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When your first impression doesn't match your true self 😐➡️😘 K-pop Dream Squad w/ KickFlip premieres in 30 MINUTES! 🔗 #KpopDreamSquad_KickFlip #KickFlipxhello82 #KickFlip #hello82

44,082 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

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石高ゆめの🕯3/25 BIGCATvor 1 Jahr

Hello😙 I'm Yumeno Ishitaka🕯 Japanese ballerina girl🩰✨ I like dancing and singing! I perform live almost every day in Japan🎤 Thank you for the likes🙌🏻 Please follow me🤍

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Cylla Kavanaugh

17,325 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

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David Perell

137,573 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

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Camus

697,577 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

A young man sees someone drive by in a Ferrari with a blonde. He thinks: that guy has everything. Jordan Peterson says look closer. "The woman in the car is a prostitute with a cocaine addiction. Her life is one catastrophe after another." "He's had to lie and cheat his way into this position. He's afraid everything's going to come crashing down on him." "And that's what you're jealous of." He spent 15 minutes explaining what we're actually built for: "We view ourselves as built for pleasure. For consumption. For safety. For egotistical self-aggrandizement and fame." "What are we actually built for? Maximal challenge." "We're built to walk uphill. When you reach the pinnacle, you want to stop and appreciate the vision. But the next thing you want is a higher hill in the distance." "It's from the uphill climb that we derive our value." This is why young men disappear into video games. "That's all acted out in the video game. The active warrior moving uphill with sword in hand. That's dynamic. That's exciting." "They have to act that out in their own life. Video games are not a substitute for life." Start where you are. Even if it's embarrassing. "Humility is starting where you are. If your life is a mess, you have to see that you're the person in that mess." "Your first attempt to fix it might not be something you're particularly proud of." "I saw this in my clinical practice. The first steps people had to take were pretty embarrassing. They'd think: really? That's all I can do?" "Hey, man. Uphill is better than downhill." Here's what most people don't understand about momentum: "You accrue success exponentially. You accrue defeat exponentially too." "Start going downhill, you go downhill faster and faster. Start going uphill, you go uphill faster and faster." "Even if you have to start painfully small, it doesn't matter." Everyone wants confidence. But self-esteem is a lie. "Self-esteem doesn't even exist. It's a pathological concept altogether." "You want confidence that's based in competence. Otherwise it's narcissistic." "How do you develop that? You watch yourself exceed your limits." "And then you think: there's something in me that can exceed my limits. That's your true self." You want a goal you can never fully attain. "Almost all the positive emotion we feel, especially the emotion that fills us with enthusiasm, is experienced in relationship to a goal." "You want a horizon of ever-expanding possibility." "People stake their soul on attaining an instrumental goal. Then they get there and think: now what?" "The answer can't be: I'm going to live in the lap of luxury and never have to do anything." "What do you want to be? A giant infant with a gold bottle? You never have to do anything but lay on your back and suck." "No. You want to be an active warrior moving uphill with your sword in hand." Now here's the dark part: "You need to contemplate your own malevolence. Because you're not only who you are. You're who you could be. For better or worse." "I think it's easier to understand who you could be if you were better once you deeply understand who you could be if you were worse." "You think: I'm way deeper on the negative end than I thought. Much more closely aligned with the forces of hell than I presumed." "That's easy to swallow factually. Not so easy to swallow emotionally. It's a bitter pill." "I don't think you can contemplate the good without contemplating the evil first. It doesn't have the depth." "Fear of God is the beginning of wisdom." Many of his clients are too agreeable. They let everyone else win. "They're resentful and don't know how to stand up for themselves. They're very compassionate by nature. If you're negotiating with them, they'll let you win." "That's not good. You need to win too." "You cannot negotiate unless you can say no. And it causes conflict to say no." The solution sounds counterintuitive. "You have to develop your inner monster a little bit. And that makes you a better person, not a worse person." "It's weird. But that's just how it is." On privilege and how to pay for it: "Some cards are privilege. Maybe you're born intelligent. Symmetrical. Healthy. Into a culture where it's easier not to be deprived. Maybe your parents are rich." "All of that is unearned." "The way you pay for your privilege is with your virtue." "You expiate and atone by doing your best to live the best possible life you can manage. To speak the truth. To treat people with respect. To put your house in order." On envy: "Don't be so sure your position in your room is so damn trivial. It might be your attitude towards it that's trivial." "If you're in dire circumstances, look at how much opportunity you have to make things better." "You don't even want it to be easy."

