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Erik: What is your comfort zone? And what do you do to break free of living in it?
Matt: My comfort zone is being uncomfortable, which is problematic in a lot of ways. So
I'm trying to break out of my comfort zone and into comfort. But yeah just you know I
mean—I'm kind of joking but I think I'm telling the truth, and like yeah I just have
always been like either doing new things or moving to new places or trying new stuff or
you know hanging out with new people, and you know like I think a little bit like I'm
trying to like stick with things or you know I've stayed in New York for a while, I've
been doing comedy for a while, I've been, you know, kind of riding the train that I'm
on for a bit and like trying to stick with that as opposed to you know maybe at an earlier
point in my life I'd, you know, I'd be like, I gotta change this, I got to—you know,
try something else, or go somewhere else, and you know just sort of sticking with something,
you know, and not running away from an unsure -- what I've been doing in the past but trying
to like see where I can go if I go deeper with it.
Erik: Why do you think that is?
Matt: It gets fatiguing running all the time. And, you know, sometimes you can like, I don't
know, maybe a different, having had—you know, shallow wide experiences, you start
to want a narrow deep one. You know? Sometimes it's—that's a different qualitative experience
to have.