“At our age, the end is much closer than the beginning”.
Two old men sit down every week to reflect on their experiences through life, how they live their lives in the present day, and most importantly, how they’ve stopped giving a sh*t.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
“At our age, the end is much closer than the beginning”.
Two old men sit down every week to reflect on their experiences through life, how they live their lives in the present day, and most importantly, how they’ve stopped giving a sh*t.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In episode 34 of The Old Men in the Seat, Byron and Paul dive deep into a profound philosophical question: what does it mean that there's only one you?
Paul introduces the concept that life is fundamentally a "single player game" – no matter how close your relationships, your lived experience is entirely unique and can never be fully shared or understood by another person. Even best friends who share extensively can only understand about 20% of each other's inner world.
Key topics explored:
The uniqueness of lived experience – How every individual's combination of formative experiences, traumas, circumstances, and perspectives creates someone completely unrepeatable
The limits of empathy and communication – Why we can never truly get inside another person's mind or body to feel what they feel, despite our best efforts to share and connect
The comparison trap – How measuring yourself against peers at school reunions or in career achievements becomes meaningless when you recognize that everyone's path is fundamentally incomparable
Memory and perspective – Why even our own recollections may be unreliable, and how two people experiencing the same moment will remember it differently
Judgment and understanding – A thoughtful discussion about suicide and major life decisions, emphasizing how we cannot judge others' choices without knowing their complete lived experience
The value of intimate relationships – How friendships and close relationships provide precious outlets for sharing our internal worlds, even if complete understanding remains impossible
Byron and Paul explore how recognizing life's "single player" nature can paradoxically reduce anxiety, eliminate destructive comparisons, and help us appreciate what's fundamentally unique about each person. They acknowledge the pain that comes with the impossibility of fully knowing even our closest loved ones, while celebrating the privilege of deep friendship and genuine attempts at connection.
In a meta-twist at the end, Byron proposes using AI to analyze whether their philosophical musings have any academic support, setting up an intriguing experiment for future episodes.
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