Nah. 27 to 33 is when you enter the portal to the most beautiful version of your life
27 is when you take the leap
28 shows you who you are. Forced to sink or swim, you realize what you’re truly capable of
29 the vision becomes clear. You double down on yourself
30 you begin doing the best work of your life
31 is your meteoric rise
32 living a life better than your wildest dreams
33 is when your partner comes into your life and you begin build the next foundation to the rest of your life
It’s Father’s Day, so let Twitter Dad cook.
1. Save your money. Invest what you save. Compound interest is the best thing in the world
2. Cash is oxygen. Cash buys you time when life punches you in the face. I promise it will happen to you.
3. Good times never last. Bad times never last either. No matter how many times life throws you off the horse, get back on.
4. Speaking of horses: don’t buy horses.
5. Choose your partners carefully in business and in life. The wrong people get more expensive as you become more successful.
6. A bad deal is worse than no deal at all.
7. Get everything in writing. On a contract no matter who it’s with.
8. Protect your downside. One bad partner, lawsuit, tax problem, or contract can erase years of progress.
9. Stop comparing yourself to everyone else. There will always be someone ahead of you and someone wishing they were where you are.
10. Focus on one thing and become exceptional at it. Shiny objects kill momentum.
11. Focus requires sacrifice.
12. Lift weights. Take care of your body. Health compounds too.
13 Invest in your mind. Read books.
14. Your health is your real net worth. If you don’t feel good go to the doctor, don’t wait.
15. Stress test everything. Ask yourself: What happens if this goes wrong?
16. Don’t confuse revenue with profit. Plenty of people making millions are broke.
17. 99.9% of course sellers have no idea what they are talking about
18. Don’t use debt to fund your ego. Buy assets first. Toys come later.
19. Protect your reputation. It takes years to build and minutes to destroy.
20. If something feels too good to be true, it is. Run away.
21. It’s okay to say no. Protect your time and your peace.
22. Give more than you take.
23. Take care of your parents and your friends. One day you’ll wish you had more time with both.
24. Call your parents more.
25. Learn to be alone. Loneliness makes people accept bad partners, bad deals, and bad situations.
26. Nobody cares, nobody will save you.
27. Do what makes you happy. Life is short, and somehow it feels shorter every year.
28. Take the risk. The biggest regrets usually come from the chances you didn’t take.
29. You don’t need more information you need more action. Do it now!
30. The smartest / richest people in the world sometimes go broke by making the smallest missteps. It’s foolish to think it can’t happen to you too.
@CoinbaseSupport please check your dm. I have an ongoing issue since December. I am being passed around multiple departments just so I won’t get my refund. @brian_armstrong I have brought your attention to this and nothing is being done.
I have email screenshot evidence.
Not so fun fact: Epstein's house has a room with a drop door that goes straight into the ocean.
Also had a dentist office, and it was revealed that he had 330 gallons of industrial grade sulfuric acid shipped there. So they were pulling teeth so they couldn't bite or be identified, dissolved in acid and dumped into the ocean.
High performers almost always want someone who’s also a high performer. Social media sold a fantasy that a rich man will fund your lifestyle while expecting little in return. That’s why so many are shocked by his comments. He’s not saying homemaking has no value. He’s saying people operating at a certain level want someone who’s just as driven & ambitious.
Lloyd Blankfein, former CEO of Goldman Sachs, broke down his entire personal trading setup:
portfolio: 98% risky assets. 75-90% single stocks. mostly big tech hyperscalers plus "second tier" names slightly below blue chip.
"i invest in risky assets. that's what's fun for me."
"do you have a team? oh, just me."
hardware: no computer. an iPad and a phone.
information source: texting and calling people.
"somebody will text me. i'll text them. then i'll get tired of tapping things out because of my fat fingers. so i just call people up."
frequency: trades every single day. multiple times.
"it's taking a lot of discipline not to look at my screen while i'm talking to you right now."
"some people listen to music. to me, the market is like music. it's out there. it's going on."
has he outperformed the market? "yes, i have for a while. it's because of where i focused, tech, energy, and financial services. i know a lot about financial services having been in financial services."
the former CEO of Goldman Sachs. manages his own money. on an iPad. alone. focused on three sectors he actually knows. and beats the market.
sometimes the edge isn't the model. it's 40 years of pattern recognition and a phone full of the right contacts.