Modern WisdomModern Wisdom

Life Hacks 202 | Modern Wisdom Podcast 234

Chris Williamson and Jonny on modern Wisdom Hosts Trade Life Hacks For Health, Focus, Sanity.

Chris WilliamsonhostJonnyguestYusefguestGuestguest
Oct 19, 20201h 40mWatch on YouTube ↗
Nutritional and health hacks (nutritional yeast, high‑protein quark, sauna blankets, ChiliPAD)Digital productivity and phone setup (iOS 14 back tap, Shortcuts, screen-time widgets, blocking apps)Social media optimization (hidden Instagram story tags, single call-to-action strategy)Behavior design and default habits (fallback activities, no-phone zones, no-TV-at-night rule)Sleep optimization and evening routines (cooling mattresses, sleep meditations, reading before bed)Cognitive and conversational tools (asking for solutions, clarifying goals before actions)Broader commentary on tech, attention, and modern lifestyle (beta OS pitfalls, social media, Netflix/TV choices)

In this episode of Modern Wisdom, featuring Chris Williamson and Jonny, Life Hacks 202 | Modern Wisdom Podcast 234 explores modern Wisdom Hosts Trade Life Hacks For Health, Focus, Sanity This episode of Modern Wisdom’s Life Hacks series features Chris Williamson with recurring guests Johnny and Yousef sharing practical, often humorous tweaks for productivity, health, sleep, and digital minimalism.

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Modern Wisdom Hosts Trade Life Hacks For Health, Focus, Sanity

  1. This episode of Modern Wisdom’s Life Hacks series features Chris Williamson with recurring guests Johnny and Yousef sharing practical, often humorous tweaks for productivity, health, sleep, and digital minimalism.
  2. They cover everything from nutritional yeast on eggs and infrared ‘bag saunas’ to iOS automation, Instagram growth tricks, ChiliPAD cooling mattresses, and rules to curb phone and TV overuse.
  3. A recurring theme is designing environments and default behaviors that reduce friction and distraction, so good choices happen automatically and bad habits are harder to execute.
  4. The conversation also drifts into wider reflections on technology addiction, beta software disasters, Netflix recommendations, and the archetypal ‘Scoby problem’ of over-optimizing life into bigger headaches.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

7 ideas

Use nutritional yeast or high‑protein quark to effortlessly boost daily protein and micronutrients.

Sprinkling nutritional yeast on eggs adds all essential amino acids and B-vitamins with a cheesy flavor, while Nestlé Lindahls Quark/Skyr-style yogurts provide ~18g protein with minimal carbs and fat for very low cost and effort.

Turn downtime into progress by defining a conscious ‘fallback activity’.

Instead of defaulting to scrolling or inbox-checking when you’re ‘buffering’ (files exporting, kettles boiling, waiting in queues), pre-select a low-effort task like clearing your downloads folder, organizing photos, light reading, or even handstands, so dead time chips away at useful projects.

Reconfigure your phone to reduce distraction and speed up intentional actions.

iOS 14’s Back Tap and Shortcuts can be set to instantly open capture apps, task managers, planners, or low-power mode; adding a screen-time widget on the home screen guilts you away from mindless use, and blocking email/social via apps like Cold Turkey exposes how often you try to check them.

Hide Instagram story tags to keep viewers focused on one clear action.

Type up to 10 @mentions, then shrink and drag the text off-screen so tagged accounts still get notified and can repost, but viewers only see a single call-to-action like ‘Swipe up’ instead of a cluttered story that dilutes clicks.

Improve sleep by controlling temperature and setting a wind-down structure.

Tools like the ChiliPAD (water-cooled mattress topper) and infrared sauna blankets lower body temperature or create strong hot-cold contrasts, which can increase deep sleep and mood; pairing this with pre-bed sleep meditations and a rule of ‘no TV after shower, only reading’ supports deeper rest and more reading.

Create intentional ‘no phone’ and ‘no TV’ zones to reclaim attention.

Leaving your phone out of the bedroom or bathroom (stocking those spaces with books instead) and not having a TV in the main living area naturally leads to more conversation, better posture, less screen-time creep, and clearer evenings.

When confronted with criticism or vague goals, demand clarity: solutions and objectives.

If someone complains (“That track is shit”), ask “What would you do instead?” to shift them from pure critique to solution-mode; likewise, for personal goals, explicitly define the outcome, list possible strategies, anticipate obstacles, and, if possible, ask a true expert exactly what they’d do.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

Everyone already has a fallback behavior — it’s just usually pointless.

Chris Williamson

Why do you sit around buffering, waiting on your email inbox?

Chris Williamson

If you find what the thing is, try and block it. And then when you go to do that, that’s the reminder.

Johnny

The bed always feels like you’ve just got into it.

Johnny, on using the ChiliPAD

I think that might be the best life hack here ever.

Chris Williamson, on having a default fallback activity

QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE

5 questions

How could I redesign my own phone and home environment to make distraction harder and meaningful work or rest easier by default?

This episode of Modern Wisdom’s Life Hacks series features Chris Williamson with recurring guests Johnny and Yousef sharing practical, often humorous tweaks for productivity, health, sleep, and digital minimalism.

What simple, repeatable ‘fallback activity’ would give me the highest long-term return if I did it every time I felt the urge to mindlessly check my phone?

They cover everything from nutritional yeast on eggs and infrared ‘bag saunas’ to iOS automation, Instagram growth tricks, ChiliPAD cooling mattresses, and rules to curb phone and TV overuse.

Which of my current routines (morning, evening, or workday) could be radically simplified if I honestly asked, ‘What is the actual goal of this habit?’

A recurring theme is designing environments and default behaviors that reduce friction and distraction, so good choices happen automatically and bad habits are harder to execute.

Am I willing to adopt hard rules like ‘no phone in the bedroom’ or ‘no TV after shower’ for 30 days, and what changes in sleep, mood, or productivity might result?

The conversation also drifts into wider reflections on technology addiction, beta software disasters, Netflix recommendations, and the archetypal ‘Scoby problem’ of over-optimizing life into bigger headaches.

When I criticize something — at work, online, or in relationships — how often do I also bring a concrete alternative, and what would change if I always had to propose a solution?

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