We humans are meant to rely on each other. We are separate, but we are also one.
Create bridges to others. Build connections. Be grateful for those you already have with you. 🙏
A golden standard to universally apply to every facet of life:
Leave things better than you found them.
Teams, Workplaces, Homes, Communities, Individuals, women, etc
By choosing to commit to a life of continual development and growth, and getting better year over year, evolving constantly… you’ll find that people and things are improved by the very merit of your proximity.
Your presence can either energise, uplift and inspire, or depress, deplete, and discourage.
This Tony Robbins video is going around. Here's the part that leapt out at me.
In the first stage, she's humiliating her husband in public.
In the second stage, he recognizes a glimpse of who he is.
It's dramatic in the body language shift, created by New Words.
@PeytonElroy@PizzaGuyKyle I had no eczema before I married my ex-wife. Then I had eczema.
I have no eczema now that I'm divorced from my ex-wife.
100% someone or something triggering feelings of irritation or discomfort.
@allicovington "Plus cardio is an appetite suppressant so there’s that."
I figured this out with my own body a few years ago, and I've since noticed exercise precedes me eating a healthy amount.
@JoshuaLisec Exit what is being replaced. Be an expert in how to use the tool. Own what can’t be replaced. My job was 95% replaceable.
Not a dig at my job. It was hard. Almost no one else could do it. I made over 500k/year
AI can do 95% of it. Everyone needs to get ahead of this
@HeidiBriones Yep, all the time.
And it did not escape me that this is indeed how God must feel, and in a strange way, it resolves me to do better for Him.
@HeidiBriones I feel like you're 90% right. I think there is something a little special about the city, but a return visit can wait until they clean up their garbage so it doesn't smell that way.
If you are a software engineer "experiencing some degree of mental health crisis", now hear this, because I've been coding for 50 years since the days of punched cards and I have a salutary kick in your ass to deliver.
Get over yourself. Every previous "programming is obsolete" panic has been a bust, and this one's going to be too.
The fundamental problem of mismatch between the intentions in human minds and the specifications that a computer can interpret hasn't gone away just because now you can do a lot of your programming in natural language to an LLM.
Systems are still complicated. This shit is still difficult. The need for people who specialize in bridging that gap isn't going to go away.
As usual, the answer is: upskill yourself and adapt. If a crusty old fart like me can do it, you can too.
@BethBridges@JoshuaLisec She seems to be in a middle ground between ready to date (although not quite) and largely still suffering.
Thank you for the book recommendation.