Chris Field

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Chris Field

Chris Field

@ChrisField

Strategic SaaS sales guy. Twin girl dad. Christian. Surfer. Ironman. Building a life skills academy for teens: Sales, leadership, entrepreneurship, AI proof

Downingtown, PA Joined Mayıs 2008
5.5K Following4.1K Followers
Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@theoliverxp What's the scoop with the scar work? Would love to learn more.
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Oliver
Oliver@theoliverxp·
I’ve been doing scar / fascia work, as well as craniosacral through a licensed professional. I feel like I am experiencing life for the first time. The scar itself (from surgery from when I was an infant) has likely disrupted my nervous system via fascia and posture for my entire life. My whole life I’ve been compensating and had no recollection of life before the scar. The mental changes that have come with the physical adjustments are indescribable.
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Chase Passive Income
Chase Passive Income@chasedownleads·
Walked by a homeless man He asked if I had some money Why yes, I do I pulled out a huge wad of thousand dollar bills More money than he had ever seen in his entire life Kind of a dumb question to ask someone as wealthy as myself I put the bills back into my wallet and walked away I could hear every homeless person on the street standing up and applauding my insane wealth Feels good to be rich
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Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@Ryanilbasso Hadn't seen you on my timeline in ages. Hope you are doing well! Happy Easter.
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Basso
Basso@Ryanilbasso·
As a professional singer, as is my wife, this is a super busy time of year for us. The 2nd of 4 weekend Masses finished. Tonight was at a beautiful, 110-year-old Catholic church just west of Chicago. Home now. Enjoying a wonderful #NewGlarus beer. Cheers to your #GoodFriday
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Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@katienotopoulos @calebhannan Lax is huge here in the Philly suburbs. I'd say it's bigger than soccer (4-5 of the top 25 teams in the nation, more d1 commits, more elite clubs)
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Katie Notopoulos
Katie Notopoulos@katienotopoulos·
Yeah, the article notes that lacrosse is still nationally popular. Anecdotally, there wasn't lacrosse in public high schools in the 90s in MA when I was a teen, but it started shortly after I left. Looks like now it's fading in those same areas, although the article notes those very wealthy towns are particularly vulnerable to talented players leaving for private schools (where it was long popular in new england)
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Katie Notopoulos
Katie Notopoulos@katienotopoulos·
I’m fascinated by the new PE-fueled landscape of youth sports, and there seems to be a curious new wrinkle: it’s killing lacrosse. Basically, teens now NEED to do club sports in addition to their school teams, which means they have to drop a lesser sport (do club soccer in spring instead of lacrosse). bostonglobe.com/2026/03/31/spo…
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Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@bevel_health When are you guys coming out with an Android app or a web version? Can't wait to use your tool.
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Bevel
Bevel@bevel_health·
Whoop filed a lawsuit against us, and this is our response. TL;DW: - June 2024: Whoop's Corp Dev reached out wanting to "explore collaboration" - 5 months later: cease and desist letter - Their demands: disable dark mode (ours defaults to light mode), rename common words like "Strain" and "Recovery" - We pushed back. Our lawyers exchanged letters for months. Then they went silent. - 2 weeks ago: sued us in Delaware with no warning - Their 111-page complaint claims our UI copies theirs but many of their own screenshots contradict their claims - Fun fact: Whoop updated their home screen to look like ours, not the other way around Watch the video below to learn more ↓
Grey@greyngyen

@WHOOP just filed a lawsuit against us. A $10B company with 800+ employees is scared of us, a 20-person team making health tracking accessible to all. Rather than focusing on product and innovation, Whoop has decided to use its newly raised capital on lawfare. In this video, I share our side of the story, explain why their claims are baseless, and why we believe fighting back is the right thing to do.

