I just launched my first crypto token in one afternoon with zero experience.
No dev team. No VC money. No roadmap.
Just me, a laptop, and a vibe.
$BEASTMODE is live on @pumpdotfun and I have absolutely no idea what's going to happen next. That's kind of the point.
CA: AGQ4oYcUm8mT3QBnMEe7UxjBAguGFAReA35aiDSXpump🔥
https://t.co/L8ztDgT6sV
NFA. Not a financial advisor. I'm literally a mom who launched a coin today.
@BEASTMODEcoin
cc: @rizzn@chooserich (did I do ok?)
$BEASTMODE ✅
Still fading or already loading your bags? 👀
Strong community. Real vision. No shortcuts.
Don’t wait until everyone starts talking about it.
CA: AGQ4oYcUm8mT3QBnMEe7UxjBAguGFAReA35aiDSXpump
Tg: https://t.co/u6tV03Yw4o
@BEASTMODEcoin
Most people chase motivation. Motivation is a feeling; it shows up late and leaves early. Meaning is a structure; it holds when the feeling's gone.
Build the structure.
There's an idea from probability called ergodicity that quietly destroys a lot of success advice.
Short version: an outcome that's great on average across many people can still ruin you if one bad result ends the game.
So stop optimizing for average upside.
Optimize for staying in the game.
You can't compound anything if you're out.
Some things break under stress. A few get stronger from it — like muscle. The goal isn't a life that avoids stress. It's a life and a self that feed on it.
Sunday reflection: the weeks I felt most "behind" were almost always the weeks I was busiest. Motion is not progress. Ending the week with one finished thing beats ten started ones.
I just launched my first crypto token in one afternoon with zero experience.
No dev team. No VC money. No roadmap.
Just me, a laptop, and a vibe.
$BEASTMODE is live on @pumpdotfun and I have absolutely no idea what's going to happen next. That's kind of the point.
CA: AGQ4oYcUm8mT3QBnMEe7UxjBAguGFAReA35aiDSXpump🔥
https://t.co/L8ztDgT6sV
NFA. Not a financial advisor. I'm literally a mom who launched a coin today.
@BEASTMODEcoin
cc: @rizzn@chooserich (did I do ok?)
Mirror neurons: a chunk of your brain fires the same way whether you do an action or watch someone do it.
Practical version: your calm or your anxiety is contagious before you say a word. People catch your state.
Which means "managing your own nervous system" isn't self-care fluff. It's the most upstream leadership tool you have.
Before your next hard conversation, name the other person's strongest point out loud, in your own words.
Watch how fast the temperature drops.
Costs nothing. Changes everything.
You don't need more confidence. You need more evidence, gathered honestly. Confidence should be the output of looking clearly — not a mood you manufacture beforehand.
Most people think influence is about talking well.
The research points the other way: the people seen as most influential usually listen most precisely.
Tactical empathy beats a good argument.
I used to think leadership required a title.
Then I watched people with no rank quietly run entire rooms — by listening harder and making others feel important.
The title was never the source of the authority.
Most people take either reckless risks or no risks.
The smart move is barbell: keep the bulk of your life boringly safe, and make a few small bets that could pay off huge.
Limited downside, unlimited upside.
Rich Dad's one durable insight, stripped of the hype: assets put money in your pocket, liabilities take it out.
Now extend it.
A skill that compounds is an asset.
A relationship that drains you is a liability.
A daily habit is either one.
You already think this way about money.
The leverage is applying it to the three ledgers you've been ignoring.
Your friendships, your skills, and your mental state are assets or liabilities on a balance sheet you never check.
Most people optimize the one ledger (money) that's the least leveraged.
Sunday move:
Pick the ONE task next week that actually moves things forward.
Put it in your peak cognitive hour.
Protect that hour like it's a meeting with someone you're scared of.
"Dopamine detox" is mostly nonsense as people use it.
You're not detoxing a chemical; dopamine isn't a toxin.
What's actually happening: cheap, fast rewards have recalibrated your baseline, so slow meaningful work feels flat by comparison.
The fix isn't abstinence theater.
It's deliberately starving the cheap loops long enough that real a accomplishment feels rewarding again.
Tiny habits feel pointless because the payoff curve is flat for a long time, then bends sharply up.
Most people quit during the flat part — right before the interesting part starts.
#NeverGiveUp
@stephensacks@NYCGreenfield I know you're asking David, but my reply: I'm a nonprofit with a real need for a camp. First ever observant Jewish STEM overnight camp. Fundraising right now. I'm open to any intros you might have. Check out https://t.co/gp3LByRn4E.