

The Jason Wright Show
Jason Wright
Jason Wright is on a mission to improve always in ALL ways. In his weekly show he interviews thought leaders, health and wellness experts, entrepreneurs or anyone else he thinks can add to his efforts to improve always in ALL ways. The philosophy is simple. Jason believes if he can reach as close to his full potential as possible it will not only benefit him but his family and community as well. Please tune it, tell your friends, your mom, your grandma, your enemies, your crushes and anyone else you can think of to listen to The Jason Wright show!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 28, 2022 • 10min
Stone Chiseler Sunday Chapter 3 of The Stone Chiseler
In this chapter Giovanni’s world falls apart. It is where we learn of the beginning of his journey from farmer, to chiseler to sculptor.
Stone Chiseler Sunday Chapter 3 of The Stone Chiseler

Aug 26, 2022 • 40min
August 26, 2022 Pod Apologizes for Allowing Ben Shapiro to Attend Their Conference, Choosing Friends Wisely and More
The Wrights and Quandahls
It has been a weird but I choose to say great week. In this episode I discuss Pod Movement’s cowardly and pathetic apology for allowing one of the single most successful and important figures in digital media to attend their conference.
Mrs. Wright and I had a lovely dinner with James and Emily Quandahl reiterating the fact choosing good friends wisely is truly a treasure on earth.
Gexa Energy sucks and more on The Best Friday Ever
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http://www.jasonwrightnow.com
Get my new Book ‘The Stone Chiseler’ Here

Aug 23, 2022 • 1h 1min
August 23, 2022 Disruptive Education-What is The Acton Academy? With Dillon and Erica Timmons
ERICA TIMMONS
Founder & Lead Guide
Growing up in the midwest as a child of educators, Erica has always had a deep love for learning and creating. She followed in her parents footsteps to become an educator with a degree in elementary education from Tennessee Temple University. She began her career as a traditional teacher, during which time she earned another bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a master’s degree in Teaching and Learning from Liberty University.
After several years in the classroom, Erica started a learning center to help struggling students and a microschool for student athletes. It was through research about best practices and innovation that she learned about the Acton Academy model, and she knew that she had stumbled upon something extraordinary that would benefit her own daughters, her students, and school-age learners in the Tyler area.
Erica’s daughters, Ruby, Hannah, Liberty, and Ember, are her prime reason for starting Acton Academy Tyler. One of her greatest desires is for her daughters to become adventurers, learners, and world-changers.
DILLON TIMMONS
Founder & Business Operations
Born and raised in Texas, Dillon has always been passionate about independence. Around middle school he decided traditional education wasn’t the most efficient way to learn, and begin to plug in to this new thing called the internet. In the early days he quickly found out that no written knowledge of technology was easily obtained, and he needed to learn by doing. Over the next decade of using the “hacker” approach to learning, he found himself earning a Bachelor’s Degree from Liberty University, building a career in engineering leadership, and beginning his entrepreneurial journey. He is passionate about his family, ensuring his four daughters never have to suffer through the same educational drudgery he did.

Aug 21, 2022 • 18min
August 21, 2022 Stone Chiseler Sunday Chapter 2 of The Stone Chiseler
‘Stone Chiseler Sunday’ Chapter 2 of My New Book ‘The Stone Chiseler’
Happy Sunday folks. Welcome to Stone Chiseler Sunday for Chapter 2 of my new book The Stone Chiseler.
Are you a chiseler or a sculptor? The choice is yours. Enjoy!
Follow me on Insta @jasonwrightnow
http://www.jasonwrightnow.com
Purchase The Stone Chiseler

Aug 19, 2022 • 45min
Did Sam Harris Really Say Censorship Is Ok If It Keeps Donald Trump Out of Office? Q&A, Why Critical Thinking Is More Important Than Ever
The Jason Wright Show
I like Sam Harris. I find him interesting, and my boy has wicked smarts. However, even the brightest amongst us can have very very bad ideas. Sam is in the news today for an interview he did on the Triggernametry Podcast.
Essentially he said, it was ok to censor the Hunter Biden laptop story lest it usher in a second term for Donald Trump. As is often the case on such issues I got the questions, “Jason, what do you think about the Sam Harris dust up?”
In this BFE I answer this question, what I think about bright people in general, the importance of critical thinking and what we should all do to not prove Sam Harris correct.
I hope you’ve had a great week. Enjoy the show.
Follow me on Insta @jasonwrightnow
http://www.jasonwrightnow.com
Buy my new book The Stone Chiseler HERE

