I’m 25.
I have made millions of dollars from crypto.
I have an amazing girlfriend.
I have an amazing team.
I travel whenever the f*ck I want.
I pretty much buy whatever I want.
But there was a time:
when I saved quarters for food.
lost my mother.
foster care.
shared a room with 8 other people.
slept in a bed full of bed bugs.
made over a million and lost everything.
suicidal thoughts.
The truth is, when you have a burning desire to succeed, God will always make a way.
I know n8n's monthly pricing is killing some startup founder's automation dreams.
I've watched too many smart founders:
- Get excited about n8n automation
- Hit the $20/month paywall for basic features
- Realize they need $100+/month for real workflows
- Give up and go back to manual processes
They were doing everything "right."
→ Building useful automations.
→ Connecting their tools.
→ Seeing real results.
But n8n's cloud pricing still has a fundamental problem:
It punishes you for usage.
→ You can build unlimited workflows: that's free.
→ You can add unlimited team members: that's free.
→ You can create unlimited steps: that's free.
But the moment your automations actually run?
That's when the meter starts spinning.
The more operations you execute, the higher the bill.
The more successful your automation becomes at doing its job, the more expensive it gets.
And here's what makes it worse:
Most people don't know there's a free alternative that's actually BETTER.
→ Self-hosting n8n gives you:
• Unlimited workflows (vs 5 on free plan)
• Unlimited operations (vs 5,000/month limit)
• Full feature access (vs restricted cloud features)
• Complete data control (vs trusting their servers)
• $5/month hosting cost (vs $20-100+ cloud pricing)
But everyone thinks self-hosting is "too technical."
The tutorials make it sound impossible:
"Just configure your Docker containers"
"Set up your reverse proxy"
"Configure your environment variables"
If you don't know what those words mean, you're stuck.
So you end up paying 10x more for cloud hosting while the solution that would save you hundreds sits right there, unused.
I went through this exact journey.
Paid n8n $100+/month for months before realizing I could run the same thing for $5.
And after finally figuring out the self-hosting setup…
I decided to document what should've existed from day one:
A complete n8n self-hosting guide written for business owners.
Everything you actually need to know.
In the order that makes sense.
• Simple self-hosting setup (no Docker confusion)
• Cost breakdown: $5/month vs $100+/month
• Getting started with your first workflows
• Core concepts in plain English
• Working automations you can deploy today
• Solutions to every setup roadblock I've encountered
If you're paying too much for n8n cloud, or you gave up on automation because of cost, this changes everything.
Like + Comment "SELFHOST" and I'll DM the complete guide.
(Must be following for DM access)
NEWS: Chemo failure rate is 97.7% in Australia and 97.9% in USA over 5 year period
"A comprehensive 2004 analysis of randomized controlled trials across 22 major adult cancers in Australia and the US estimated that cytotoxic (traditional) chemotherapy contributes to 5-year survival in only 2.1–2.3% of cases overall. "
"This means that, across all cancers treated with chemotherapy, it directly enables long-term survival for a small fraction of patients, with a corresponding failure rate (death within 5 years) of 97.7–97.9% when considering its isolated impact"
Source: Grok 3 sourced from 2004 Graeme Morgan et al: The contribution of cytotoxic chemotherapy to 5-year survival in adult malignancies, published in the Elsevier Journal: Clinical Oncology
"The overall contribution of curative and adjuvant cytotoxic chemotherapy to 5-year survival in adults was estimated to be 2.3% in Australia and 2.1% in the USA."
"As the 5-year relative survival rate for cancer in Australia is now over 60%, it is clear that cytotoxic chemotherapy only makes a minor contribution to cancer survival"
@TDWIntercontin1@MarcRyanOnAir All two miles of it that are developed, remember Detroit is about 30 miles square. Most of it is abandoned houses and buildings rotting. It looks like Dresden after WW2...