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A Guide to Staying Human (Part 1): Desperately Seeking Agency

March 9, 2026

Recorded on March 4, 2026

Description

In this week’s Frankly, Nate begins a new series called “Staying Human,” which focuses on what he sees as a precondition for everything else: recovering a sense of personal agency. He opens against the backdrop of Operation Epic Fury and the broader turbulence of 2026, but rather than offering geopolitical analysis, he turns inward toward a question that has been reshaping his theory of change: why does growing awareness of the more-than-human predicament so often produce paralysis rather than action?

Nate traces the gap between awareness and agency through several layers. He draws on the science of learned helplessness and self-efficacy research to explain how nervous systems learn whether effort leads to outcomes, and how a digital environment designed to fragment attention can train people to stop investing in their own follow-through. He frames this not as a personal failing but as a predictable consequence of living inside a Superorganism that advertises choice while eroding the conditions for it. Rather than prescribing a program, Nate shares practices he is experimenting with himself: voluntary speed bumps before reaching for a screen, small kept promises that rebuild self-trust, and protecting even one hour of intentional time. He argues that reclaiming agency at the individual level is not sufficient to address our entire predicament, but it is a precondition for the community-level and institutional work required to make the future better than the default.

Where in your life has awareness of the world’s problems triggered overwhelm or even paralysis? What is one kept promise, however small, that might begin to rebuild your sense of traction? And if agency is a precondition for everything that comes next, what would it look like to treat it as something you practice rather than something you wait to feel?

Show Notes & Links to Learn More

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The TGS team puts together these brief references and show notes for the learning and convenience of our listeners. However, most of the points made in episodes hold more nuance than one link can address, and we encourage you to dig deeper into any of these topics and come to your own informed conclusions.

00:10 – Operation Epic Fury2026 Iran war

00:25 – Strait of Hormuz,Strait of Hormuz practical closureWhat it means for oil and gas pricesWhich countries will be hit the most

00:45 – Error bar

00:53 – Wide Boundary News playlistWide-boundary perspective

01:45 – The Twilight Zone TV Series

03:15 –  Communicating a problem without solutions can be ineffectiveStress hormones

04:20 –  Agency (Self-leadership)

05:10 – The Meaning Crisis, Increase in chronic fatiguedirectionlessnessinattention

06:00 –  MetacrisisDaniel Schmachtenberger – an introduction to the Metacrisis (Human predicament)

06:30 –  Nate’s Reality 101 course (now accessible online), Reality 101 Textbooks:

06:45 –  Theory of change

06:55 –  Economic superorganism (with a metabolism)

07:15 –  Do sharks really die if they stop swimming?

07:45 – Increase in surveillence

08:45 –  Check your Voter Registration (U.S.)

09:25 – The Information Age

09:50: –  Inability to change, negative emotions, and reactions to such:

10:50 – Freeze responseNervous system overwhelmConditions that make humans more persuadable

11:05 – Feudalism

11:30 – Orwellian

12:25 – As an evolutionary adaptation, our brains are constantly estimating the controllability of our environment:

13:19 – Learned helplessness

13:45 – Self-efficacy

14:07 – Mastery experiences, See also Albert Bandura’s work:

14:33 – Tiny Habits by BJ Fogg

15:06 – How to tolerate discomfort and stick with something (successful habit formation)

15:55 – Biophysical macroeconomics (More info)

16:30 – Self-trust is key to agency

17:45 – Ecological decayGlobal heatingGlobal debt

18:35 – Human tendency to rationalizeNeocortexTime blindness

19:35 – Elephant path meditation

21:40 – Inertia

26:05 – The social nature of mitochondria,

Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens is the Director of The Institute for the Study of Energy & Our Future (ISEOF) an organization focused on educating and preparing society for the coming cultural transition. Allied with leading ecologists, energy experts, politicians and systems thinkers ISEOF assembles road-maps and off-ramps for how human societies can adapt to lower throughput lifestyles.

Nate holds a Masters Degree in Finance with Honors from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in Natural Resources from the University of Vermont. He teaches an Honors course, Reality 101, at the University of Minnesota.