Something no one is honest about:
Discipline should not be hard 95% of the time.
The other 5% is reserved for a bad day, a particularly challenging moment, or starting something new.
If you see discipline as hard, you are not aligned internally to what you are doing.
One of my favorite lessons I’ve learnt from working with smart people:
Action produces information. If you’re unsure of what to do, just do anything, even if it’s the wrong thing. This will give you information about what you should actually be doing.
Sounds simple on the surface - the hard part is making it part of your every day working process.
Beware of posing as a profound person— God became a baby.
To be shallow is not a sign of being sinful, nor is shallowness an indication that there is no depth to your life at all— the ocean has a shore.
#myutmost
https://t.co/LKzjoNLmM7
#shallow#profound
My focus for 2025 is to be seen, to connect & collaborate with more people.
Being Seen= Creating and putting myself out there more often
Connection= Serving others and Asking for help
Collaborating= Contributing my knowledge and skills and learning from others
What's yours?
Getting started is the most challenging part of meditating, writing, filming, practicing vocals, stretching, going to social events…
My tendency is to think about the things that I love without doing them.
But I'm getting better at doing them with less thinking.
Aim to create higher quality problems for yourself.
When you avoid bc of fear…. you are creating problems.
When you jump in before you feel ready… you are creating different problems.
Unlocking new (quality) problems is how you level up in this game.
I was hurt and had limited movement for about a year. It was excruciating getting fit again (Still not totally there yet)
I learned that usually any movement is better than none. After long periods of immobility, the pain of moving can mislead us, telling us to stay down.
However, by consistently moving a bit more, the pain eventually subsides. It’s often just a matter of acknowledging that change is happening.
It’s the same concept while getting back into freelancer mode. Momentum and consistency are more important than outcomes. They are the “wins” to be celebrated.
You’re destroying your posture and health daily…
How? Just by sitting at your computer for hours.
Luckily, I found 7 tips from Andrew Huberman on how to fix it permanently.
Read this to avoid future health issues:🧵
I am Baptiste Parravicini:
• Tech entrepreneur & API visionary
• Co-founder of apidays, world's leading API conference
• Passionate about AI integration & tech for the greater good
Follow for insights on how APIs are connecting our future
Repost for your network 🔄: