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There is a 2010 study from the journal Nature that completely shatters how we think about gender and behavior. It is called "Prejudice and truth about the effect of testosterone on human bargaining behaviour."
Researchers gave women a temporary dose of testosterone to see what would happen. The result? They actually became calmer and negotiated much more fairly.
But the crazy part is what happened with the control group. Women who were given a placebo but were told it was testosterone became incredibly selfish and aggressive. They started acting out what they assumed male power looked like.
The hormone did not cause the hostility. Their own projection did.
When society pushes women to chase raw power, they rarely find true strength. Instead, they end up adopting a hostile femininity. In their pursuit of power, they embody the absolute worst versions of women by mimicking the worst traits they mistakenly associate with men.
On the flip side, look at what happens to men. Men who constantly pursue lust and chase women become submissive and complacent. They strip away their masculine edge just to acquire sex.
This embodies the ancient moral lesson behind the fall of man. A society driven by female power-seeking and male lust is a society destined to collapse.
Stop for a second and just look around.
What roles do men and women play in almost every movie today? Look at the constant messaging around "toxic masculinity" and how we are conditioned to behave.
The inverted programming is clear as day. And once you finally see it, you can never unsee it.
Anxiety and excitement are chemically identical in your brain.
How many times did you tell yourself you were anxious about something when you were actually excited?
Fear of failure is a myth.
βBy avoiding the work, you guarantee failure. You're not afraid of it - you're already doing it every single day.
βYou're terrified of what happens if you succeed.
When you are wronged, the natural instinct is to seek revenge. But the ultimate retaliation is actually forgiveness. The person who hurt you expects a counterattack; when you offer peace instead, you leave them to stew in their own toxic anticipation and guilt. That internal buildup of negative karma will punish them far worse than anything you could ever inflict. Forgiveness is your revenge. By choosing not to strike back, you leave them to manifest their own downfall.
Run every recurring business task through this routing decision tree:
Is the task deterministic with clear if-this-then-that rules?
ββ YES β n8n / Make (L4)
ββ NO β Does it need reasoning, memory, or multi-step judgment?
ββ YES β Does it need a human relationship or final creative authority?
ββ YES β Human or Eli (L1/L2)
ββ NO β Paperclip + Hermes agent (L3)
ββ NO β it's probably plumbing after all β n8n/Make
When you shift from being an "owner" to a "steward" or "conduit," your capacity to hold wealth expands exponentially. You view money simply as energy, leverage, and a tool to organize physical reality. Because you are unattached to it on an ego level, the psychological friction of greed, anxiety, and scarcity disappears, allowing you to execute business strategy with flawless, cold clarity.
Discipline is not about grinding harder. It's about removing friction. Making the right decision easier than the wrong one. Life should flow and feel effortless.
Predictability of belief outweighs accuracy of content; stability of narrative supersedes truth.
People would rather be comfortably wrong within a predictable, stable story than uncomfortably right in a chaotic, unpredictable reality.
Replace the word "should" with "want."
Instead of saying "I should go to the gym" say to yourself "I want to go to the gym."
The word "should" carries shame. It makes your younger self want to take agency and rebel against your adult self because it's telling your younger self that it should be doing something.
How can you tell if you're being tricked?
You ask the questions nobody else thinks are polite.
If the answer makes you uncomfortable and there's pressure to stop asking that tells you something is off, maybe dangerous.
The fastest way to tell if youβre performing is the language you use.
βWords like βjust,β βreally,β and βveryβ dilute your position. Theyβre linguistic apologies.
βWhen you stop shrinking your speech, people stop treating your presence as optional.
If you want to live a life that's aligned with who you genuinely are, stop "performing". Don't laugh at their stupid jokes. Don't respond just because they want you to. Don't lower your standards to fit in. Don't sacrifice your taste just because they don't have any. Don't do anything, anything... that makes you shrink yourself. That makes you dilute the very essence of who you already are. Let them do the work. Let them rise to your standards. Why not? They're not special. You are. You know who you are. It's your reality. Your life. Don't bend.
Human complexity is a surface illusion. Underneath all the noise, our behavior runs on a strict binary: connection or protection.
βWe oscillate constantly between two deep fears: the terror of isolation or the dread of exposure.
Every word spoken, boundary set, or bridge burned is a tool to balance this internal scale.