@GigaBasedDad Father of 7 here. It's true. While big family isn't for everyone, people often stop at 2/3 cos it feels as though it's exponentially harder. Once the oldest is 7-10, most of them are helpful!
Robert Greene ha vendido +20M de libros estudiando una sola cosa:
por qué unas pocas personas encuentran su propósito y la mayoría muere sin descubrirlo.
Tuvo una charla de 3 horas con Huberman sobre propósito.
Te lo resumo en 7 pasos:
1. Vuelve a tu infancia
@plantologyninja I'm almost through the #Odyssey . As a new-to-the-classics reader I had to write out a character list cos the names were so unfamiliar to me. Same as with Dostoevsky for me.
...first time follower...just read a summary of your Discipleship V Disciple-Making and already love it.
Over the past 35 years, the percentage of Americans who claim to be "non-religious" has increased by over 260%.
For those who leave the pews to believe in "nothing" at all, does life get better?
Here's some interesting data about "nones". I'll let you decide.
-They report being significantly less satisfied with their social lives.
(Pew, 2024)
-They are more likely to say they have "zero close friends" to rely on.
(AEI, 2024)
-They have fewer children (far below "replacement rate") and only 32% say they even want to have children at all.
(Pew & American Family Survey, 2025)
-They are more likely die at a younger age than those who attend church regularly.
(JAMA, 2020)
-They are 1.5-3x more likely to have a substance abuse problem. (NIH, 2024)
-Also, less likely to donate to charity (even secular charities). Less likely to volunteer. Less likely to say they are "very happy" with life.
The good news is that after decades of running this strange anti-religious social experiment, we're finally beginning to see how awful it has made things.
We're at the commencement of a significant spiritual change in America.
Bill Gurley just identified the only career advantage that AI cannot commoditize.
It isn’t talent. It isn’t your degree. It isn’t your network.
Gurley: “The thing that will differentiate you more in your career than anything else is to be the most hyper curious person that’s trying to do this thing.”
For centuries, knowledge was gatekept. Elite institutions. Expensive mentors. Geographic luck.
The information existed but access to it was the moat.
That moat is gone.
Gurley: “You have no excuse not to be the most knowledgeable person, because the information’s all out there.”
Every question you can formulate now has an answer available instantly.
Every industry. Every domain. Every skill you want to acquire.
The playing field didn’t just level. It inverted.
The people who used to win by controlling access to information now compete against anyone willing to ask better questions.
Gurley: “I can’t make you the most talented person in your company or your field.”
Talent is genetic. It’s luck. It’s the variable you cannot control.
But knowledge is a choice. And curiosity is a compounding asset.
Gurley: “If you are the most curious person that’s constantly learning in your field, you will do extremely well.”
This was always true. What changed is the multiplier.
Gurley: “That advantage is put on steroids with these AI tools.”
A relentlessly curious person with access to all human knowledge and the ability to interrogate it in real time doesn’t just outlearn their peers.
They outlearn entire institutions.
The gap between the curious and the incurious was always there.
AI just made it insurmountable.
“Every other religion is basically survival of the fittest … in Christianity, the fittest sacrificed Himself for the survival of the weakest."
-Wes Huff
If Christianity is true, it is not only good news, but the best news imaginable. It offers not just hope, but the best possible hope: that all who repent can experience eternal fullness of joy in fellowship with God.