Curiosity is a wonderful thing, but it becomes powerful when you’re deliberate about your information diet.In this episode, Jasmine and Jean-Louis explore what it means to be a strategist as a bodybuilder of the mind: choosing what to ingest, digesting it through reflection, conversation, community, and play, and training the instinct to recognize what is actually interesting. In a culture drowning in feeds, clips, and AI-generated sameness, there’s no advantage in merely hoarding signals. You have to know where to look, what to ignore, and how to turn information into insight.
Staying professionally curious sounds simple, but it is one of the hardest disciplines of strategy.
It is not about reading more, saving more, scrolling more, or building an infinite pile of references. It is about developing a mind that knows what to feed on, what to reject, and how to metabolize information into original thought.
Information is food. We digest ideas, chew on thoughts, sit with raw facts, and let things simmer. If strategists are bodybuilders of the mind, the diet has to be intentional. Social feeds, books, podcasts, conversations, lectures, old histories, fiction, academia, and side projects each have a different nutritional profile. Some inputs raise adrenaline or cortisol. Some restore oxytocin. Some provide breadth, but very little depth.
The question is not just whether an input is good or bad. It is what that input does to your nervous system and whether it can become useful thought.
Consumption is only half the work. The more important part is digestion. You have to chew the information by slowing down, reflecting, talking about it, writing through it, and turning the jewel with other people. Conversation adds emotional stakes and intellectual rigor.
This episode also looks at the instinct behind great strategy: the ability to notice what is weird and know when the weirdness matters. The strongest insights rarely come from the average box of shared information. They come from rare places, from the edges of fields, old books, sci-fi, academia, history, other professions, and strange moments where trend and countertrend rhyme.
That is where AI becomes complicated. It can help us go wide and find more material. But when it starts deciding what is interesting, it can weaken the very muscle strategists are trying to build.
Professional curiosity is not passive openness. It is disciplined exposure. And when everyone is consuming the same feeds and asking the same tools for answers, the rare insight belongs to the person who still knows how to get lost.
Links to interesting things mentioned in this episode and further reading:
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