I’m grateful that I have bad days. Problems, difficult conversations and inconveniences. I’m thankful bc that’s life and I am alive.
Most problems only exist in your head.
The thing I always hate about going to any family’s house is that women don’t get to be guests. Men do. We have to immediately offer to help cook, serve, clean, etc. if not, it’s not “ polite”. You’re looked down upon for resting as a guest. I’ve never had guests in my home do anything.
I read a quote that said, “You can be the prettiest shade of green, but you’ll never be enough for someone whose favorite color is blue,” and it really stuck with me.
Being nice.
Nice = conflict avoidance. Good = doing right when it costs you.
Nice people: avoid hard conversations, need to be liked, perform goodness publicly.
Good people: set boundaries, give honest feedback, act with integrity when no one's watching.
You can be nice and still gossip, enable harm, or lack courage.
Kindness with spine > empty politeness.
Being a "Peacekeeper." People think avoiding conflict makes them a saint, but usually, they’re just conflict-avoidant. If you stay neutral while someone is being mistreated just to "keep the peace," you aren't a good person—you’re just an accomplice who values your own comfort over justice.
I mean… JAY-Z bringing out Michael Jackson at Summer Jam is motion that’ll never be topped again.
The crowd thought Hov was lying, because why would MJ be at Summer Jam? 😂
RIP MJ🐐
A look at the Yacht The Carters use to vacation. It costs approximately $3 million a week, which the Carters sailed for a month to celebrate Beyoncé’s birthday.
A 17-year-old just built a mind-controlled prosthetic arm for $300.
Yes, $300.
For something that usually costs $450,000.
Let that hit you.
A teenager, working from home, used AI, cheap materials, and 23,000 lines of code to build a device that reads brain signals without surgery, without implants, and without a $450K price tag.
This is not a feel-good story.
It’s a warning shot.
How can a high school student build something 1,500× cheaper than the industry standard?
What does that say about innovation?
About pricing?
About who gets access to life-changing technology?
Of course, medical prosthetics are expensive for real reasons:
materials, testing, regulation, customization.
But let’s be honest — not all of that justifies a half-million-dollar price.
This story exposes a simple truth:
The future of accessibility won’t come from the system.
It will come from the outsiders who dare to challenge it.
If a 17-year-old can match top-tier prosthetics for a fraction of the cost…
why aren’t these solutions available to the millions who need them?
What do you think — breakthrough moment or the start of a bigger revolution?
#AI #Innovation #Healthcare #Accessibility #FutureOfTech