PODCAST · society
The Glass Bead Game
by Guy Skilton
Making sense of ordinary life, one quiet idea at a time.A reflective podcast exploring literature, philosophy, and everyday life. Connecting ideas, noticing patterns, and giving language to things we often feel but rarely articulate. Short pieces that linger in ordinary moments long enough to reveal something deeper.
-
11
Epidsode 13 The Machine That Said Sorry
Welcome to The Glass Bead GameA few days ago I came across a cartoon on social media.It made me laugh.Then it made me think.And the more I thought about it, the less it seemed to be about artificial intelligence at all.If any of this resonates feel free to email me [email protected]
-
10
Episode 12. The Last Witnesses
Most people went to the wake.Six of us followed the coffin to the crematorium.What happened there felt unexpectebly strange. Stripped of the crowds and familiar rhythms of a funeral, the ceremony seemed briefly exposed- deeply moving on one level but also oddly surreal.A reflection on grief, ritual, and the experience of accompanying someone to the very end.Please comment or email if anything resonates with you [email protected]
-
9
Episode 11. Tesco Car Park and the Field Beneath
What happens when a Tesco car park sits on top of a childhood field?A reflection on memory, change, and the hidden layers beneath ordinary places.The Glass Bead Game explores attention, witnessing, and the search for a meaningful life.If this episode resonates with you , I would be delighted to hear from you, either leave a comment or send a message to :[email protected]
-
8
Episode 10: For ages 4-100 +
A few words on the side of a Lego box led me to think about David Attenborough, childhood, curiosity, and the strange idea that growing older means growing serious.In this episode, I reflect on play, wonder, learning and the people who never quite lose their fascination with the world.Maybe wisdom is not the opposite of childhood but rather childhood somewhat preserved.
-
7
Episode 9: The calm dismantling of a narrative
Following on from "Saying much softly", this episode explores another kind of public language. The calm dismantling of a narrative, not through noise or victory, but through steadiness, restraint, and the quiet force of clarity.If any of this resonates feel free to [email protected]
-
6
Episode 8: Saying much softly- King Charles III, Mark Carney, and the Art of Quiet Speech
A reflection on restraint, implication, and the quiet power of language.In this episode , I explore how some speakers manage to communicate profound things without shouting, posturing, or simplifying the world into slogans. Through public speeches, personal reflection, and literary sensibility, this episode considers why understatement can sometimes carry greater moral force than outrage.Sometimes people say much.... softlyIf this episode resonated with you, you're very welcome to get in touch [email protected]
-
5
Episode 7: The Quiet power of Fred Rogers
In a loud world, Fred Rogers spoke softly.This episode explores why gentleness is so often underestimated- and why quiet moral seriousness can sometimes reach people more deeply than anger, performance , or spectacle.From the calm rhythms of children's television to the hidden courage required to remain kind in a cynical age, this is a reflection on warmth, restraint, and the strange strength of those who refuse to harden.A short meditation on kindness, dignity, and the enduring power of soft voices.
-
4
Episode 6: The Kindness of not being right
Prince Myshkin, Socrates, and perhaps even Jesus all share a curious problem.They are not simply right- they are too honest, too direct, too unfiltered in their goodness.And the world doesn't quite know what to do with them.In this episode, I explore Dostoyevsky's The Idiot and the unsettling idea that truth, when expressed without modulation, can become socially disruptive- even dangerous.And that perhaps, in everyday life, there is a quieter virtue:The kindness of not always being right.If you would like to get in touch or share your thoughts, you can email the show [email protected]
-
3
Episode 5: Many Lives- A Good Place to Begin
There's a familiar idea that reading allows us to live more than one life.But what does that actually mean... in an ordinary, every day sense?In this episode, I explore the quieter side of that thought - not in a grand literary way, but in the small, almost unnoticed moments: sitting in a room, holding a book, and briefly stepping into another way of seeing.Reading doesn't just transport us to dramatic worlds. It changes how we return to our own.This feels like a good place to begin
-
2
Episode 4: The Afghan Biscuit
A small memory from childhood : My grandmother,an Afghan biscuit, a kitchen, and a time when life felt simpler without us quite realising it.This episode is about those ordinary moments that don't seem important at the time... but quietly stay with us, shaping how we feel about the past, and perhaps what we miss in the present.Not a grand story- just a small one. But sometimes those are the ones that remain.If any of this resonates with you feel free to contact meGuy [email protected]
-
1
Episode 3: The Table
I sometimes like to imagine conversations that could never be real but are revealing.Here is a simple tableAt the table are Anne Frank, Martin Luther King Junior and Nelson Mandela.This episode is a reflection on presence- what certain people carry with them, and how moral seriousness can feel quiet rather than loud.It is not an argument or a lesson. Just an attempt to sit for a while and notice what becomes visible.This is part of The Glass Bead Game, a series of reflections on literature , ideas , and the quiet patterns that shape how we see the world.If any of this resonates with you I welcome any dialogue.You can contact meGuy Skilton [email protected]
-
0
Episode 2: The Third Man
In this episode, I reflect on Michael Collins- the often overlooked "third man" of Apollo 11- and what his role tells us about unnoticed lives, quiet contribution, and George Eliot's idea of "unhistoric acts."If anything here resonates, you're very welcome to write:Guy [email protected]
-
-1
Episode 1. Introduction
This is the beginning of The Glass Bead Game.A series of short reflections on life, meaning, and the quiet patterns that shape how we see the world.I am not an academic or a guru, just someone who has spent years listening, reading and noticing.These episodes are an attempt to give words to things that are often felt but rarely articulated.If something here resonates, then it has already done its job.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Making sense of ordinary life, one quiet idea at a time.A reflective podcast exploring literature, philosophy, and everyday life. Connecting ideas, noticing patterns, and giving language to things we often feel but rarely articulate. Short pieces that linger in ordinary moments long enough to reveal something deeper.
HOSTED BY
Guy Skilton
Loading similar podcasts...