Non-politically correct, asshole, bored, and, sometimes, funny. Don't take it personal, the universe doesn't revolve around you. Always a loyal God's servant.
@IrvingPineda Estoy de acuerdo con el, por primera vez. Que le diga a los de su partido que echen para abajo esa ley, que sea el mismo el que lo proponga.
If an actual woman had behaved like this while in a position of authority over underage girls it would have been front page news on every paper. Men like this revel in the fact that people of influence are more frightened of looking illiiberal than of endangering schoolgirls.
@El_Universal_Mx@deandafer La única manera en que existe el "Supremacismo Blanco" es cuando lo paga el SPLC. Los periodistas bananeros de acá de seguro no saben de lo que estoy hablando.
The myth of luck
People love talking about luck. Someone builds a billion dollar company and they were “lucky.” Someone bought the right stock at the right time and they were “lucky.” Someone met the love of their life by chance and they were “lucky.” Looking backward, life often appears random. Looking closer and thinking deeply, it usually isn’t.
What we call luck is often the delayed byproduct of consistently putting yourself in good positions. It has far less to do with predicting exactly what will happen and far more to do with making decisions that slowly improve the odds in your favor. Most people don’t notice this because the compounding is invisible while it is happening. By the time the outcome finally arrives, the years of preparation have been forgotten.
One of the biggest mistakes people make is believing life is a game of certainty. They spend their time asking whether something will happen instead of asking whether they are positioned if it does happen. Great investors, entrepreneurs, athletes and leaders understand this difference. They know they cannot control the future, but they can absolutely control how prepared they are for it.
Every decision changes the probability distribution of your future. Reading one more book probably won’t change your life. Neither will one workout, one conversation, one dollar invested or one networking event. The power comes from stacking those decisions year after year until the probabilities begin to heavily favor you. Eventually people call the outcome luck because they never saw the thousands of small decisions that produced it.
This is why people constantly confuse the harvest with the seed. They celebrate the company after it becomes worth billions but ignore the decade spent learning, failing, reading, improving and taking intelligent risks. They admire the investor after the stock has increased tenfold but rarely appreciate the thousands of hours spent studying businesses before making the investment. The harvest is obvious, but seeds were buried underground where nobody was paying attention.
The fascinating thing about life is that good decisions do more than increase your odds. They create optionality. Every dollar you save gives you another opportunity you can say yes to. Every relationship you build opens another door. Every skill you develop creates possibilities that simply did not exist before. Wealth is not just money. Wealth is having choices when opportunity finally knocks. Luck is when opportunity meets preparation.
Looking backward, these moments seem almost inevitable. Looking forward, they are almost impossible to identify. Nobody knows which book will change the way they think forever, which conversation will lead to a business partnership or which investment will transform their financial future. The goal is not to predict the exact opportunity. The goal is to keep putting yourself in positions where opportunities are more likely to find you.
One of the reasons I love investing is because it constantly reinforces this lesson. You do not need to predict recessions, elections, interest rates or tomorrow’s headlines with perfect accuracy. You simply need to consistently buy wonderful businesses at sensible prices, avoid permanent mistakes and allow time to do most of the heavy lifting. Positioning is usually far more valuable than prediction.
The same principle applies almost everywhere else in life. Healthy people are rarely transformed by one workout. Great marriages are rarely built because of one romantic vacation. Exceptional careers are rarely created because of one brilliant meeting. Extraordinary lives are usually nothing more than ordinary decisions compounded for an extraordinarily long period of time.
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