1/ I seem to be easily triggered by lists of "what every successful entrepreneur does in the morning" or "10 common traits all millionaires share" or "six things you need to know before the market opens."

They MUST be popular, or the clickbait farms wouldn't publish them.
2/ They lull honest, hopeful people who want to better themselves into a thought process that believes that if I just do those things that successful entrepreneurs do, or develop those traits that ALL millionaires share I'll make it. I'll be successful just like them.
3/ Bad news: NO, you won't. That's because successful entrepreneurs all tend to do DIFFERENT things in the morning. Millionaires that self-select themselves to answer pages and pages of questions might share traits, but they are a TINY fraction of all millionaires.
4/ Most of those "self-selected" millionaires might have less in common with the entire universe of millionaires than you do. And anyone who's read me knows that there are never 6 or 10 or 20 things you NEED to know before the market opens, unless one of those things is the sun
5/ exploding; aliens landing or a civil war starting over night, and honestly, with the exception of the sum exploding, my guess is most gurus and forecasters would be WRONG about the ramifications of the other two. The honest to god, no BS answer is that there is NO secret to
6/ almost anything. People so want there to be a secret, an easy path that leads to guaranteed success. That path does not exist. If you think about it for just a second, you can see how obvious that is. If such a path DID exist, you couldn't get on it because every other human
7/ on the planet would already be on it.

So, am I saying there is no hope for your dreams of success? Absolutely not! But the real path is one most people don't want to take. Why do you think so many people play the lottery? The real path is emotionally hard. The real path
8/ requires you to often hold uncomfortable opinions and challenge conventional thought. The real path requires you to learn, learn and then learn some more. And there is no end date on your learning. The real path requires you to seek out the latest knowledge, the latest
9/ thinking continually in a never-ending commitment to gaining knowledge. Note I say knowledge, not information. That's another part of the real path--after all that reading, listening and watching, you have to critically separate the wheat from the chaff. And given the
10/ information tsunami we have today, that's a task that gets harder and harder. The real path requires you to have a burning desire to not only know, but to then also act on that knowledge. The real path is filled with people who will tell you you can't or shouldn't be doing
11/ whatever "crazy" thing you're doing. It's filled with negative, bitter people who will--knowingly or unknowingly--hope that you fail because they themselves either have or never tried. It's filled with genuinely good people begging you to be "more practical" and urging you
12/ to get a stable job that is a "good fit" for your talents. It's filled with people whom really and truly love you and whom you love being filled with palpable worry for you and what you're doing. And that's just the start. There are so many other land mines on the real path
13/ that you couldn't fit them all on the longest available thread on Twitter. So, am I telling you to give up? To not have that burning ambition to succeed at whatever you love?

*Absolutely not.*

I'm telling you the truth so that you stop reading those easy lists, so you
14/ stop just dreaming and start doing. I believe that all types of people can become great successes in their chosen field. But it requires the willingness to read more than almost everyone else; to sort out the gems of knowledge you find in the thicket of information and then
15/ to try things. Many don't work--good, you just learned another way not to do something and succeed. They require you to persist even after you're knocked down ten times, you've got to get up eleven. They require you to keep your mental models sharp, to learn from mistakes and
16/ then keep on going. Babe Ruth (?) said "You just can’t beat the person who never gives up." And, almost most importantly, you've got to really and truly believe that you can do it. I've met so many incredibly smart and talented people who have been done in by their beliefs.
17/ And sometimes, we're not even aware of limiting beliefs that may lurk in our minds. I had several that I had to delete once I became aware of them. So, no lists, but some simple advice: Read, synthesize ideas, try them, abandon those that aren't working, try new one, read
18/ some more. Tell people about your hopes and goals. Listen for good advice, it does exist.But ruthlessly remove the bad advice, the naysayers, the permanent pessimists, keep your mind wide open to ideas, indeed, read and understand those you might have an aversion to, so
19/ that you improve your understanding and knowledge. It sounds daunting, but, done the right way, it is such an exhilarating feeling that you'll want to keep doing it even if you're not yet getting paid to do it. Be open; be kind; treat people well, karma will get your back.
20/ Oh, and one more thing. For the love of god, DON'T read those lists!

