Which is why the $NEET lifestyle has become inevitable for ordinary office workers. After all, anyone—regardless of age—who is stuck in the role of a mere executor bound by obligations simply wants to live a life free of demands while still having money.
Thinks about solana:Ce2gx9KGXJ6C9Mp5b5x1sn9Mg87JwEbrQby4Zqo3pump. Any info-business podcast—whether hosted by a genuine entrepreneur or a "guru" scammer—will inevitably talk about working hard to achieve a goal; yet, all of this has become meaningless noise.
Maybe I've seen the light or maybe I've gotten older, but it's like they used to feel more alive, whereas now they're complete crap. although most likely I became less naive
It's interesting how the cycle has changed the feed and the people. Crypto Twitter was really different just two years ago, the keychain hasn't changed, and the inflies are doing the same thing.
But honestly, I don't see any genuinely lively or dynamic interest in Crypto Twitter right now—just AI-generated text and identical, plastic-looking posts from shillers and gamblers. My feed is a total dumpster fire.
Overall, I'm comfortable with the relaxed trading regime. At one point, it was really hard not to go in every day and check the charts. Now, looking back on that time, I see the mistakes, so it wasn't all in vain.
Since February, I've only made one trade and sat back and watched. My dopamine system has calmed down somewhat, and I think I've become calmer. I've also resolved my health issues. In general, I don't feel constantly irritated and want to run for a late train.
@AxisAce101 In fact, it seems like yesterday. Crypto is so interesting that sometimes it feels like you're chasing the best deal every day, but years pass in this race
But just two years ago, with the mass emergence of memecoins, no one cared about these same conspirators at all. There was volume, and anyone could make money. Now, the kol howl is only because they're losing money, not because they actually want to change anything.
The entire CT is teeming with conspirators. Every kol writes about other kol, saying everything is broken and the system doesn't work, that they need to fix it, add fees, or reduce fees.