#44 Sebastian Junger (Tribe, The Perfect Storm)

Published: July 11, 2019, 11:28 a.m.

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Hello, and welcome to another edition of the Inside The Newsroom podcast newsletter! This week\\u2019s guest is Sebastian Junger, author of five books including The Perfect Storm (remember that movie?). Sebastian and I talked about his latest book, Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging, which is a detailed history of how and why tribes are formed, and why today\\u2019s society isn\\u2019t set up for humans to function properly. It\\u2019s one of those books that you know is going to change your life and way of thinking within the first 20 pages. Below is a post-game analysis of everything we talked about.

The Premise For a Book

Tribe is only 138 pages long, but that\\u2019s what I like about Sebastian\\u2019s work the most. Authors often try to fill out a 300-page book and, as readers, we\\u2019ll suffer with a ton of waffle. With Tribe, I was in and out within a couple of days. The book is actually an extension of the below longform piece Sebastian wrote on how PTSD became a problem for soldiers beyond the battlefield. Even if you skip the book and just read the original article, I promise you your mind will be blown.

Sebastian Junger for Vanity Fair

Why Do They Keeping Taking Us To War?

At school I was always told that wars were fought over for economic and religious reasons. Take the U.S. and UK\\u2019s war against various terrorist groups in Iraq and Afghanistan. It\\u2019s very much a war of different ideas with big economic interests. But what I haven\\u2019t ever been told, until now, is the positive psychological effects that war brings \\u2014 unity, cohesion and meaning. Now, this doesn\\u2019t mean I condone war. I do not. But to unpick things you disagree with, you have to dig deeper under the shell to understand the human traits that lead people to do certain things.

Steve Taylor, The Guardian

Like Me, Please

Before you read on, please like this edition of\\xa0Inside The Newsroom\\xa0by clicking the \\u2764\\ufe0f below the title. That way I\\u2019ll appear in clever algorithms and more people will be able to read. Cheers.

Why Do Disasters Bring Us Together?

Turns out it\\u2019s not just war that unites us. The first thing we\\u2019ll hear whenever a hurricane or other natural disaster hits is about how tough the people affected are, and how they\\u2019re already rebuilding the community. Disasters, as well as wars, trigger our need for social-connection, and more specifically an increased willingness to help others in times of stress. Wars are one of the greatest stresses anyone could bear, so maybe we just need to get the world\\u2019s leaders to legalize weed and everything will be alright.

Emma Seppala, Scientific American

The Cult of Extreme Sports

Back in May I completed my first ever walking marathon. Six hours and 51 minutes of complete hell. Seriously, don\\u2019t knock until you\\u2019ve tried it. As I crossed the finishing line with my new 70-year-old walking buddy, Gill, I felt a sense of direct connection with her. We\\u2019d just walked for seven freaking hours together, and I knew many far-too-personal things about her. I\\u2019ve already signed up for my next one in September with hopes that Gill will be there too (I forgot to take her number). Anyway, this is a roundabout way of saying that I now understand the obsession of extreme sports. It\\u2019s about social connection and having an identity, especially in this modern world of comfort and routine. Take Badwater, for instance. Covering 135 miles through Death Valley is no joke. But the ability to be one of only a few to complete it each year is enough to drive people to do crazy things.

Heather Hatfield, WebMD

The Value of Suffering

Without becoming a depression newsletter, it is fascinating to learn about why we feel the way we do. For me, a big turning point was realizing I could turn rejection and unfavorable events into positives. Below, David Goggins neatly sums up why suffering is actually a good thing that we need in order to succeed.

The Need To Be Needed

This will be a test for my dad to see if he actually reads these things. Stephen Levitt recently retired after a 40-year career in the finance industry. He had a tight-knit group of about five or six colleagues he\\u2019d see or talk to every day, all conversing for the good of one shared goal. Now that he\\u2019s out of the business he, like millions of other retirees, has found it hard to know how to spend all of his free time. This is one of the most common misconceptions about retirement, the notion that no more work will be heaven. But no. Work and feeling needed is essential for the soul.

Michael Mamas for Huff Post

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