@BonesawMD You can only ever meet someone at their level of consciousness.
Once I internalized that I started to realize trying to convince some of your point of view is a tragic waste of energy.
I’ve now sat with over 100 people and listened to them tell me the most meaningful moments of their life.
Among all stories, there were 24 themes driving meaning.
Finding what is meaningful to you and understanding what drives it is the simplest path to discovering who you are and what you’re meant to do
It’s absolute bogus. Ayahuasca is probably the closest thing to the real version of this.
There’s no magical healing for the disabled. But real energetic exchanges that can produce somatic releases of decades of trauma held physically.
And it generally feels like a “miracle” for the people experiencing it.
@X_David_PRFI@PrimeFiXYZ@HyperliquidX@base Hey David, really love how you guys paired your incentive structure directly with deepening liquidity. FLIK is also awesome. Would love to learn more about PrimeFi and how you power your infra
I think we’re heading into a negative feedback loop where AI is making humans dumber while simultaneously becoming more capable at taking their jobs. Companies are using AI to cut costs and replace workers, while students are using AI to write, ideate, and basically outsource thinking. Over time, people become more reliant on AI, less creative, and less capable of original thought. Humans begin writing, coding, and thinking at the same level as AI, then worse. Meanwhile, AI just keeps getting better — and not because humans are smarter, but because humans are feeding it better data. So now you’ve got AI becoming more human-like, while humans are becoming more AI-like. We’re training it to think like us, but we’re starting to think like it. Eventually, we’ll reach a point where it doesn’t even make sense to hire a human, because they think like an AI—only slower, less efficient, and more expensive.
@RJRCapital I agree. But when does it pop? Assuming rates drop the next 1-2 years, do we see it in 2026/27 when inflation comes roaring back and fed pivots quickly?
That makes sense. As you grow into a bigger fund do you see you guys going away from smaller caps? Or is that the whole ethos of liquid VC?
And as the industry progresses we’ll see more an influx of incredible startups that launch a token rather than do the traditional angel/seed/series A.B.C/IPO model.
I imagine a point in the future where liquid VC is almost as big an industry as traditional VCs.