"Well ackshually that doesn't work and has been debunked..."
-People who failed and never properly followed the instructions to people who did follow them exactly and succeeded.
The Internet in a nutshell.
The wisdom is there but hidden in plain sight through gate-keeping, social stigma, accreditation worship, search algorithm and people's inability to appreciate layers of symbology and learn their language.
Luckily the more work you undertake towards wisdom the more you realise it is not for everyone. It is not to be publicised directly nor will it be understood.
Hint and leave the curious eager to start their own journey and the dismissive to wallow in nihilism.
"They thought that it would be a disgrace to go forth as a group. Each entered the forest at a point that he himself had chosen, where it was darkest and there was no path. If there is a path it is someone else's path and you are not on the adventure."
-Campbell
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I grew up as a little autistic kid in the North East of England wearing hand-me-down clothes.
There was no esports for hundreds of miles from me when it began and the dot com bubble had burst and tanked all the early industry. I was told I'd missed "it".
Once I got them to send me to London I had to get them to send me to the US over hiring Americans who were already there.
I went to that event, my first on a plane, with something like $50 wiggle room for anything to go wrong. Madness when I look back now.
I put in a lot of effort and I could get a few ideas out through my sloppy and cliche-riddled writing, a subject I had never focused on in school or as a hobby.
I also always followed my curiosity about what I wanted to know in an interview.
Best way to show you have skin in the game when it comes to not accepting blood money would be to return it publicly, right? Seems pretty easy to do if you're serious.
Not if you really wanted money and to pretend to maintain your "values" (fashion trend) tho
Kobe Bryant, one of the NBA's most famously deadly scorers, once went a whole summer as a 10-11 year old without scoring a point. He was "terrible", in his own words.
I could have cried laughing in tribute to KEKW when LS and Nemesis said G3 S10 Spring final draft was unwinnable for Nemesis and he wasn't an issue for not doing anything with four kills and items.
They open VOD and go to where he is 4 kills up, and show him die for no reason in jungle, with vision of enemies. They quickly backtrack their comments to a neutral position like "was it my fault here? I'd need to rewatch the game" and then quickly close VOD.
If LS and Nemesis could destroy my points they would. Instead they just shift the goal posts and declare I didn't score. Like if I point out you didn't carry the game they flip it to "but I wasn't the worst player on my team in the game."
It's wild to me that Doublelift still ascribes to "ahead" and "behind" thinking about LoL.
If LoL has shown us anything it's that every patch is a slightly different game and macro concepts can be learned by totally fresh line-ups within weeks and months.
Preparation and practice is about removing the impediments which hold you back and aligning the strengths of the meta with your personal strengths.
How is CoreJJ so good still if NA is behind? Is he using left over magic from 2017? Of course not.
How has Jensen performed internationally despite playing his entire competitive career in LCS?