Buffett doesn't like holding bonds. Therefore, a rough prediction about the market's direction can be made. Berkshire currently has an all-time high in cash reserves. This could be due to Berkshire's market capitalization increasing with new clients or capital inflows. Or it could be one of two options: either they can't find shares to buy, or the market value of their shares is higher than their intrinsic value.
@NoLimitGains It looks like a good opportunity to open a short position. But since market makers know this, buying and selling is gambling in my opinion 😂
It’s not about math, it’s about psychology.
Our brains read prices left-to-right, so $3.99 feels closer to $3 than $4 (“left-digit effect”). That tiny drop keeps it in the cheaper mental category.
Same reason you see 9.99, 90.9, 999 everywhere—it signals “deal” or “just under” a threshold.
Gas stations didn’t invent it—they just never stopped using what still works.
We are being deceived🥺
We’ve seen this pattern before.
During the Iran–Iraq “Tanker War” in the 1980s, even threats to Hormuz pushed prices up (e.g. ~$34 → $39).
In 2026, Brent dropped from ~$114 → $102 the moment US–Iran talks were mentioned—only to spike back when talks failed.
Same story across conflicts:
War risk = spike.
Ceasefire signals = drop.
Failed agreements = surge again.
Markets price probability of disruption, not just reality.
What changes have occurred in your lifestyle, relationships, and thoughts? The signal may be pointing to the future, not the past. What I'm curious about is the difference between this and substances sold on the street? Is it about addiction or not? Psilocybin and 5-MeO-DMT activate serotonin 5-HT2A receptors
If I had to pick one with the strongest evidence for stress resilience, it’d be magnesium.
It plays a direct role in regulating the nervous system, sleep quality, and cortisol levels—and a lot of people are mildly deficient without realizing it.
The vitamins I use are:
•Magnesium (calm + sleep)
•B-complex (energy + stress response)
•Vitamin D (mood regulation)
@bryan_johnson Such heightened awareness is like a double-edged sword. Biology, like mathematics, is not linear. This change in BPM can be related to food, stress, sleep, fluid intake, and even timing. Optimizing the body for these situations would be the healthiest approach.
@carterd1016@obsdmd I bridge the gaps in my human connections by meeting people directly face-to-face. If some people are building their social relationships this way, then the tweets I post, which you might consider artificial, could be bothering them
@luxemiaa Everyone’s obsessed with money, but they miss the real signal.
The guy had nothing—and still moved with discipline, pride, and responsibility.
That’s dangerous.
Because men like that don’t stay broke. They level up.
Flash impresses. Character compounds.
Choose accordingly.
This whole thread is a mix of misinformation, ego, and bad science.
Circumcision debates aren’t about masculinity or sexuality—they’re medical, cultural, and personal. And viral headlines ≠ scientific truth.
Before arguing, read the actual research—not clickbait interpretations.
@unusual_whales AI isn’t just reducing work—it’s compressing time.
When tasks get faster, expectations expand to fill the gap. Same hours, higher output, tighter deadlines.
The edge now isn’t just doing the job—it’s adapting to new tools while managing the pace they create.
@NTFabiano You’re one walk away from a better day.
Hitting 7,000–9,000 steps daily is linked to better heart health and a lower risk of depression. Regular walking improves circulation, reduces stress hormones, and boosts mood naturally.
Simple habit. Real impact.
@stijnnoorman Simple framework, but execution is where most fall off.
Consistency across the whole system matters more than intensity in one area. Miss a step and the pipeline weakens.
It’s not glamorous—just steady, repeated action over time. That’s what turns effort into income.