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Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
John “The Vermin” Sherman became a cult figure in climbing for his bold style, often tackling problems in flip-flops with a beer in hand. In the early 1990s, he helped reshape the sport by creating a new way to grade bouldering difficulty, at a time when climbers relied on older systems like the Yosemite Decimal System or John Gill’s B-scale. Sherman introduced the “V” scale, named after his nickname, starting at V0 for easy problems and originally topping out at V9. After his guidebook was published, climbers began racing to claim harder first ascents, leading to grades like V10 and far beyond. Today, the scale stretches to V17 and V18, reflecting how much the sport has evolved. Outside of climbing, Sherman is also known for his sense of humor and oddball fame. He once won an Alferd E. Packer lookalike contest, referencing the infamous 19th-century figure whose survival story and criminal conviction became part of American folklore. The creepiest photos ever taken: bit.ly/3MhKiB3
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Nicolás Forero
Nicolás Forero@MrNicolasForero·
In 2023, I decided not to work for a year. In the months that followed, I questioned everything about how I'd been spending my time. By conventional measures, I'd been successful. I started working at nineteen. By twenty-two, I'd helped companies generate millions in revenue, working remotely from Lisbon and Mexico City with startups in California and New York. None of it felt like enough. Someone from St. John's College told me to talk to Michael Strong. Within minutes of our first conversation, I understood why people who work with him stay for decades. Here was someone who had spent thirty-five years taking young people who were anxious, disengaged, and depressed and helping them become happy, self-directed, and whole. Not training them for test scores. Developing them as complete human beings. I joined his school as an executive. I shadowed his classes. I kept notes on everything he said across decades of writing, podcasts, and interviews. Those notes became Raising Free Learners. 1,000 people have it already. If you want a copy, comment "book" below.
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Kevin Henderson
Kevin Henderson@KHendersonCo·
It's with a heavy heart that I announce that I've made the difficult decision to step away from SMB Law Group. When @SMB_Attorney, @Sam_Rosati and I set out to build a new kind of law firm almost 4 years ago, I never dreamed where it would take us. And where it has taken me is to into the searcher seat myself, having recently closed on the acquisition of @SupremeWrapsDFW. So as of today, I'll be stepping down as a partner of @smblawgroup and working full time with my wife as the operators of Supreme Wraps. Thank you all for your support and the wild ride these past 4 years!
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Podcast Notes 🗒️
Podcast Notes 🗒️@podcastnotes·
Fine, I’ll give you all answers. You’re welcome internet. Home alone Men in black Homeward bound Life of Brian Highlander Hook Down periscope Encino man Almost heroes Sherlock Oscar Men at work Rush hour Wild Wild West Dodgeball Street fighter Speed Trading places Van Helsing ET The mummy Bourne Clash of the titans Anastasia Pirates of Caribbean Pleasantville Superman! Superman returns Frankenstein Ready player one (after reading) The Italian job Bill and Ted’s Grease True lies Galaxy quest National treasure Demolition man Iron eagle Master and commander The rock Con air Stargate The saint Beethoven Mr Bean Trading places Anastasia Iron giant Atlantis Groundhog Day Lost Rocky IV Dark knight 12 angry men Babe Street fighter iI (1994) The Iron Giant Balto 3 ninjas League of extraordinary gentlemen Terminator and terminator 2 Treasure planet Don’t tell mom the baby sitters dead Twister Flight of the navigator Hackers 12 angry men Amadeus Jaws 3 Ninjas
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Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@simplesamtx Love this! Congrats on the great year. Did you start or buy the company? What's the most surprising thing about owning a cabinet shop? What's the hardest?
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simpleSAM
simpleSAM@simplesamtx·
Our little mom and pop cabinet shop produced just under a million dollars worth of cabinets this past year. My wife and I. My brother and his wife. Just the 4 of us putting out custom cabinets and install. We own our equipment. We pay our bills. We don’t owe anyone any money. We have no business loans. Makes me proud that in the world we live in we somehow make it work for our family. It’s hard physical work and not every day is peachy. We still have a lot to learn but we are still surviving and happy to be able to work as a family. 5 years in and each year gets a little better. If you’re little like us have faith and keep grinding. Find peace in what you’re doing and just understand it’s going to be full of ups and downs but if you just keep pushing and adapting you have a chance to do something that plenty dream of doing. Life is a balance of family, fun and work. It may not last forever but feeling very blessed this morning.
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Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@tessak22 I love the idea of peaceful homeschooling. We started this fall with our 3rd graders. So far so good! Never going back. I'm interested in your software. Open to a call?
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Tessa Kriesel
Tessa Kriesel@tessak22·
I accidentally built really great homeschool software. Just helped a local family switch to it today that was struggling through miacademy curriculum. And their 8th grader left excited about her schoolwork that included her interests in the assignments. My 10 year old used it to teach my 3 year old a kindergarten math skill that he mastered through the IXL integration. And now she can make us dinner because she asked to learn about cooking. Anyone I know have experience in the eduction space? I think I need to find a co-founder that can play the CEO role. Education and parents are not my forte. I just care about making really great software products that help people. I think the strongest next phase is integrations. The IXL integration was simple, but a game-changer for our family instantly. I think Selah (peaceful homeschooling) could really help distribute small homeschool curriculums built by educators, too. People are raving about it and parents are begging for it once I tell when about it. There's something here, and I know from experience because the current homeschool landscape is patched together and very confusing for parents. Selah makes it peaceful.
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Ian Cushing
Ian Cushing@ianncushing·
