⚠️ If this goes viral, many racists will go nuts 🌰
🇺🇸 Trump: 50% Tariff on India.
🇮🇳 Record 22.6% growth in exports to the US in Nov.
🇺🇸 Trump: $100K fee for H1B Visa.
🇮🇳 Big Tech hires 33,000 Indian Techies and increase of 18% YoY.
> Modi, do nothing
> Win
🧠 Yelling isn’t just yelling. To a child’s brain, it’s a threat.
Neuroscience shows that the brain doesn’t neatly separate physical danger from emotional danger. MRI scans reveal that children raised in high-conflict homes develop hyper-reactive threat responses that closely resemble those seen in soldiers with PTSD. The brain reacts not to intent, but to intensity.
At the center of this response is the amygdala, the brain’s alarm system. In children exposed to frequent yelling, hostility, or unpredictability, the amygdala remains stuck in a state of constant vigilance. It scans relentlessly for danger, even when none is present. What should be a place of safety becomes neurologically coded as a battlefield.
This chronic stress doesn’t stay confined to emotions. It reshapes how the brain develops, affecting attention, emotional regulation, memory, and impulse control. Over time, the nervous system adapts to survive the environment it’s in, preparing the child not for learning or connection, but for defense.
The tragedy is that this rewiring happens silently. No bruises are required. No single traumatic event is necessary. Repeated exposure to hostility is enough. The brain learns that calm is unsafe and that danger can erupt at any moment.
A hostile home doesn’t just hurt feelings. It trains a child’s nervous system for war, long before they understand what war even is.
THINGS THAT QUIETLY EXCITE INTROVERTS
1. Cancelled plans
2. Empty elevators, seats, cafes
3. Long peaceful nights
4. Soft lighting
5. A quiet weekend
6. A calm private life
This is Sridhar Vembu.
He runs a $5.93 billion-dollar SaaS company without VC funding.
And still still finds time to teach at a village school.
I had to know how he balances it all.
Here's what I discovered:
By 2034, your 9-5 job will be extinct.
Everything will be so cheap you won't have to work anymore.
That's Reid Hoffman's latest prediction – the founder of LinkedIn who predicted the rise of social media in 1997.
Here's what he said next: