Skip to content
  • Home
  • Favorite Quotes
  • Philosophies of Life
  • Get to know Man Overseas
  • Man Overseas 1-On-1 Coaching
  • Podcast
  • Speaker
Facebook Instagram Twitter Pinterest
  • Home
  • Favorite Quotes
  • Philosophies of Life
  • Get to know Man Overseas
  • Man Overseas 1-On-1 Coaching
  • Podcast
  • Speaker
Facebook Instagram Twitter Pinterest
Menu
Manoverseas
Hit enter to search or esc to close
Home  >  Life Lessons • Podcast • Self-Development  >  Exploring the Rational and Emotional with Ted Agon
Posted inLife Lessons Podcast Self-Development

Exploring the Rational and Emotional with Ted Agon

Ted Agon Podcast
Posted By Man Overseas Posted on May 17, 2019
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Pinterest

Ted Agon has lived a life filled with exploration and adventure! He is an author and speaker who has lived in seven countries and operated on five of the seven continents.

He gained life-altering perspectives from other cultures & languages, and has been heavily influenced by living in the environments of three of the world’s major religions.

Ted learned to observe the simple by being raised with no money, a great community, and a love of nature. His penchant for clear writing, combined with engagement with new technologies, from the sea floor to space robotics, has driven Ted to write ground-breaking books.

Listening to our conversation will change the way you think about thinking. We discuss:

  • Everything Ted does is a Ted Talk
  • He puts a lot of thought into thinking
  • “The Learning Curve” is dedicated to his mother, Isabel Allen
  • She was born in 1916; raised three boys as a widow
  • His dad died when he and siblings were infants

Thinking and Rationality (4:27):

  • Humans are comprised of emotion and reason or emotion and rational
  • If we are totally rational, we would not be human; if we are totally emotional, we would not exist
  • The rational helps us cope with negative emotions
  • Positive emotion aids in decision-making
  • Consistency of rational mediates emotions
  • Thought distinguishes humans from all creatures on earth; thinking is central to the human experience

Thinking About Thinking (6:47):

  • What is thinking?
  • The only tool of curiosity is the question
  • “Intelligence is not measured by what we know, but what we use when we don’t know”
  • The Scientific Method starts with a question
  • Knowledge is the accumulation of answers
  • Critical thinking is critical questioning
  • Everything that is man-made is an answer to someone’s question
  • Every word in every language is an answer to the question, “What do I call this?”
  • “Our age is not measured in years, but curiosity”

Stumbling on Discoveries (13:57):

  • Christopher Columbus stumbled upon America
  • Alexander Fleming discovered Penicillin by accident
  • Viagra was discovered by accident
  • Teachers use Socratic Method to inspire thought

On Writing (14:51):

  • A “think piece” is a book written for an audience of one—the author
  • Write simply, to be understood
  • Everything in life is practice (thinking & writing)
  • Writing is re-writing, which is re-thinking
  • The best way to process your thought is to write

When you write, you mind your mind, and we discover things that we didn’t know we knew.” – Ted Agon

On Questions (24:35):

  • Law of unintended consequences is not asking enough questions
  • The brain cannot ignore a question
  • Asking a question is taking control
  • “Paralysis of Analysis” is asking questions all the time; we exit paralysis with action
  • Most basic elements of human existence: thinking, learning, and communicating

To “Google” is to Question (27:34)

  • In 1999, a company was started with $100,000 investment
  • In their 6th year in business, the company’s market value was $6 billion
  • Google provided a path for people’s questions
  • Search for knowledge is process of learning
  • The only way we learn is to question
  • We cannot help ourselves (or our children) to think better; we can help ourselves to ask more and better questions

And Much More:

  • The simplest life is deepest life, un-cluttered
  • Smart phones are making us dumber—entertaining ourselves without thinking
  • Learning how to learn is life’s most important skill
  • We can only do our imperfect best
  • The greatest gift we can give to ourselves is to help other people
  • Sense of humor is a measure of intelligence
  • The imperfect life is…perfect
  • Negative people are rocks in the stream [of life]
  • Creativity requires solitude
  • A discussion about our wives
  • Ted’s wife, Julie, sang for the USO in Germany, Belgium & France
  • Julie’s greatest gift is her personhood
  • Loneliness is a desert; solitude is an oasis

Quick Questions (52:37):

  • Which country that you’ve visited has had the most impact on how you think?
  • What advice would you give your 35-year old self?
  • What do you hope to be doing at 85 years old?
  • What are you most grateful for?
Connect with Ted:
  • On his website
  • By email: info@thehumankey.com

 

Listen here:
https://www.manoverseas.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Ted-Agon.mp3

 

 

Kids ask a million questions; to discourage their questions is an unintended form of child abuse. – Ted Agon

 

Books mentioned:

Articles mentioned:

13 Rules to Live By

Why You Should Use a Journal

Tags: #podcast life lessons Self-Development
Previous Article Driving a Porsche in Your 30s
Next Article Learning Emotional Intelligence From Michael Jordan & Jordan B. Peterson

Related Posts

Feature image for Man Overseas Podcast episode titled Mardi Gras, Mexican Cartels, Nazi Olympics
Posted inInvesting & Finance Money Podcast Politics Self-Development Sports Travel

Mardi Gras, Mexican Cartels, Nazi Olympics

I start this episode with ‘funnies’ from the past week, then get into the Winter Olympics in Milan. How thrilling would it be to have a luge track nearby that you could use? Problem is there are only four of them in America. In this episode, I break down the differences between luge, skeleton, and

Read More about Mardi Gras, Mexican Cartels, Nazi Olympics
Posted By Man Overseas Posted on February 26, 2026
0
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Pinterest
Feature image for Man Overseas Podcast episode titled Why the Long Face?
Posted inLife Lessons Man O Podcasts Podcast Politics Random Thoughts Sports Travel

Why the Long Face?

In this episode, I share my ‘physiognomical theory of everything,’ and what could unaffectionately be referred to as “communist face.” Here I discuss facial structures, perceived softness, and why certain public figures project a collectivist energy based solely on appearance. This eventually turns into a broader conversation about leadership, optics, and testosterone (or lack thereof).

Read More about Why the Long Face?
Posted By Man Overseas Posted on February 18, 2026
0
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Pinterest

2 Comments

  1. Luke
    June 19, 2019 at 11:11 pm

    This podcast was killer! I’m drinking from the saucer listening.
    Thanks!

    • Man Overseas
      June 20, 2019 at 12:02 pm

      Thanks man!

FOLLOW MY ADVENTURES

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Like Us on Facebook

Manoverseas

Now Reading

ISBN: 9781473589681

Badges of Honor

””

””
””

SEARCH

Popular

  • Feature image for Man Overseas Podcast episode titled: Your Money and KidsYour Money and Kids
  • How to Pass a Shit Test: Life’s Most Underrated Skill
  • Sexual EnergyThink and Grow Rich: How to use Sexual Energy for Maximum Utility
  • 40 Pieces of Life Advice for 20-Year Old Me
Facebook Instagram Twitter

Organizations I support



About

Hi there! I’m the Man Overseas, a thirty-something-year-old from Houston, TX, who in 2015, took a year-long sabbatical from a lucrative sales job in the States to travel the world on passive real estate income.
After one year abroad, I discovered the FIRE (financial independence retire early) community, and have since become a proverbial card-carrying member.
Read more …
© Copyright 2019. All Rights Reserved.
  • Travel
  • Self-Development
  • Investing & Finance
  • Life Lessons
  • Random Thoughts
  • Podcast
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy