anonymous

13.7K posts

anonymous

anonymous

@anonymous79730

انضم Kasım 2024
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anonymous
anonymous@anonymous79730·
Day 112: False suspension on @the_trollblazer (2009 account, organic curation, no violations). Aadhaar (India's SSN equivalent) verified ignored, Grok blocked. Forced out of X ecosystem — which AI should I choose now? ChatGPT (@sama), Gemini (@sundarpichai), Claude (@darioamodei), or...? @Support @elonmusk @xai @nikitabier review? Thanks Proof thread:
anonymous@anonymous79730

@XFreeze @the_trollblazer Now the suspension is blocking Grok access on my devices ("X account suspended" error during login, even on backups). Impacting xAI products too! @Support @premium @X @elonmusk @lindayaX @nikitabier please manual review and restore—evidence attached. #XSupport

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Mind Essentials
Mind Essentials@Mind_Essentials·
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Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
Jordan Peterson on Elon Musk: "My mind is a storm… I don’t think most people would want to be me" "There was a recent interview with Elon Musk where he said something... 'My mind is a storm. I don't think most people would want to be me. They may think they would want to be me... but they don't. They don't know. They don't understand.'" Peterson explains: "One of the downsides to high-level genius is what you might describe as hypermania." On verbal fluency and creativity: "Here's a simple test. Write down as many four-letter words as you can in three minutes that begin with 'T.' Or write down as many words as you can in three minutes that begin with 'S.' There's quite a powerful correlation between the sheer number of words you produce and your lifetime creative achievement... especially in the artistic and verbal domains." He distinguishes: "That's different than vocabulary. Vocabulary is how many words you understand. Fluency is how many words you can produce in a given amount of time." The variance is staggering: "People vary to a degree you can hardly imagine. Some people... if you get them to do the four-letter test in three minutes... they'll write down 12 words. Some will write down 150. The ones writing down 150... their minds are going at a hypomanic rate. They're just thinking five times as fast. Without any remission whatsoever." On when it goes too far: "When that gets completely out of control, you have someone who's manic. There's nothing fun about manic. That's where the word 'maniac' comes from. Someone who's manic has a thousand different plans... each of which are one sentence long... that they're hyper-enthusiastic about. They'll spend every cent of their money pursuing them. And things just go immediately to hell." He applies it: "That's the outer limit of pathology on the creative front. Someone like Musk who's clearly a genius... that's what he's contending with in his internal landscape. I'm not saying he's manic because I see no signs of that. But someone that creative is on that edge." On minds that move too fast: "Take someone like Ben Shapiro. It's very interesting to talk to Ben... Russell Brand is the same way. Shapiro speaks more rapidly than anyone I ever met. But if you're with him, you see very clearly that he's probably thinking five times that fast. And that's a lot." Peterson shares his own experience: "When I was writing Maps of Meaning... my first book... I had a very difficult time shutting off my mind. I was obsessed with that book. I was writing about 3 hours a day. Then I was thinking about the material for like 12 hours. And the thoughts came way faster than thinking. They probably came about as fast as I can read... about 1,200 words a minute. It was just nonstop thought for 16 hours a day." How he coped: "That's part of the reason I started lifting weights. If I was lifting heavy... thinking at 1,200 words a minute while I've got 100 pounds on my back... it was enough to shut it down. It was also one of the reasons I drank. That was another thing that would shut it off." On the price of genius: "The price that people pay to be the person they admire is such an interesting frame. 'My mind is a storm. I don't think most people would want to be me.' The price you would have to pay in order to be me is not one you would want to pay." The interviewer pushes back: but you're one of the richest men on the planet, you get to release bulletproof cars and put rockets in space... Peterson: "Yeah, but what about all the baggage? He also appears to me to be hyper-conscientious. Musk isn't just a creative genius... he's also an extremely conscientious engineer. Really conscientious engineers have very interesting minds. When they understand something... they understand how to build it out of atoms. They understand it at every single level." On the rare combination: "Musk appears to me to be someone who's this rare combination of hyper-creative but also hyper-conscientious. And I know he works all the time." The interviewer asks: does that hypertrophied executive function help wrangle some of the diffuse creative energy? Peterson: "Yes. Definitely. Eric Weinstein is a good example... Eric is unbelievably creative but he's not particularly conscientious. I think he found an occupation where that works extremely well... he worked with Peter Thiel for quite a long time as his idea man." He contrasts: "Musk is hyper-creative and as far as I can tell hyper-conscientious. The conscientiousness does focus it. Lots of creative people aren't conscientious. There's no correlation between creativity and conscientiousness." The math: "If you're the most creative person in a thousand... and you're the most conscientious person in a thousand... you're one person in a million. Musk is probably more like one person in 100 million. Maybe more. Maybe a billion."
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Sophia ❣️
Sophia ❣️@KeruboSk·
I recently realized something I can’t ignore: There’s a line that should never be crossed. When someone knows you’re at your lowest and still chooses to hurt, dismiss, or disrespect you, it’s not an accident, it’s a decision. Harming someone in their most vulnerable state reveals character, not confusion. And once that line is crossed, it doesn’t just hurt in the moment, it changes how you see them forever.
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Hannah - Apex Fitness Advisory
Can't get lean? I promise it's your diet. After 8 years training and coaching, here are 27 nutrition tips I wish I knew when I first started: =Thread= 1. Carbs don't make you fat.
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Curious Minds
Curious Minds@CuriousMindsHub·
Repetition rewires your brain. Repetition rewires your brain. Repetition rewires your brain. Repetition rewires your brain. Repetition rewires your brain. So choose carefully what you repeat.
Curious Minds tweet media
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Shakira played a free show on Copacabana beach last night to a crowd of 2 million. Rio's city government paid $4 million to put it on. The city is expecting around $155 million in return. The whole thing is a tourism program called "Todo Mundo no Rio," which means "Everyone in Rio." Every year through 2028, the city books one massive pop star for a free show on Copacabana. The city built it to fill hotels in May. That month sits between Rio's two peak tourism windows, and bookings would otherwise dip. The first two years proved the model. Madonna's 2024 show pulled in 1.6 million people, and the local economy got about $60 million out of it. Lady Gaga came in 2025, drew 2.1 million, and brought in $109 million. Both weekends, the city's hotels were packed. Shakira is on track to top them both. Rio's economic office is projecting around $155 million in spending at hotels, restaurants, taxis, and shops, plus another $250 million worth of news coverage worldwide that the city would otherwise have to buy through ads. About 310,000 of last night's crowd flew or drove in from outside Rio. Airline bookings to the city were up 80% the week of the show compared to the same week in 2024. Hotels were full. When the previous mayor was asked whether spending public money on a free Lady Gaga show was a good idea, he didn't dance around it. Yes, he said. He'd done the same for Madonna. The reason was simple: the shows fill the hotels and the restaurants, and the tax money rolls in. 2 million people is about the population of Paris. They were all standing on a 4-kilometer (2.5-mile) stretch of beach. The setup ran 16 video and audio towers down the coast so the back rows could still see and hear. The city is generating roughly $40 of economic activity for every $1 of public money it puts in. They're doing it again in 2027.
2000s@PopCulture2000s

