Never Enough: Can self-improvement really fix us? | Daniel Ogbonna
We live in a generation obsessed with self-improvement. Bullet Journaling, juice cleanses, cold plunges. And, of course, much of it works. Many of us have achieved far more than our parents or grandparents could have dreamt of.And yet, the focus on self-improvement has a dark side. We become anxious about our performance. We obsess over the small details of our sleep, diet, exercise, mental health, and habits. Our world feels smaller. Some of us have burnt ourselves out in the pursuit of perfection. And even when you make the gains, you’re left wondering what’s next.On Tuesday, 20th May 2025, we hosted Salt Live with speaker Daniel Ogbonna. In a room full of curious Londoners, he unpacked the perils of our collective perfectionism and explored what ancient Christian wisdom has to say to our hunger for self-improvement.
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Can self-improvement really fix us? Q&A | Daniel Ogbonna & Jeremy Moses
Listen to the Q&A session from our Salt Live event, "Never Enough: Can self-improvement really fix us?". Speaker Daniel Ogbonna and host Jeremy Moses take questions from the audience.
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Screen Fatigue: How to be human in the digital age | Jeremy Moses
Less than 20 years after the birth of the iPhone, screens have become the dominant presence in modern life. We work, plan, socialise, read, and entertain ourselves through them. Barely a minute goes by without a pick-up. And yet, we’re increasingly aware that too much screen time is harmful. Heightened anxiety from constant doomscrolling. Brain-rot from too much YouTube. Insecurity from perpetual comparison. We’re bored and addicted to our phones. We feel like something is wrong. But buying a dumbphone or reducing screen time isn’t enough. What if the problem is deeper? Do we need to understand the roots of our habits?On Tuesday, 4th February 2025, we hosted our latest Salt Live event where speaker Jeremy Moses shared his take on the digital dilemma with a room of curious Londoners. Jeremy is a former start-up leader, as well as a leadership coach, pastor and speaker. He has experience counselling and coaching young professionals in London and helps to lead Grace London, a young church in central London. He is married to Jen and has three children.
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The Case Against Secularism | Glen Scrivener
For centuries, secularism has been heralded as humanity’s golden bullet. Society will flourish if we reject religion, so we’ve been told. No more truth, intolerance or control. But over recent years, a wave of backlash has formed. Feminist thinkers have slammed secular ethics, cultural Christianity is on the rise, and prominent atheist figures have come to faith. Meanwhile, a ‘meaning crisis’ is quietly brewing as many struggle to find significance in a society emptied of religion and purpose.Has secularism overpromised? Are we really better off in a society without faith? And how can we find significance for our lives in secularism’s crumbling shadow?On Tuesday, 15th October 2024 we hosted our latest Salt Live event where we were joined by guest speaker Glen Scrivener and a room of curious Londoners who came to hear what Glen had to say on this subject. Glen is a regular speaker at universities, churches and other public forums across the UK. He directs Speak Life, a Christian digital media company, and has authored several books, including The Air We Breathe: How We All Came to Believe in Freedom, Kindness, Progress, and Equality. Originally from Australia, he lives in Eastbourne with his wife Emma and their two children.
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Does religion poison everything? | Glen Scrivener
The writer Christopher Hitchens famously claimed that ‘religion poisons everything’. For many, religion appears to be the cause of much of the world’s intolerance, division and even violence. And yet, for others, religion is a source of personal meaning and existential peace. Why isIn this archive episode from our Salt Live event in January 2019, popular Christian speaker and author, Glen Scrivener, dives into the world of anti-theism and seeks to explore why religion can be so polarising. Originally from Australia, Glen regularly speaks at universities, churches and other public forums across the UK.Glen will be back at Salt Live on 15th October 2024 and will be speaking on why faith makes sense in our modern age, at our upcoming talk, "The Case Against Secularism." If you'd like to join us in person for this Central London event in Waterloo, please visit our Eventbrite page to sign up for free.