Jaynit

400,000 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Having sex and playing League of Legends is the same thing first time i hit true flow state during sex everything disappeared wasn't me anymore. wasn't her. just pure motion. pure rhythm. no thought about lasting. no thought about technique. no thought at all. breathing synced. movement synced. completely dissolved into the moment. 30 minutes felt like 3 seconds time stopped existing that's when i understood: this is EXACTLY what challenger players feel in league they're not playing league they ARE league watched faker play yesterday: not thinking about cooldowns - he FEELS them not calculating damage - he KNOWS it not deciding to dodge - his body already moved perfect flow state. no gap between thought and action. actually, no thought at all virgin conscious player: thinks about every click "should i trade here?" brain processing already dead chad flow state player: hands moving before brain killed you during your thought doesn't remember doing it "wait we're fighting?" here's what flow state actually is: NO INNER DIALOGUE you know that voice saying "careful" "wait" "check map"? it's gone just pure pattern recognition firing directly into your hands the second you think "i'm in flow state" - you're out the second you think ANYTHING - you're out sex taught me this. league proves it your brain is the enemy your body knows what to do consciousness is lag instinct is instant you want to hit challenger? stop trying to play perfectly start trying to disappear become nothing. become everything. become the game. clip below demonstrates REAL flow state study the saskio way

Tony Chau

337,295 Aufrufe • vor 8 Monaten

A blackjack dealer in Macau got blacklisted from the VIP rooms last spring for counting cards. By August he couldn't get a floor job at any property in Cotai. So he deposit $500, ran a Hermes trading agent on Polymarket and pulled in $881,319 over the next 14 months. His wallet: The casinos taught him one thing - count, size your bet to your edge, walk away when the edge is gone. So he makes 5 trades a day. Not 50. Not 500. Five. And waits for the rest. Here's the actual stack. Claude Opus 4.7 reads the order book nightly, scores every threshold market by Markov persistence x Kelly edge, and surfaces the 2-3 mispriced ones. Hermes Agent by NousResearch executes. A $10/mo Hetzner VPS runs it 24/7. Telegram pings on every fill. Total cost: $10/month. Setup: 30 minutes. No coding. One trade in April: Will Bitcoin reach $90,000? Market said 1.2¢. He put $3,088 on Yes. It hit. +$123,196. A 3,988% return on a single position. The real edge is the nightly self-learning loop. Every midnight, Opus reads the day's trade journal and rewrites MIN_PROB and MIN_EDGE in the .env file. Last week the threshold was 0.87. This week 0.89. Next week maybe 0.91. His version of the bot has rewritten itself 412 times in 14 months. The Macau syndicate couldn't ban him from Polymarket. The bot doesn't sit at a table. It doesn't show a passport. It just hunts the tails. Save this post - if you want to build something of your own based on Hermes. Or just start copying algorithm that has improved itself 412 times:

cvxv666

207,411 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

THIS IS THE BIGGEST LIE IN ECONOMICS RIGHT NOW Everyone's celebrating because "inflation is coming down." Politicians are taking victory laps. Economists are patting themselves on the back. And meanwhile, you're still paying 30% more for groceries than you did 3 years ago. Let me explain why the entire inflation conversation is designed to mislead you: People don't live on rate of change. They live on price levels. Let's say your rent goes up 30% over 3 years. That's roughly 9-10% a year. A massive number. You're bleeding. Then the next year, your rent doesn't increase at all. The bean counters in Washington look at that and say: "See? Rent inflation is zero. Problem solved." Meanwhile you're still paying that 30% premium every single month. Nothing got cheaper. Nothing went back to normal. The government just stopped measuring the pain. That's gaslighting with a spreadsheet. And it gets worse. The official CPI print came in at 2.8% in February. Some economists are running around saying "true inflation" is only 1.8% if you strip out housing. Others say if you annualize the last 3 months, it's barely above 1%. Great. Wonderful. Fantastic. Except the cumulative price increase since 2020 is over 22%. Your eggs. Your insurance premiums. Your car repairs. Your kids' daycare. None of those prices came back down. Not one. The inflation rate could hit zero tomorrow and your cost of living would still be 22% higher than it was 5 years ago. That's the part they conveniently leave out of every press conference. Here's what this actually means for real people: If your wages haven't grown 22%+ since 2020, your real purchasing power has declined. PERIOD And for most Americans, wages haven't kept up. So you've got two outcomes playing out simultaneously: Either workers demand higher wages to catch up, which puts upward pressure on costs and keeps inflation sticky. Or they don't get the raises, their real incomes deteriorate, and consumer spending eventually cracks. Neither outcome is good. This is the K-shaped economy in action. If you own assets like real estate, equities, commodities you've been largely insulated. Asset prices inflated right alongside everything else. But if you're the average worker living on a paycheck? You've been getting quietly crushed for 5 straight years while every headline tells you the problem is "under control." If anyone tells you inflation is "back to normal," they're either lying to you or they don't understand the difference between the speed of the damage and the damage itself. A car crash at 60 mph is worse than one at 30 mph. But decelerating from 60 to 30 doesn't undo the wreck that already happened. That's where we are right now. The wreck already happened. Prices aren't coming back. And the people celebrating "disinflation" are measuring the speed of the car, not the damage to the passengers. 45 years on Wall Street taught me this: when the official narrative diverges this far from lived reality, something eventually gives. Either wages catch up, which means inflation stays sticky far longer than anyone projects. Or demand breaks, which means the recession everyone keeps ruling out becomes inevitable. The government can redefine the math all they want. But your grocery bill doesn't care about annualized 3 month core PCE.

George Noble

24,368 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

A beanie that reads your thoughts and turns them into text — no surgery required?@jason grills the co-founders on their noninvasive brain-computer interface, backed by Vinod Khosla, and calls cap on the whole thing (until he doesn't). This episode of This Week in Startups covers a lot of ground: Jason's tactical tip of the day on making everyone the CEO of their domain, a deep dive into Sabi's thought-to-text beanie, a live demo of AI-powered podcast sidebars built by the TWiST audience, the announcement of a new $5K bounty for an annotation tool, and Jason's big five wellness framework. 0:00 Intro & tactical tip: Make everyone the CEO of their domain 1:49 Matt Coffin's "CEO of X" management philosophy 3:04 Community ownership: Deputizing Ricky, Lawn, Bianca, Maddie, Kabir 4:02 Building the Noti Gang: X group chats and community flywheels 5:08 Founder takeaways: Activate your top 1%, make someone the CEO of it 6:18 The streamer trick, parasocial dynamics, and creator ethics 7:59 Plaud: If your work depends on conversations — interviews, meetings, calls — you need a Plaud NotePin. You can check it out at and use code TWIST for 10% off! 9:34 Guest intro: Rahul Chhabra of Sabi 10:01 What is Sabi? Noninvasive BCI in a beanie with 100,000 sensors 10:02 LinkedIn Jobs - Hire right, the first time. Post your first job and get $100 off towards your job post at 11:02 How it works: From fMRI to EEG, from hospital to hat 13:46 The brain foundation model and thought-to-text decoding 15:55 Vetting the founders: BITS Pilani, Stanford, athlete fatigue AI 17:22 Vinod Khosla's investment thesis: BCI must be noninvasive 19:30 Jason's challenge: Say "Calacanis" or it doesn't count 19:50 Northwest Registered Agent: Get more when you start your business with Northwest. In 10 clicks and 10 minutes, you can form your company and walk away with a real business identity — Learn more at 21:30 Reserve your device, release by end of 2026 22:26 Privacy concerns: Does the beanie read everything? 23:47 Jason's Big Five wellness framework: sleep, nutrition, exercise, meditation, socialization 25:41 Bounty #1: AI live sidebar contest — demos from the TWiST audience 26:02 What the bounty asked for: AI personas watching the show in real time 27:04 Oliver's breakdown: What's easy vs. hard about live AI commentary 28:40 Demo #1: Armchair (by Mark Colebrook) — fact-checker + troll personas, live 30:26 Render: Find out why 5 million developers are already using the all-in-one cloud platform, Render. Go to and apply for the Render Startup Program to get $500-$100,000 in free credits, depending on your stage and backers. 35:30 Live political violence test: The sidebar in real time on the WHCD shooting 38:45 Demo #2: Pod Commentators / SideCast — browser-based, Gemini-powered 40:35 Jason's revised Bounty #1 spec: Fact-checker + cynic, public stream or Zoom 42:41 Timeline: check-ins May 1, May 8; final winner May 15 44:51 Demo #3: BMD Pat (by Patrick Hughes) — instant URL, all-snarky personas 46:52 Bounty #2 announced: — a fair-use multimedia annotation tool 49:31 Annotated: the of media commentary 51:11 Contest rules: Jason owns the domain, winner gets $5K + potential ongoing work 53:13 Wrap-up: Bounty 1 = AI sidebar, Bounty 2 = Annotated 🎥 Watch the full episode here 👇

