“The biggest difference I've noticed between people with a low or high bias for action is that the former loops on "what if it goes wrong?" and the latter loops on "what if it goes right?""
“Fear the man who’s already lost everything. Not the tyrant with armies. Not the billionaire buying souls. But the quiet one who has died a thousand deaths yet still moves like water. Who’s been betrayed, broken, burned to ash, and wakes each morning without bitterness. He doesn’t seek vengeance because he’s seen how small that victory is. Doesn’t fear threats because he’s already faced his worst nightmares. Doesn’t need to dominate because he has nothing left to prove. His gentleness isn’t weakness but wisdom earned through blood. His compassion isn’t naive but chosen despite knowing exactly how cruel the world can be. He moves like water not because he’s soft, but because he knows that water, given enough time, carves canyons through mountains. Suffering has made him unkillable. Love has made him revolutionary. The most dangerous freedom is having nothing left to lose.”
My most hippy belief I think is true is that changing your vocabulary changes how you perceive reality. You're just prompt engineering your brain all day. Try shuffling out these 5 words:
1. Decision --> Experiment
2. Problem --> Puzzle
3. Relax --> Energize
4. Failure --> Data point
5. Should --> Could
Note that all the people that live long major in the category on the right…
“In the pits of spiritual despair and black hopelessness, the necessary Knowingness to be followed is that, spiritually, all fear is illusion.” -David Hawkins
That’s all for this week. Please check out Peter Crone’s work if you haven’t already.