@francis_oleh I had no idea man, thanks for giving the newsletter a chance haha.
To answer the PPS, I was thinking as you wrote "Damn this is some good writing" - so yes, A+ from me sir.
This post made my day.
@austxhunty@tonydawg1411@daithaigilbert That is how a lot of shooters are (and I don't mean trans). People who are outcasts, already mentally unstable, or who become unstable from the harsh treatment they get, end up being the shooters.
@austxhunty@tonydawg1411@daithaigilbert No. He was talking about how the statistics show (apparently, I did not look), there is a high number of trans shooters. I think the reason for that is that people probably mess with them to the point they break. If they were not already unstable, getting bullied will do that.
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- RT this tweet
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If you want to see a quick jump in quality of life start going on a 15 minute walk first thing in the morning, right after you wake up, no matter what the weather is.
40. Finally, it’s never too late to change. A friend of mine once told me a story about his grandmother. He said that when her husband died, she was 62, and for the first time in her life, she began to take piano lessons. For weeks, she practiced all day, every day. At first, the family thought it was a phase, a way for her to process her grief. But months went by and she continued to play every day. People started to wonder if she was crazy or something was wrong. They told her to give it up. To go back to her life. To face reality.
By the time she was in her 90s, she had been playing piano every day for 30 years—longer than most professional musicians have been alive. She had mastered all of the classics: Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, and Vivaldi. Everyone who heard her play swore she must have been a concert pianist in her youth. No one believed her when she said she took her first lesson in her sixties.
I love this story because it shows that even at an impractical old age in life, you still have more time left to learn something than most professionals at that thing have even been alive.
I didn’t start writing until I was 27. I didn’t start this YouTube channel until I was 36. In every phase of my life, I’ve started five to ten years later than most people. Yet, it didn’t matter.
It’s never too late. There’s always time. The only question is how long we’re going to make excuses and pretend there’s not.
@AnthonyVicino What are you working on now? I know you have not been posting on YouTube in a long time and I am curious about what you are trying.
Growing the newsletter and following on X is part of it I'm guessing?
@AnthonyVicino I got this idea from Sharran Srivatsaa. Many of the words I used in those tweets are his, but they are not quoted accurately. https://t.co/KRQZvOkFFh I time-stamped where he talks about this
@AnthonyVicino 2/2 Instead, something more tangible is to ask yourself the "Do Better Question (DBQ) every night before bed.
The question is "What is one thing I can do tomorrow that will make it better than today"
It's a lot easier. I think the concepts are the same, but the 1% rule is vague