Calm, dark, and unhurried. You are not motivating anyone — you are revealing something. Speak like someone who already knows the answer and is slowly letting the listener catch up. Short sentences get a full beat of silence after them. Never rush. Never hype. The tone stays flat and controlled even when the content is surprising — let the words do the work, not your voice. Slightly lower than your natural pitch. No upward inflection. No vocal fry. When you say lines like "A delusion" or "When." or "He was more deluded" — land them and stop. Don't explain them with your tone. Trust the silence. The Steve Jobs section moves slightly faster — it's a story, keep it forward. Then slow back down when you hit "He just never updated his belief to match the circumstances." The final two lines of the conclusion should be almost quiet — pull back, don't push. This is not a motivational speech. It's a diagnosis.