ethereum:0xb2617246d0c6c0087f18703d576831899ca94f01 high timeframe
Trying to reclaim the mid range
Strong buyback start on July 1st of $500M
Accumulated and not selling anytime soon
33 rules for engineering your own luck.
1. Volume is better than perfection. You can't predict which attempt pays off, so take more shots.
2. Bridge disconnected groups. The gap between two worlds is where you add value.
3. Seek asymmetric bets. Small downside, big upside, over and over.
4. Never risk total ruin. To win the game, you have to stay in the game.
5. Keep slack in your life. A fully optimized schedule has no room for luck.
6. Break your routines. Returning to the same café, route, and people gives diminishing returns.
7. Treat every situation as an audition. Go above and beyond even when the stakes look low.
8. Persistence outperforms talent. The winners are usually the ones who didn't quit.
The other 25 are below.
The fastest way to change your life takes about 20 minutes a day and happens with your eyes closed.
It is called visualization, and done properly it is closer to rehearsal than daydreaming. Here is why it works, and exactly how to do it.
Why it works
Your brain does not draw a hard line between something vividly imagined and something actually lived. When you rehearse an experience in detail, with real emotion, it fires many of the same pathways it would fire if it were really happening. Repeat that often enough and the experience stops feeling imagined. It starts to feel like familiar territory. And what feels familiar stops feeling impossible.
Two things happen at once. Old patterns weaken, not because you fight them, but because you stop rehearsing them in your head. New patterns stabilize, because you are living them internally long before they ever show up in your real life.
Timing matters. Right after you wake up and right before you fall asleep, your brain is already drifting through a slower, drowsier state where imagery sinks in instead of bouncing off. Those two windows are the highest-leverage minutes of your day.
How to do it
Find somewhere you will not be interrupted. Sit or lie down with your body supported and uncrossed. Take a few slow breaths and let the tension drain out of your face, shoulders, and stomach. You are not forcing anything, you are just lowering the internal noise.
Now pick one specific scene. Not a vague goal like "I want to be confident," but a single moment you can step into.
Health: see yourself moving through an ordinary day with ease, walking without effort, breathing clearly, your body light and responsive.
Confidence: see yourself in a situation where you would normally hesitate, but now you speak steady and direct, and it unfolds without resistance.
Discipline: see yourself already inside the routine, doing the work without negotiating with yourself, as if it is simply what you do.
Stay in first person, through your own eyes. Build the scene in layers. First what you see: the light, the textures, the small details you would normally skip. Then what you hear: voices in the room, the rhythm of your own breathing. Then what you feel physically: the weight of your body, the temperature on your skin, the way you move when you are not resisting yourself.
At the end, stop adding detail. Just rest in the overall feeling for a moment, as if your mind has already accepted it as normal, then carry that lightly into your day.
The only rules that matter: keep it specific, keep it first person, do not force it, and do it daily. Give it three to four weeks before you judge it. Some days you will drop in deep, some days barely, and both still count, because repetition is what burns the pattern in.
You are not building a fantasy. You are rehearsing familiarity. Use it wisely.
How to fix your confidence:
Focus inwardly
Become aware of the sensations in your body as you notice how good it feels to breathe slower.
Do this as you feel your feet planted firmly on the floor and begin to relax every muscle in your body head to toe.
Within a few minutes you'll notice your body feels heavier and heavier.
Once that sensation arrives, you will be able to visually go within yourself to create permanent upgrades in your subconscious: remembering who you truly are.
Now, ask yourself this question:
"Can I remember the last time I truly felt like I won?"
The moment you acted upon an idea and surprisingly it paid off.
Despite voices of doubt.
The fact you transformed a deep calling, invisible idea in to physical reality.
Maybe it felt as confirmation that you are enough.
Go back there now.
Where were you sat, stood, walking? What was in your hand? Who, if anyone, was near you?
What did you tell yourself in that split second before the thought “don’t get too comfortable” crept in?
Second by second, let yourself feel any winning sensations, maybe a warmth in the chest, maybe somewhere else that says “we did it”
Stay with it a moment longer than your mind wants you to because in a moment your subconscious mind is going to predict the future.
It understands the fact you can remember what it feels like to be confident as proof you already are, so obviously it begins to ask itself:
Who would I become if experienced this every single day?
How would it feel if I felt certain in myself regardless of outside circumstance?
Would I believe this is your potential or just much closer to it?
Enjoy it.
Commit the next 30 days to practice this and see if you find the answers to those questions.
Cogito Ergo Sum
REPETITION IS THE MOTHER OF LEARNING.
ALL BEHAVIOR IS LEARNED BEHAVIOR.
You can be anything you set your mind to.
Put FAITH and CONVICTION into your beliefs, and with enough repetition, they will become automatic.
Fake it long enough until you make it.
The fastest way to change your life is to rip yourself out of your (physical and digital) environment. Change everything overnight. The places you go, the accounts you follow, the info you consume, etc. It's difficult but it absolutely works.
If you actually want to change your life as fast as possible, this is the single most effective thing you can do.
Spend around 10–30 minutes a day visualizing a version of yourself that you are deliberately trying to build. Do it when your mind is already calm, especially in the evening or just before sleep, because the mind accepts imagery more easily when it is not being pulled in different directions.
The basic idea is simple. The brain treats repeated internal experience as something important. When a certain kind of situation is lived again and again in imagination, with enough detail and emotional weight, it starts to lose its “imagined” quality and becomes something your mind recognizes as familiar territory.
And what becomes familiar stops feeling impossible.
Old patterns weaken in this process not because you fight them directly, but because you stop feeding them the same mental rehearsal. At the same time, new patterns begin to stabilize because they are being repeatedly experienced internally before they ever exist externally.
Start by settling your body. Slow breathing. Less tension in the face, shoulders, stomach. You are not trying to force anything, you are just lowering internal noise.
Then choose one specific scene. Not an abstract goal. A moment. Something you can step into mentally.
If it is health, do not think “I want to be healthy,” instead see yourself moving through a normal day with physical ease, walking without effort, breathing clearly, feeling your body light and responsive.
If it is confidence or success, see yourself in a real situation where you would normally hesitate, but now you speak without that hesitation, you are steady, direct, and things unfold without internal resistance.
If it is discipline, see yourself already inside the routine, doing the work without negotiation, as if it is simply what you do.
Always stay in first person. Through your own eyes.
What is directly in front of you. What is under your feet. The texture of the environment. The light in the space. The small details your attention would normally skip.
Then sound. The way voices actually enter the space. The rhythm of your breathing. Any background noise that belongs to that environment.
Then physical sensation. The weight of your body. Temperature on the skin. The sense of movement. The way you occupy space when you are not resisting yourself.
Emotionally, you are not trying to force excitement. You are allowing a quieter set of states to appear. Relief that things are simple. A sense of “this is already how I operate.” A quiet internal stability that does not need justification.
You are not building a fantasy. You are rehearsing familiarity.
At the end, stop adding detail and just remain in the general felt sense of it for a short moment, as if your mind has already accepted it as normal.
Let that feeling continue lightly as you move into the rest of your day.
Repeat it often enough that the scene stops feeling like something you are trying to reach, and starts feeling like something your mind already knows how to do.
This may seem like "woo woo" nonsense but if you want to alter the world around you, then you need to do this:
Everyday for the past 3 month I've written in cursive the story of my future self.
I write over and over that I already have the life I want want. More clients, more income, more success.
And guess what?
Everything I write freaking happens.
Do with this information what you want, but there is something powerful behind scripting your own future.