Aug 16, 2022 • 1h 35min
August 16, 2022 The Afghanistan Withdraw, Ukraine, Rucking and More With Purple Heart Veteran and Congressional Aide Kenneth Depew
Kenneth Depew on The Jason Wright Show
I’m very fortunate to have very smart and accomplished friends. Kenneth Depew is certainly no exception. Kenneth served in both Afghanistan as well as Iraq. Recently he became involved with Afghanistan once again not as a soldier but as a congressional aide trying to bring Americans home.
He has also spent time on the ground in Ukraine where he gives a first hand account of exactly what the region has gone through, the realities of Russian warfare and just what war smells and looks like. It was a great and far ranging conversation.
Oh, and yes we also discuss rucking. This has become one of my new passions and Kenneth is a veteran at rucking for his job as a soldier as well as for fitness. Enjoy the show.
Follow me on Insta @jasonwrightnow
http://www.jasonwrightnow.com

Aug 14, 2022 • 18min
'Stone Chiseler Sunday' Chapter 1 of My New Book 'The Stone Chiseler'
‘The Stone Chiseler’ was inspired by Viktor Frankl’s ‘Man’s Search for Meaning.’
It is a story about a young boy, Giovanni Chistianni, who loses everything dear to him in life. He is even cast into the dreaded outdoor prison known as The Stone Yards.
However, it is there he discovers who he really is. Will he accept his fate as just another listeless Stone Chiseler? Or will he develop in himself a sculptor? This book is the classical heroes journey.
I hope you will have a listen to Chapter 1 of ‘The Stone Chiseler’ and consider ordering the full book at Amazon or Audible. Thanks for listening!
Order The Stone Chiseler on Amazon HERE

Aug 12, 2022 • 40min
August 12, 2022 I Why I Haven’t Had a Drink In 4 Years and What I’ve Learned
August 12, 2022 I Why I Haven’t Had a Drink In 4 Years and What I’ve Learned
So about 4 years ago I decided to abrogate drinking from my life altogether. It was a huge step. I come from a family of drinkers. We Wrights love to throw back cold beers and have a good time.
However, in an effort to reach peak health and performance I decided alcohol wasn’t part of that mix. So I quit. No more. In this episode I discuss what it was like quitting, how people treat you when you’re the guy that “doesn’t drink” and how you too should you desire to quit can improve your chances for success.
Let me be clear. This is NOT an episode to try to get anyone to quit drinking or shame those who drink. It’s just a little testimonial I thought might bring value to my audience. I hope you enjoy.
Let me know what you think.
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Checkout my new book ‘The Stone Chiseler’ HERE
Subscribe to my newsletter The Vitruvian Letter HERE

Aug 9, 2022 • 42min
Do You Believe in God? Why? Who is Jesus?
So an interesting question came through this week in the Vitruvian Letter. So I did my best to answer. It was a big enough question I thought I’d share it as well as my answer here on the JWS.
If you are not a subscriber of The Vitruvian Letter, you can become one HERE. I hope you will check it out. Thanks for listening.
Also, please give me a follow on Insta @jasonwrightnow
Keep endeavoring to ‘Improve always in ALL ways!”