Roofing is super slept on when it comes to cold email lead gen If you own a roofing co and want to see how we are generating commercial roofing leads, comment "roof" and I will show you
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Shawn Gorham
Shawn Gorham@shawngorham·
A cycling friend has been in Bentonville all week riding bikes - he has raved about it Are we sleeping on Bentonville?
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Matthewhuffman
Matthewhuffman@myscifi·
@flowidealism Im about 3/4s the way through designing/implementing my homeschool-os which is a series of Markdown files and instructions usable by any llm to generate custom lessons and teacher guides both A)according to your specifications and B) up to standards/exemplars you set.
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Michael Strong
Michael Strong@flowidealism·
Something is happening in education that most people have not noticed yet, and I believe it is worth understanding, even if you never change a single thing about your child’s schooling. To understand what is happening, it helps to know what came before. In 1920, there were about 200,000 school districts in the United States. For most Americans, the one-room schoolhouse was a reality. Districts were small, local, and responsive to parents. By 1970, due to the school consolidation movement, that number had fallen to about 20,000. Today, there are public high schools with 2,000, 3,000, or even 5,000 students. They are monstrosities. New York City schools spend approximately $40,000 per pupil each year. The results are mediocre at best and catastrophic at worst. For the first time in American history, that monopoly is beginning to crack. Educational Scholarship Accounts now allow families in multiple states to use public funds for private education, tutoring, homeschool materials, and other educational services of their choice. If you had a ten-student microschool and could access that money directly, you would have $400,000 a year to educate ten students. The resources exist. They always have. They were simply locked inside a system that could not use them well. At the same time, the homeschool and microschool movement has grown tremendously. These are not isolated families doing worksheets at the kitchen table. They are organized communities of parents, often led by mothers and former teachers, who saw their children struggling and decided to build something better. Learning pods allow families to share the teaching load. I know families in which each mother watches the children one day a week, and the kids rotate among homes. Microschools bring eight to fifteen students together with a skilled guide. The models vary, but the underlying principle is the same: small groups, meaningful relationships, and genuine learning. What has not changed, and what technology cannot replace, is the human element. A child needs adults who know them, who take their thinking seriously, and who create an environment where they feel safe enough to take intellectual risks. A child needs peers who share their curiosity and hold them to a higher standard. A child needs to feel that what they are doing matters, that their education is not merely preparation for some future life, but a meaningful part of their life right now. This is where I have spent thirty-five years: building environments in which the human element is the foundation and everything else serves it. Small seminars where every student speaks every day. Mentorship relationships develop over the years. A culture built around genuine intellectual engagement rather than compliance or credentialing. I am sharing this because I believe we are at an inflection point. The families who understand what is happening and act on it in the next few years will give their children an extraordinary advantage. Not an advantage measured merely in test scores or college acceptance letters, though those often follow, but one measured in how their children think, how they relate to others, and how they approach the world. Putting more money into the system will not change it, because the problem is structural, not financial. Every meaningful change in education has come from families and educators who chose to build something new outside the existing structure. That movement is now larger and better funded than it has ever been. If you are curious about what this looks like in practice, or if you simply want to talk about your child’s situation, reply to this email. I have been at this for thirty-five years, and I still find every family’s story worth hearing.
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Jesse Pujji
Jesse Pujji@jspujji·
My companies close $20M/year on 30-minute Zoom calls. I had an ex-McKinsey consultant reverse-engineer exactly how: – Sales call recordings – Sales scripts – Lead gen systems Reply with “GA” and I'll DM you the copy. Free.
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Chris Field
Chris Field@ChrisField·
@BarryRoland19 Do you have a mic in my house? Grind the coffee beans the night before so I don't wake up the kids. Pour coffee into French Press, hear my 5yo climb out of bed 3 mins later. Sprint upstairs to try to get to him before he wakes up my wife.
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BarryRoland19
BarryRoland19@BarryRoland19·
Day in the life of a late 30s guy in the suburbs (Sunday edition/2 kids): 6:00am— tip-toe downstairs to make some coffee before everyone wakes up. notice an injury you acquired while you were asleep. 6:10— take your first sip of coffee. take a deep breath and— 6:11— hear your wife yelling your name to come and get the 4yo bc she just woke the other one up 6:11— pretend you don’t hear her so you can have just one more sip of coffee in peace 6:11— “I know you hear me! Hello???” 6:12— take your kid downstairs. “What would you like for breakfast sweetie?” “I want pancakes daddy. I love pancakes!” 6:13— make a fresh batch of pancakes for the family. 6:20— “here are your pancakes sweetie :)” “I don’t want pancakes” “huh? You literally said ‘I want pancakes daddy’, and that you love them?” “PANCAKES ARE YUCKY” 6:21— take a third sip of your coffee. it’s cold. your wife yells your name again from across the house.
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Alton Syn
Alton Syn@WorkflowWhisper·
I built 31 automations for clients last year. Every single business needed some version of the same ones. So I put them all in one playbook: ✅ 31 workflows organized by department ✅ The exact prompt to build each one ✅ Which 3 to start with (save 10+ hrs/week) ✅ From "I should automate" to running in minutes Comment "PLAYBOOK" and I'll DM it to you.
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Marilyn Moedinger
Marilyn Moedinger@mwmoedinger·
@DallasAptGP An architecture firm owner in a small American city who's slowly but surely converting her business revenue into RE that she owns and operates, while also converting social media/podcast following to paid consulting gigs?? 👀
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