Most people try to fix their posture by “manually” correcting it.
Squeezing their glutes.
Tucking their hips.
But this doesn’t change the reason why you have that posture in the first place.
Here’s a better solution 👇
🚨 Anthropic's own team just showed how to actually use Claude Code properly.
30 minutes. free. the person who created Claude Code.
watch the workshop. bookmark it.
worth more than every $500 course you almost bought.
you've been using Claude without knowing 40 of its commands.
Then read the guide below.
The creator of Claude Code teaches more about vibe-coding in 30 minutes than most tutorials do in hours.
Save this — it'll change how you build forever.
HOW TO GO VIRAL ON X: complete basics easy mode
with first guest as @minmax0501
00:00 Intro
00:50 @getyourmomo
01:16 First guest intro
02:16 Warm up account
02:51 Tip 1: tag communities
04:19 Tip 2: tag famous accounts
05:06 Understanding X audience
06:00 Things that didn’t work
06:28 Linkedin vs X
07:14 Tip 3: post everyday
08:20 Do videos work?
09:03 Tip 4: post successes
09:44 Do multiple channels work? What’s the difference?
10:40 Tip 5: wait for random viral posts
12:00 What’s your brand message?
13:10 Tip 6: Copy viral templates from competitors
13:25 Tip 7: Follow the trend
14:35 How to structure demo videos
15:10 1 second hook
16:13 First 5 seconds matter
17:48 1 feature / video
19:17 Story telling
21:32 Writing good script
22:47 Yeet
Jordan Peterson dropped a couple of relationship stats that hit harder than most marriage advice I’ve heard.
First: if one (or both) partners starts rolling their eyes during a conversation with a therapist, there’s a 95% chance they’ll be divorced within six months. That eye-roll is pure contempt — the relationship is already in serious trouble.
Second: track positive vs negative interactions.
If the ratio falls below 5 positive to 1 negative, the relationship is at risk.
But if it goes above 11 positive to 1 negative, it’s also in danger.
Why? Because you need some pushback. If your partner never calls you out when you’re being stupid or domineering, resentment builds and your inner tyrant takes over.
The sweet spot is somewhere in the middle: mostly positive, but with enough honest friction to keep both people growing.
It’s a refreshingly practical way to think about what actually keeps a relationship alive.