The Humble Gardener has gone offline to his Village by the Sea
I put the best tweets I collected over the years in a PDF, so you can appreciate the Art
Sit back, Spark your Synapses and Enjoy!
https://t.co/TKoiUPTC7C
an interesting thing to note on this:
great men of the past (and to this day) NEVER EVER needed
"self help" books or anything of the sort.
they used stories of other men/empires to fuel the fire of their ambition,
but never needed anything spoon-fed to them.
their purpose was enough to allow them to achieve their goals.
example:
through his early life, Napoleon read
- Caesar
- Cicero
- Voltaire
- Diderot
- Abbe Raynal
- Erasmus
- Eutropius
- Livy
- Phaedrus
- Sallust
- Virgil
- Themistocles
- Lysander
- Alcibiades
- Hannibal
the plays he enjoyed as an adult focused on ancient heroes, e.g. Alexander the Great, Mithridates, Horace, and Atilla
none of the books/plays he read were about
"how to stay focused while working"
"how to make your first $10,000"
"how to get girls to fall in love with you"
the content he consumed only fed his passion.
it didn't hold his hand and show him "how to usurp the french throne"
he simply had a singular purpose,
and a deep, burning, desperate desire to have it realised.
that's it.
that's the sauce.
that's all you need.
leave "atomic habits" to the normies.
i wanna live a thousand lives before dust… Ferrari ceo, bum under bridge, drunk artist losing mind at 3am, fighter chasing purpose, junkie chasing god, hangover writer, monk, outlaw, prophet, player, family man, mountain hermit, city wolf, beach bum
Entire spectrum. beauty, filth, genius, failure etc.
@ode_to_fyodor@Devon_Eriksen_ His plan is outlined in the waitbutwhy articles many years ago. All of his businesses are components to make sustainable human life on Mars possible.