over 2 million people for shakira at copacabana 🇧🇷

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Fitness Knowledge
Fitness Knowledge@Fitnessknowledg·
Excellent exercises to get rid of waist fat With consistency for a month and notice the difference.💪🔥
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y
y@ysuckme·
we are living in a time where the intelligent person must remain silent in order not to offend the ignorant.
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Unfiltered
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100·
11 SIGNS YOU'RE AN OLD SOUL IN A MODERN WORLD: 1. Crowds drain you but deep one-on-one conversations restore you completely. 2. You feel more at home in nature than in any city or social setting. 3. Small talk feels almost physically painful to sit through. 4. You were drawn to wisdom, books, and philosophy from a very young age. 5. You often feel like you were born in the wrong era entirely. 6. Trends never excite you,depth and authenticity always do. 7. You sense things about people before they ever open their mouths. 8. You find more peace in solitude than most people find in company. 9. You carry a quiet sadness for a world moving too fast to feel anything. 10. You question everything society calls normal, urgent, or important. 11. You have always known, somewhere deep inside, that there is far more to this life than what is visible.
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Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen@BGatesIsaPyscho·
And so it begins.
Concerned Citizen tweet media
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𝓲𝓬𝓮
𝓲𝓬𝓮@be_like_ice·
High IQ ADHD people are the most Dopamine Addicted.
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gomi
gomi@parveen__tyagi·
"IF YOU ARE SO SURE BURN THE SHIPS" The quickest way to attract what's meant for you is to express yourselt so honestly and be so delusional that everything fall in the right place on its own. If you burn the ships, you can't go back home, so you won't have any option other than to win the war. And even if you sink to the bottom. Then don't come back up without the pearl. If you really believe in what you're doing then just prioritise that thing and forget everything else, just remove all the noises. you can start to feel how magnetic you attract your goals in life. And always ask yourself "Am I being true to myself or to the projections I've made?"
alexei@alexeixbt

the whole cheat code to life is just being delusional and confident asf

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NutriScience
NutriScience@Nutri_Science_·
Fixing ADHD is simple. But most people don't even know where to start... Here are 6 doctors' protocols to fix ADHD: 1) Stop drinking tap water
NutriScience tweet mediaNutriScience tweet media
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Forge Physique
Forge Physique@ForgePhysique·
📷 Chest Day Best Day
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Hotiihotii🔥
Hotiihotii🔥@hotiiofficial·
Met a man in the gym in his 50s with a physique most people want and I asked for his routine. He said: “Just 2 exercises per muscle group. Been doing it for 20 years.” Chest — incline bench + cable fly Shoulders — overhead press + lateral raises Biceps — hammer curls + preacher curls Triceps — pushdowns + overhead extensions Back — pull-ups + barbell rows Legs — squats + leg extensions Then I begin to wonder Are we doing too much in the gym just to feel productive during a workout?
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Kevin Jordan
Kevin Jordan@kevin_jordan__·
Nobody warns you what ADHD looks like at 40. Every year of unfinished projects and missed promotions stacks up. The question stops being "why can't I focus" and becomes "who could I have been?."
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