived at my local high school track last Friday at 4:45am, that was exactly what I planned to do. I wish I had a thoughtful answer to the obvious " um, why? " this opener no doubt sparks in your mind. The truth is that every now and then, I like to re...
The ABC Goal System 03.06.2026 7:13
"Just be consistent." By now, you've undoubtedly heard this advice countless times. So much so that it may even induce an eye roll or sigh. Yes, it’s true, consistency is the difference maker. The common thread behind every major success story. Everyone tells you to be consistent , but no one ever tells you how to be consistent . And let’s be honest, it’s (much) easier said than done. Life gets ch...
The Pratfall Effect 29.05.2026 6:01
In 1966, a University of Texas psychologist named Elliot Aronson ran an experiment to examine the role of imperfection on human connection. Aronson recruited 48 college students and had them listen to an audio recording of a candidate supposedly auditioning to be on a "College Quiz Bowl" team (a popular TV format at the time). The recordings were, in fact, staged. The candidate was just an actor w...
5 Life Learnings From 5 Years of The Curiosity Chronicle 27.05.2026 10:16
A few days ago, I was reminded by a reader that May 14 was the five year anniversary of my first Curiosity Chronicle newsletter. Sending that first newsletter, which went out to a few thousand people who had been receiving my tweet threads in email format each week, felt like something of a leap of faith at the time. Fast forward five years and what started with that tiny leap of faith has compoun...
The Eject Button Mentality 22.05.2026 7:19
In 2002, Harvard psychologists Daniel Gilbert and Jane Ebert designed a series of studies to test the role of optionality on happiness and human satisfaction. In the first study, the students in a Harvard photography class were asked to make prints of their two favorite photos from the semester. After creating the two prints, they were told to select one that they would get to keep, while the othe...
The Most Powerful Decision Making Razors 20.05.2026 10:59
A razor is a rule of thumb that simplifies decision making. The term comes from philosophy. A principle that let you quickly cut away unlikely explanations or unnecessary steps was called a razor. Razors aren't perfect. They're shortcuts. But used well, they can be the highest-leverage tools you carry through life. In an age of infinite information, razors can help you stop overthinking and start...
The Powerful Art of Negative Capability 15.05.2026 6:38
In 1902, a 19-year-old cadet in an Austrian military academy was silently becoming a bystander in his own life. Franz Xaver Kappus felt trapped. On the track for a life as a military officer, but unsure if he wanted it in the first place. His heart felt pulled in a very different direction. To poetry. When Kappus learned that one of his teachers had taught the famed poet Rainer Maria Rilke when he...
Dear Son - A Letter to My Son on His 4th Birthday 13.05.2026 7:39
My son turns four years old this week. And if I'm being honest, I don't know where the time went. Everyone says this, and I spent most of my life rolling my eyes at it, but my goodness, it goes by fast. With parenting, perhaps more so than most things in life, the days are very long but the years are painfully short . Last year, I started a practice of writing him a letter each year on his birthda...
The Styrofoam Cup Theory 08.05.2026 6:13
Last weekend, I had the joy of catching up for a quiet dinner in Omaha with a mentor and friend, Apple CEO Tim Cook. He recently announced that he would be transitioning out of the CEO role at the company after a 15 year tenure. When the news first broke of his announcement, several people asked me how I thought he would handle the major life change and identity shift. My answer was a story from a...
How to Be More Magnetic 06.05.2026 10:59
Over the weekend, I made what has become an annual pilgrimage to Omaha, Nebraska to attend the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting. The event, which is nominally a business update on Warren Buffett's famed holding company, has become a staple in my annual calendar, mostly due to the incredible density of deep thinkers who drop into the midwestern city for a short window of time. Every year, I seem t...
The Streetlight Effect: Why Smart People Look In The Wrong Places 01.05.2026 4:27
We all fall into the same trap: measuring what's easy instead of what's meaningful, clinging to routines we know instead of adapting ones that work, and asking the questions we can answer instead of the ones we're avoiding. In this podcast, I break down the street light effect — the tendency to search where there's light rather than where there's truth — and share how it showed up in my own career...
The High Shoulders Theory 29.04.2026 8:16
When I was 12 years old, I tried out for a baseball all-star team in our area. I really wanted to make this team. The tryouts were my first adventure beyond the confines of my small town. An opportunity to see how I stacked up against kids from all around the state. When the results came out, the coaches called my house. They were taking 16 players for the team...and I was the 17th on the list. I...
The Michelangelo Phenomenon 24.04.2026 5:44
The most famous sculpture in history was almost never created… In 1464, the Opera del Duomo—the committee overseeing the cathedral in Florence—commissioned a massive statue to adorn the cathedral’s roofline. They sourced a single, 17-foot block of marble from the quarries in Carrara, Italy. A sculptor named Agostino di Duccio began work on the project, but after a short stint, he backed out... •••...
The New Opportunity Razor 22.04.2026 6:49
A few weeks ago, I had the unique opportunity to attend a small author’s retreat hosted by Atomic Habits author James Clear. To be honest, it was a bit of a ”pinch-me” moment. I was in a room with a group of 15 authors I’ve long admired, who had collectively sold tens of millions of books and left an indelible mark on the world with their ideas and insights. We were each asked to share something t...
The Tinkerer's Mindset: How to Win More 17.04.2026 4:56
A group of kindergarteners outperformed the CEOs, lawyers, and MBAs. The way they did it has a lesson I've never been able to forget. While in college over a decade ago, I watched a TED Talk by a famed designer named Peter Skillman about an experiment he conducted in which groups of participants were given a challenge... ••• This episode brought to you by: DeleteMe - DeleteMe makes it quick, e...
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