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More from @jposhaughnessy

Feb 17
1/ I'm recording an @InfiniteL88ps chat with @krishnanrohit today and going through his work is like catnip for me--I've been thinking about things that he opines on with a vastly better take than my early dreams on such as virtual reality.
2/ But what I think is cool is that we've been thinking about these things for a LONG time, exhibit A👇🏻(1988)

3/ It seems ideas take longer to become realities than many (very much including me) think they will, exhibit B 👇🏻
Read 11 tweets
Feb 12
Douglas Adams 🗣️

"Human beings, who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so."

"Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so."
“A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools.”

“I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.”
“Let's think the unthinkable, let's do the undoable. Let us prepare to grapple with the ineffable itself, and see if we may not eff it after all.”

“I'd take the awe of understanding over the awe of ignorance any day.”
Read 4 tweets
Jan 17
1/ Our team at @InfiniteL88ps wanted to experiment with the NFT marketplace in order to get a better understanding of how it worked and see if the online auction pace was similar to what we see offline.

We commissioned the artist @cernicageanina to produce the artwork 👇🏻
2/ Our hypothesis was that an NFT that "unlocked" a benefit would be more highly valued than one that didn't, so we included the opportunity to either co-host an @InfiniteL88ps with me or choose a guest.

As far as the behaviour of the auction, we found it *did* mimic that of
3/ auctions conducted IRL. The price stayed pretty stable until the last half hour, when @vtslkshk watched as the price screamed higher, with the winning bidder @dineshraju paying WETH 9.0 or approximately $36,543.78 $USD at the time of the sale.
Read 25 tweets
Jan 15
1/ “A good magic trick forces the spectator to tell a story that arrives at an impossible conclusion, and the clearer the story is, the better.”
~@DerrenBrown
The first job I ever got paid to do was that of a professional magician. I’d loved magic since my early childhood
2/ and badgered my mother to take me to the Eagle Magic Store in Minneapolis almost every Saturday, where I would linger for hours and bug adult magicians to teach me some of the tricks of the trade. Unlike many of my friends who had posters of their favorite bands or
3/ Farrah Fawcett on their walls, I had Harry Houdini. I was fascinated with the ability to create illusions that made people gasp in delight. I started using two books that my dad had given me (which I think my grandfather gave to *him*) and learned as many effects with cards
Read 19 tweets
Jan 14
1/ Recorded a great conversation with @RickDoblin, the Founder and Executive Director of @MAPS, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies. We were joined by Amy Emerson, the CEO of the MAPS Public Benefit Corporation (MAPS PBC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of @MAPS
2/ We had a broad ranging discussion about the potential benefits of psychedelics in treating PTSD; depression; alcoholism and many other conditions that have challenged doctors and have been notoriously difficult for therapists to help patients find lasting recoveries.
3/ We also discussed the history of why governments and other authorities vilified psychedelics through a sustained propaganda effort that still has effects on people's attitudes to this very day. There are major breakthroughs occurring regularly in research trials conducted
Read 5 tweets
Jan 1
“The ordinary man places his life's happiness in things external to him, in property, rank, wife and children, friends, society, and the like, so that when he loses them or finds them disappointing, the foundation of his happiness is destroyed.”
~Arthur Schopenhauer
In his book "Happy: Why More or Less Everything is Absolutely Fine," @DerrenBrown writes "The vital changes to our happiness do not come from outside circumstances, however appealing they might seem." and our failure to understand this leads many to mount the hedonic treadmill.
He illustrates how many of our desires--things we think will make us happy--are actually chased in order to impress other people, thinking that the approval of these 'other people,' many of whom we don't even know, will lead to happiness for ourselves.
Read 24 tweets

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