This Week in Startups

16,332 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

a16z co-founder Ben Horowitz: “Don’t follow your passion” Ben gives this advice to the Columbia University class of 2015: “Don’t follow your passion. Now I know you’re probably thinking: ‘That’s a really dumb idea because if you poll 1,000 people who are successful, they’ll all say they love what they do. And so the broad conclusion of the world is that if you do what you love, then you’ll be successful.’ But we’re engineers, so we know that might be true. It also might be the case that if you’re successful, you love what you do — you just love being successful, everybody loves you, it’s awesome. So which one is it?” He continues: “The first tricky thing about passions is they’re hard to prioritize. Are you more passionate about math or engineering? Are you more passionate about history or literature? Are you more passionate about video games or K-pop? These are tough decisions. How do you even know? On the other hand, what are you good at? Are you better at math or writing? That’s a much easier thing to figure out. The second thing that’s tricky if you’re going forward in time with this ‘follow your passion’ idea is that what you’re passionate about at 21 is not necessarily what you’re going to be passionate about at 40. Now this is true for boyfriends, as well as career choices. The third issue with following your passion is that you’re not necessarily good at your passion. Has anybody ever watched American Idol? So you know what I’m talking about. Just because you love singing doesn’t mean you should be a professional singer. And then finally, and most importantly, following your passion is a very ‘me-centered’ view of the world. And when you go through life, what you’ll find is that what you take out of the world — money, cars, stuff, accolades — is much less important than what you put into the world. And so my recommendation would be to follow your contribution. Find the thing that you’re great at, put that into the world, contribute to others, help the world be better. That is the thing to follow.” Video source: a16z (2015)

Startup Archive

358,054 Aufrufe • vor 7 Monaten

Rick Rubin can't play or read music, yet he's won 8 Grammys and produced for legends (Jay-Z, Johnny Cash, Adele, Metallica) Rolling Stone called him "the most successful producer in any genre." So what does he actually do? He helps artists access their creativity. 6 lessons from Rubin that changed how I think about the creative process ↓ 1) Be a reducer, not a producer Most people think creativity means adding more. More ideas. More layers. More complexity. Rubin does the opposite. When he worked with Johnny Cash in 1994, Cash's career was considered dead. Labels had dropped him. His albums weren't selling. Rubin's solution? Strip everything away. He recorded Cash in his living room. Just a man and his guitar vibin'. The result was American Recordings — one of the greatest comeback albums in music history. Lesson: Remove until only the truth remains. 2) Trust your taste over your technical skill When asked what Rick does as a producer, he told 60 Minutes: "I have no technical ability and I know nothing about music. I'm paid for my taste." You don't need to be the most skilled person in the room. You need to know what feels right. 3) Create for yourself first Rubin believes you can't make great art with someone else in mind. If you're constantly thinking about what the audience wants, you'll create something generic. Make what excites you. If you have good taste, others will find value in it too. 4) Creativity is like tuning a radio You don't invent the signal. You tune into it. This means staying aware. Paying attention to the world around you. Noticing what others miss. The ideas are already out there. Your job is to receive them. 5) Lower the stakes Feeling blocked? Give yourself permission to make something terrible. Tell yourself it doesn't need to be a masterpiece. It won't impact your career. You don't have to show anyone. The pressure of perfection kills creativity. Remove it. 6) Self-doubt never disappears Even the greatest artists feel fear before they create. Rubin says they don't create in the absence of doubt. They create in spite of it. The difference between amateurs and professionals? Professionals show up anyway.

Avery Chauhan

78,627 Aufrufe • vor 7 Monaten

American Cattle Rancher Exposing That Beef Sold In American Grocery Stores Doesn’t Look Like Natural Beef “They pump gases into the packaging that artificially create a red color — the color of the meat doesn't necessarily indicate it's fresh” “I get a lot of questions sometimes like when people buy our meat they're like, well, I opened it up and it's not red. Why isn't it red? And the reason is, is because the only way to keep it red is as they pump gases into the packaging that artificially create a red color. So the meat naturally is never that red. When you cut it and it's first exposed to oxygen momentarily, it will bloom. It's called, it'll redden up just a little bit and then it'll instantly start to brown out unless you pump gases into the packaging for about 10 minutes and artificially create this like red pinkish color. So we get that question a lot. And it's like, they're like, your meat's not fresh because it's brown. It's like, well, actually it's way fresher. Our meat is brown because five minutes later, it turns to that brown color and then we flash freeze it. So you're like eating meat that's like metabolic at five minutes old versus that red fresh meat in the grocery store might be a month old. And it sat like that, but they're using artificial gases in that packaging to crea completely unnatural. — If your packaged meat then it is it is filled w to create that. It doesn' look like that. But like believe it or not, it's been sitting out for 11 days. So how could it still look so fresh? It's because it's being packed and gassed in a special process that most people never heard about, using carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen, which keeps the meat looking fresh and bright red. We left two cuts of lamb out at room temperature. One was gas packed, the other, no gas. After a few days, the untreated meat turns a dark, unappealing color. But the gas-packed meat stays red, even after being left out for eight days. The only visible sign of spoilage is the package puffing out and a bad odor when opened. We had the meat analyzed in a lab, and it's no surprise that both cuts are loaded with bacteria. The color of the meat doesn't necessarily indicate it's fresh”

Wall Street Apes

293,075 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren