I love how Yuval looks at life from a unique perspective.
He talks about how corrupt individuals will take advantage of the chaos, how companies are hacking human desire, how science is overtaking religion, and much more.
This podcast is a goldmine of wisdom about achieving happiness and self-love, becoming successful, the importance of fixing yourself before trying to fix the world, and much more.
I never knew how outdated & unregulated the laws in the beauty industry were. There are thousands of harmful chemicals that are somehow legal to put in domestic products.
I really believe the 25x250 Reading Challenge is one of the best things I've created.
Here's why:
(thread) π§΅
[PS: scroll to the bottom for a FREE and UPDATED version of the reading challenge]
1/
As I mentioned before, the 52 Book challenge is flawed. It:
β’ Punishes readers for quitting books
β’ Punishes readers for picking long books
β’ Incentives quantity over quality reading
β’ Doesn't reward readers for reflecting or taking action on what they've learned
2/
The 25x250 Reading Challenge solves all of these problems:
β’ It doesn't punish readers for quitting books
β’ Nor does it punish readers for picking long books
β’ It rewards readers for reflecting and taking action
β’ It encourages people to read BETTER, not just read more.
In a Reddit AMA, someone asked Elon how he's able to learn so fast.
His response?
"It is important to view knowledge as sort of a semantic tree--make sure you understand the fundamental principles, ie the trunk and big branches, before you get into the leaves/details." -Elon
"View knowledge as sort of a semantic tree..."
That got me thinking, and I realized that it's the same for books.
There are 3 types of books (at least when it comes to non-fiction):