A rule I've lived by since a pencil + cassette made sense...
Can't - is a word that is foe to ambition,
an enemy's ambush to shatter your will!
So this word is not allowed.
Success is information.
Failure is information.
Without understanding, you can't repeat success and you can't move beyond failure.
Every experience is an opportunity to learn, evolve, and create who you become.
WATCH: @RepFrankLucas questions witnesses on why it’s important to get the INVEST Act over the finish line, to which Mr. Quaadman replies:
"The INVEST Act has, you know, several different components to it, but one, obviously, it deals with a lot of the issues that will allow for growing public capital market. But more importantly, it also provides for different investor opportunities as well.”
📺⬇️
@robosauce
Peter does have a framework (even if he doesn’t spell it out every post). His curated newsletters pull the latest high-signal info he learns and shares. The other part is The Doing: he takes action on what he learns right away, which keeps it fresh, plus the circle of builders/architects he surrounds himself with, Love for humanity and passion.
Please know, No one stays completely current, everything’s moving too fast. The only way to get left behind is to do nothing or head in the wrong direction. Have vision and keep listening to the people you want to serve. Keep compounding. MTP, Moonshots. The rest you already know, give yourself more credit. 😎
The “good old days” were not as good as you think.
Chelsea Follett (@chellivia) joins Infinite Loops to explain why the past was far more brutal than nostalgia suggests — and why progress is real, fragile, and worth defending.
TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Intro
02:24 Why We Romanticize the Past
04:00 Child Mortality and Modern Medicine
07:04 Rousseau and the Myth of Nature
09:00 The False View of History
12:24 Life Was Nasty, Brutal, and Short
22:02 Why Doomsday Predictions Persist
31:23 Science Is Never Settled
54:32 Freedom, Systems, and Progress
01:12:26 What Blocks Progress Today?
01:26:02 Chelsea’s Two Ideas for the World
"PRISONER NO MORE" is an award-winning documentary chronicling Tae Jin Park's story of change. It is the most incredible transformation I've ever seen. It is available to watch for free on my YouTube channel.
The official description:
"Prisoner No More follows Tae Jin Park, a young man diagnosed with cerebral palsy, who dismantled every physical limitation medical science predicted for him. Through athletic training under Olympian strength coach Jerzy Gregorek—and an uncompromising commitment to identity transformation—Tae Jin's story redefines what the human body and mind are capable of."