I agree with you, but it's a very addictive habit.
Let me give you people a gist of how I suffered pile for many years right before I entered the university.
It was hell.
And this is one of the reasons I will forever cherish my lovely wife.
And it was also one of the reasons I moved out of the school hostel.
Each time I went to the toilet, blood was the order of the day. It used to flow from my anus as if I was urinating.
After each use, I would call on my to get me tissue paper, because I would have ran out of tissue.
Then I would clean and wash up and go back into our room to lie down. I would then get another tissue to push the pile back inside before I could feel some relief.
My wife was a witness to everything.
I used to wear tissue when going to classes and I never sat on the middle of the seats in the lecture hall.
I was always sitting on the extremes so I could move my legs freely or sometimes sit with one part of my butt to reduce the pains.
This was what I experienced all through my university, NYSC and 4 years post NYSC and in marriage.
Thank God I got a good job with a good HMO. Then I decided to erase the fear of surgery and went for it.
The surgery was done (suture).
I stayed in the hospital for days before I was discharged.
More than 10 years now it has never resurfaced.
My lovely wife suffered o.
The toilet was always red each time and at some point I thought I was going to collapse because of loss of too much blood.
Although I learnt that it can resurface in 5 to 10% of patients, I think I have been lucky.
Very bad experience.
End.
It's still early, but watching a network mature through real participation is far more interesting than watching marketing claims.
Looking forward to seeing how @konnex_world continues to evolve from here.
Growth metrics only matter if they represent real network activity.
Seeing @konnex_world cross 1.14M+ testnet transactions made me think about something beyond the headline number.
A network designed for autonomous systems needs to prove it can handle constant interaction long
More users are joining, subnet activity is increasing, and developers are continuously putting the network through its paces. That's exactly what you'd want to see before a protocol is expected to support AI agents and autonomous machines operating at scale.
I've been reading about @konnex_world recently, and one idea stood out to me.
The project talks about a Universal Task Language, which is essentially a common way for different autonomous machines to describe and understand work. That might not sound exciting at first, but it
It made me realize that the future of robotics isn't only about building more capable machines.
It's also about building shared infrastructure that lets those machines coordinate, verify outcomes, and interact across different environments.