@Mrbankstips Since the estimated market cap of Gold is 17.7 T, if BTC's MC is take up the MC of gold with it's total supply being 21 M, 1 BTC would be priced at $842,857 i.e. (17.7 T/21 M).
So, should BTC now takes up at least half of Gold's MC, 1 BTC would then be = $421,428.
Geez. 🤯🥶
🎉 i've successfully bound my wallet for the DSCVR airdrop!
early community members are being rewarded.
have you checked yours yet?
👉 https://t.co/yPD7K1oAAj
ps. not a paid post
#DSCVR#Airdrop
DID YOU KNOW??
Offering unprompted advice or explanations actually triggers a defensive "threat response" in the human brain, effectively shutting down the other person's ability to learn!
In neuropsychology, this phenomenon centers on human autonomy. When someone explicitly asks you a question, their brain releases a burst of dopamine, creating an active, hungry state of curiosity that primes their neural pathways to receive and store information.
However, when you explain something without being asked, the brain perceives the unsolicited information as an intellectual boundary violation, an implicit statement that they are incompetent, causing their nervous system to push back rather than absorb the lesson. Let me explain 👇🏾👇🏾
1. The Paradox of the "Protégé Effect":
While it seems counterintuitive, waiting for someone to ask an entry-level question before explaining a concept is the single most efficient way to solidify your own mastery over a subject.
Behavioral scientists refer to this dynamic as the PROTÉGÉ EFFECT . When you are forced to wait until someone approaches you with a specific, unpredictable query, your brain cannot rely on a rehearsed, robotic script. Because you must instantly adapt your knowledge to bridge the specific gap in their understanding, your own brain is forced to rapidly reorganize its internal cognitive filing cabinets.
This real-time synthesis builds significantly stronger synaptic connections in your own prefrontal cortex than lecturing to an unprompted, passive audience ever could.
2. The Mechanics of the Curiosity Gap:
A human mind that has not asked a question is structurally incapable of retaining a complex answer due to a psychological barrier known as the INFORMATION CAVITY.
True learning requires a baseline level of cognitive friction. When a person encounters a problem they cannot solve, their brain creates an uncomfortable "curiosity gap", a literal itch that demands to be scratched.
If you step in and explain the solution before they have spent time wrestling with the problem or asking for help, you deny them that friction. Without the internal drive of a self-generated question, the explanation is processed as useless ambient noise, escaping their short-term memory almost instantly.
3. Deconstructing the "Unsolicited Advice" Wall:
In behavioral communication, offering an explanation to someone who didn't request it frequently triggers a psychological phenomenon known as REACTANCE.
Reactance is the brain's emotional urge to maintain personal freedom and control. When you launch into an unprompted explanation, the listener's subconscious registers the interaction as a status dynamic where you are positioning yourself as the superior "expert" and them as the inferior "student."
To protect their status and autonomy, their brain builds an immediate cognitive wall. They will nod politely while internally tuning you out, or actively search for flaws in your explanation just to re-establish their intellectual independence.
4. The "Pull" Management Architecture:
These days, global corporate leadership frameworks and educational institutions have largely abandoned top-down "push" teaching styles in favor of strict "pull" knowledge architectures.
Modern organizational psychology strongly emphasizes that managers and educators should strictly serve as passive resources rather than active explainer. Training modules are engineered to set up complex, safe-to-fail scenarios that naturally prompt workers to hit a wall and explicitly request guidance.
FINALLY!
True communication is a game of supply and demand. If you provide the supply of an explanation before there is a demand for it, you waste your words on a brain that is actively defended against them. By holding back until you are asked, you ensure your knowledge lands on fertile, curious soil.
Hopefully you've learnt something new today?
Cheers 🥂 😅
The Medic Who Writes™🌚
Exactly this time yesterday I found this phone in inside keke. Three thoughts crossed my mind give it to the driver, keep and sell it, or return it to the owner. I chose to return it, but now I regret it.