Aug 6, 2022 • 50min
August 5, 2022 Improve Your Focus Always in ALL Ways With a Word From Dr. Andrew Humberman
August 5, 2022 Improve Your Focus Always in ALL Ways With a Word From Dr. Andrew Humberman
For complete Huberman episode referenced in this episode click below
Winter, 1914.The Belgium landscape looked like the haunted forest from a child’s nightmare. Once-verdant vegetation and trees were stripped and scorched, desolated by artillery fire.Relentless rain called for makeshift bridges, built so soldiers could traverse the mud bogs and continue the push on the Western front.But the rain was slick. Soldiers slipped, their shoulders heavily laden with gear. The mud swallowed their legs, rendering them paralyzed Comrades reached in to pull them out. Shells showered overhead. The smell of chlorine––chemical warfare––was overwhelming, overpowered only by the stench emanating from piles of the fallen surrounding them.Their efforts to free their flailing comrades from the mud failed. Occasionally, as they scrambled to save them, the mud would claim another victim. The sinking soldiers were left behind. Hellfire above them, unable to move, before suffocating, they had hours to sink. The panic, fear, and helplessness drove some of them to the edge of insanity. And the mud swallowed them whole.Of all the difficult and dangerous battlefields of history, the Flanders Trenches during the winter of 1914 tops the list. Military scholars tell us that this is due to a single reason:World War I marked a historical intersection of modern weapons with medieval strategy.Similarly, the 21st century marks a historical intersection of modern technology with ancient biology.There’s a war going on for your attention. And it’s relentless.According to the data, most of us are drowning in the mess and mud; the average knowledge worker is interrupted every 11 minutes, checks their inboxes 56 times per day, and completes 1.5 hours of work per day.If you don’t protect your consciousness, you’ll risk becoming a casualty.The good news? Unlike WWI, the damage from today’s weapons––smartphones, laptops, social media, VR gaming devices––is self-inflicted. This means the attention war is winnable.So what causes all this wasted attention in the first place?In one word:Distraction.We know by now that distraction stresses us out, makes us dumber, blunts our empathy, and fragments our attention. So in this series, we’ll focus primarily on the distinctions that are most relevant to flow.Neuroscientist Adam Gazzaley defines distractions as “goal-irrelevant information that we either encounter in our external surroundings or generate internally within our minds.”The operative word here is “information.”We’re wired to crave information. In primates, the brain responds to new information like how it responds to food. This served our ancestors because new information was a matter of life or death.Learning that a lion was lurking in the bushes––new information––was more important than staying focused. In a crisis like that, ignoring Simba and finishing a task would be fatal. This is partly why our information-seeking drive is stronger than top-down cognitive control––attention, working memory, and goal management.What’s happening under the hood here?It starts with the nucleus accumbens––a cluster of nerve cells underneath the cerebral cortex. Neuroscientists often refer to it as the brain’s pleasure center. It’s the region that lights up when gamblers place a bet, drug addicts snort, or when people have orgasms.The likelihood that an activity will lead to addiction links to 1) how fast it releases dopamine, 2) the intensity of that release, and 3) the reliability of that release.Inhaling or injecting a drug––as opposed to swallowing a pill––produces a faster and stronger dopamine release. Social media, smartphones, and modern-day tech act similarly. They’re designed to cause a dopamine surge in the nucleus accumbens as fast as possible.And the pleasure of this release is so extreme that many animals would rather die than stop experiencing it.In a famous experiment at McGill University, neuroscientists Peter Milner and James Olds placed a small electrode in the brains of rats on the nucleus accumbens. A lever in the cage allowed these rats to send a small electrical signal directly to their nucleus accumbens.Do you think they liked it?Boy, how they did. They liked it so much that they did nothing else. They forgot all about eating and sleeping. Starved or not, they ignored tasty food. They even ignored sexual opportunities. The rats pressed the lever over and again until they died.The average knowledge worker behaves similarly every time we dispatch an email, tap out a text, or gawk at our news feed. Our brain gets a dollop of dopamine and we feel a tiny sense of accomplishment. This incessant info-snacking constitutes a neural addiction.Again, for our ancestors, this info-gathering was essential. But in a high-tech world where everything is meticulously engineered by the brightest minds of our time to seize and sustain our attention? It’s more a bug than a feature.Technology facilitates the ability for us to be like caged rats – endlessly pressing that lever for pleasure.And that’s just modern tech interacting with our internal dopamine system.Attention is further threatened when you bring in everyone else.There are over 7.9 billion people in the world. 5.3 billion of them are on the internet. 2.9 billion are active on Facebook every month.What do these people have in common?They want you to hear them, see them, like them, understand them, and follow them.But that’s not all.There are 250 million businesses. 150 million have websites. 70 million of them advertise online using 5,000 different tools to optimize their marketing efforts.These companies spend $629 billion dollars per year on ads to do one thing:To get your attention.At this point, it’s hard to imagine life before our personal and professional world was so dominated and switched on. Our devices are as indispensable as they are distractible.We check our phones every twelve minutes (often after first waking up). We check our phones up to 150 times per day (every 6-7 minutes that we are awake).We have become interruptible every second of the day. In the average office, there’s a meager 5 minutes between interruptions. Nearly half of workplace employees respond to an email immediately after receiving it, and spend ten minutes dealing with its contents, only to take another ten to fifteen minutes to return to work. And this sort of rapid response is expected.And these trends are exponential. It took radio 38 years to get 50 million users. For Angry Birds to reach that milestone? It took 35 days. The speed of adoption is accelerating––and our attention span is evaporating in kind.One study by Workplace Options found that this chronic distraction is costing American businesses approximately $650 billion dollars per year in lost productivity.This constant fragmentation of concentration has become the new normal. We’re living in a state of continuous partial attention (CPA)––a phrase coined by an ex-Microsoft and Apple consultant, Linda Stone. By adopting this always-on––anytime, anywhere, anyplace––behavior, we scan the world all the time, but rarely give full attention to anything.Considering we’re still walking around with the same wetware our ancestors had hundreds of thousands of years ago… In the short term, we’ve adapted remarkably well to these demands on our attention.But in the long term?Well, distractions make us dumber. In 2005, research by Glen Wilson at the London Institute of Psychiatry found that persistent interruptions and distractions at work have a profoundly negative impact on our intelligence. In his study, those distracted by emails and phone calls saw a 10-point decrease in their IQ.According to a 2010 study by Daniel Gilbert and Matthew Killingsworth out of Harvard, we spend nearly 47 percent of our working hours thinking about something other than what we’re doing. This “mind wandering” has been shown to decrease cognitive performance. It has a negative impact on working memory and fluid intelligence.Distractions also stress us out. Stress hormones of adrenaline and cortisol create a physiological, hyper-alert state. We scan the environment for stimuli––itching for an info-hit––but are only temporarily assuaged. This leads to a constant assault of stress hormones.The biggest problem?Sources of dopamine-inducing information are everywhere, all the time. That means that, in the modern attention economy, winning the war is about what you ignore.Research shows that the primary determinant of high-level working memory isn’t the ability to focus. Instead, memory depends more on ignoring distractions. And that ability is fragile, even among young adults.You may think that being surrounded by sources of distractions––your phone, notifications on your laptop, other people––isn’t a big deal, as long as you don’t give in to the pull.But here’s the key:Filtering incoming stimuli isn’t passive.
Andrew D. Huberman (born September 26, 1975 in Palo Alto, California) is an American neuroscientist and associate professor in the Department of Neurobiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine who has made contributions to the brain development, brain plasticity, and neural regeneration and repair fields. Much of his work is focused on the visual system, including the mechanisms controlling light-mediated activation of the circadian and autonomic arousal centers in the brain, as well as brain control over conscious vision or sight.[1][2]
Huberman has been credited with coining the term “Non-Sleep Deep Rest” (NSDR), referring to practices that place the brain and body into shallow sleep to accelerate neuroplasticity and help offset mental and physical fatigue.[3][4][5]
Huberman was awarded the McKnight Foundation Neuroscience Scholar Award (2013),[6] and a Biomedical Scholar Award from the Pew Charitable Trusts.[7] He received the 2017 ARVO Cogan Award for his contributions to the fields of vision science and efforts to regenerate the visual system and cure blindness.[8]
Huberman is an elected member of the National Institutes of Health Grants Advisory Panel “Neurobiology of Visual Processes”,[9] and the editorial boards for Current Biology,[10] The Journal of Neuroscience, The Journal of Comparative Neurology, Current Opinion in Neurobiology, Cell Reports,[11] and Neural Development.[12] He is a member of Faculty of 1000.[13]


