1. Bearish divergence on the daily timeframe (both RSI and MACD)
2. My timing cycles - May 25th was the start of the final greed I calculated, June 5th was the start of the fall based on psychological time
3. Rising dollar, base formation on USD. Rising dollar is not good for equities
4. 15%+ stretched from moving averages / 3x the normal average
5. Pumps all driven by hype and news - people were exhausted from new announcements
6. Lower and lower buying volume at the highs - just retail pumping their stocks while institutions were selling out
7. Defensives, healthcare and utilities forming bases and starting to hold lows
@calvinfroedge 1. Calvin suggests beaten down sector/boring companies trading at good multipless
2. Stocks go down an additional 10-15%
3. People get angry/call him a retard
4. Calvin gets angry
5. Buy stock at peak pessimism
6. Profit 2-3x
It's all a cycle
Same as sbsw, pbr, ec, dow, etc.
“It’s just money. It’s made up.”
Money is nothing more than a shared belief system. Paper. Numbers on a screen. A social contract.
The real currency?
Value.
Every dollar earned is a reflection of a problem solved, a need fulfilled, or a life improved.
Too many people chase money.
The smartest people chase value.
Because when you create enough value, money follows.
Markets will boom. Markets will crash. History repeats.
But one principle never changes:
Create value. Get rewarded.
Money is the scorecard, not the game.
We’re thrilled to announce Suno’s next chapter: a $400M Series D at a $5.4B valuation! 🚀
Our mission has always been simple: more people should get to experience the joy of making music. Huge thanks to our incredible community and investors for building alongside us.
Read more from Mikey here: https://t.co/9oC706e14H
Frida Kahlo à son mari Diego :
"Je ne te demande pas de m’embrasser,
je ne te demande pas de t’excuser quand je pense que tu as eu tort,
je ne te demanderai même pas de me prendre dans tes bras quand j’en ai le plus besoin.
Je ne te demande pas de me dire que je suis belle, même si ce n’est pas vrai,
ni de m’écrire quoi que ce soit de tendre.
Je ne te demanderai même pas de m’appeler
pour me raconter ta journée,
ni de me dire que je te manque.
Je ne te demanderai pas de me remercier pour tout ce que je fais pour toi,
ni de t’inquiéter pour moi quand mon moral est au plus bas.
Et bien sûr, je ne te demanderai pas de soutenir mes choix,
ni même de m’écouter quand j’ai mille histoires à te raconter.
Je ne te demanderai rien.
Pas même d’être à mes côtés pour toujours.
Parce que si je dois te le demander… alors je n’en veux plus".
Frida Kahlo
New research shows clutter dramatically spikes women’s cortisol—while men’s stress barely budges.
Household clutter extends far beyond mere aesthetics—it's deeply intertwined with stress physiology and cognitive burden, impacting women in particular.
Drawing from studies on dual-income married couples, therapist Elizabeth Earnshaw explains that women who view their homes as cluttered often see their cortisol levels rise throughout the day, unlike those who feel at ease, whose levels naturally decline. This heightened effect in women stems largely from bearing the disproportionate invisible mental load—the constant cycle of noticing, recalling, planning, and orchestrating household tasks.
Earnshaw suggests a realistic, three-part approach to reducing the stress–clutter spiral.
First, “shedding” involves intentionally minimizing possessions, including doing the emotional work required to let things go, in order to create more mental and physical space. Second, “preventing” focuses on systems: giving items clear “homes” so that decisions about where things go become automatic rather than mentally taxing. This may start with listing common types of clutter and designing dedicated spots for each (for example, a single, consistent place for receipts). Third, “adapting” asks families to accept that some clutter is inevitable in busy seasons of life and to concentrate on emotional regulation and co-regulation with partners, keeping stress and cortisol lower by adjusting expectations rather than striving for a perpetually picture-perfect home.
[Earnshaw, E., "Clutter, Cortisol, and Mental Load". Psychology Today, 2024]
[Saxbe, D. E., & Repetti, R. , "No place like home: Home tours correlate with daily patterns of mood and cortisol", Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 36(1), 71–81, 2010, DOI: 10.1177/0146167209352864]