Naume G.

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Naume G.

Naume G.

@naumeguveya

The extraction economy is feeding on your hours. Stop being consumed. Start compounding. | https://t.co/SW6k9pqhzw

Inscrit le Ekim 2018
965 Abonnements1.5K Abonnés
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
I spent years being extremely busy building absolutely nothing. A full calendar. Tight systems. "Productive" by every metric that didn't matter. At the end of every week, nothing compounded. Nothing grew. Just another week extracted. Work wanted my hours. Apps wanted my attention. Obligations wanted the rest. The problem wasn't my discipline. It was that I didn't realize I was living inside an extraction economy—one designed to consume your time before you ever decide where it goes. Once I saw it, I couldn't unsee it. That's what I write about here; how to stop being extracted and start owning your time like the asset it actually is. Follow if you're done being optimized for someone else's priorities.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
The difference between people who build things and people who talk about building things: Not talent. Not discipline. Not hustle. Protected, consistent, compounding hours. That's it.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@SahilBloom We’re out here Googling the arrow specs while the poison spreads.
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
Everyone should read this story... Imagine someone is struck by a poisoned arrow. A doctor is called to remove the arrow, but the man stops him. "Not so fast! Before you remove it, I want to know who shot me. What town or village does he come from? What kind of wood was his bow made from? Was it a crossbow or a longbow?" While he asks the questions, the poison takes hold and he dies. Like the man in the story, we occasionally get shot with the poisoned arrows of life. But ruminating too much on the nature of those arrows is unlikely to help. This is a trap we all fall into: We think we need more information to solve our problems, when all we really need is more action. The trap is becoming more challenging to avoid in a modern era where information is abundant. We've become conditioned to get our dopamine from information gathering. But you see, dopamine from information gathering is a dangerous drug. It convinces you that information alone is enough. That it's sufficient. That it's all you need. But information alone is never enough. Information is nothing without action. The information meant to push you forward can quickly start to hold you back. Struck with the poison arrow, you feel a surge of satisfaction from learning that your attacker was from a nearby village, that his bow was made from oak, and that it was a longbow. And then, you're dead, because the information you wanted had become a distraction from the action you needed. This is what I call the Poison Arrow Principle: Never allow information-gathering to get in the way of action-taking. The next time you're in an overthinking loop, ask yourself: Do I really need more information, or do I simply need to act on the information I already have?
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@SahilBloom Funny thing is none of this is new. It’s just the stuff we avoid because it’s not exciting—but it’s exactly what works over time.
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
Nobody tells you this: You can win by just embracing what most people avoid. Wake up early. Focus. Move your body. Eat real foods. Obsess over one thing. Read old books. Be present. Listen intently. Change your mind. Have difficult conversations. The recipe for a good life.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
Quick check-in: How many hours this week did you own completely? Not "had free." Not "wasn't working." Fully owned—spent on your explicit priorities, protected from extraction. For most people, the honest answer is uncomfortable.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
There's a specific kind of horror that comes from data about yourself you can't argue with. I'd been telling myself for months that I wasn't really a heavy phone user. I'd consciously cut back. I didn't scroll first thing in the morning—not usually. I'd deleted a couple of apps. I was aware, I thought. Then one evening I opened Screen Time. Four hours and forty-one minutes. That was my daily average. Not a bad week. The average. I did the math in the notes app, because I needed to see it written down: 4.75 hours × 365 = 1,734 hours a year. That's 72 days. Awake, functional, adult days. Gone. And that was just the visible cost—the time I could actually measure. What the number didn't capture was every work session that had started at 80% because I'd done a "quick phone check" ten minutes before sitting down. Every conversation I'd been half-present for. Every morning that had been someone else's feed before it was mine. I didn't feel addicted. I felt cheated. Not by the apps—I knew what they were designed to do. By myself, for thinking awareness was the same as defense. Knowing something is extracting you and actually having architecture to stop it are completely different things.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@iamjustyv Autonomy isn’t a reward; it’s leverage. The quieter, deliberate work you do today stacks into the freedom to enjoy life later.
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iamjustyv
iamjustyv@iamjustyv·
Hustle culture is often just a treadmill that leads to a burnout you can’t afford, true success is having the autonomy to actually experience the life you've built. Slowing down is the ultimate luxury.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@Himayat63 Showing up consistently beats burning out spectacularly. Protecting your energy and mental health isn’t laziness—it’s how you actually stack results over time.
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Er. Himayat Ullah
Er. Himayat Ullah@Himayat63·
We glorify hustle culture but ignore burnt-out souls. Society applauds exhaustion while mental health silently collapses.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@DongRealBig The real compounding comes from high-leverage work—systems, strategy, and skill that keep growing while you sleep. Busywork looks like hustle, but it rarely pays.
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Erlich Dongman
Erlich Dongman@DongRealBig·
Hot take: The startup world keeps celebrating 'hustle culture' like it's a badge of honor. But there's a difference between grinding and grinding in circles. Work ON the business, not just IN the business. That's the only hustle that actually pays off. 📈🔥
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@tommyswriting Chasing digits alone often costs more than it’s worth. When freedom, creativity, and integrity lead, money just becomes a side effect.
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Tommy Christie
Tommy Christie@tommyswriting·
Alex Hormozi and hustle culture have sold us a lie. The idea that the relentless, optimizing-obsessive pursuit of money equals a life well lived. The digits on the screen go up, but the quality of the spirit deteriorates. I'd rather be rich in God, character, honor, self-knowledge, experiences, and creative output. Money can follow that. Money is cool, don't get me wrong. I want a lot of it. It represents stored time and freedom. I view money as freedom points. I don't want freedom points at the cost of my honor or individuality.
Tommy Christie tweet mediaTommy Christie tweet media
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@agn_mindset Hustle culture treats refueling like weakness, but even engines need gas. Quiet moments aren’t lost time—they’re leverage for the long run.
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Alpha Growth Network
Alpha Growth Network@agn_mindset·
We live in a "hustle" culture that treats burnout like a badge of honor. But a car doesn't go faster because you refuse to stop for gas; it just eventually breaks down on the highway. Schedule 30 minutes of "nothing time." No phone, no goals, just breathing.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@Prestige_Mag Hustle as a status symbol gets more airtime than results. Quiet consistency usually wins—it’s just less selfie‑worthy.
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Prestige Magazine
Prestige Magazine@Prestige_Mag·
“How hustle culture is framed today, especially on social media, often feels performative. Endless meetings, visible exhaustion, constant urgency, presented as proof of importance or self-worth."Jessie Setiono said. Read more prestigeonline.com/id/people-even…
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@Nithya_Shrii The starting line isn’t equal, but your strategy and compounding effort still matter. The key is figuring out how to turn whatever you do have—skill, grit, connections—into leverage.
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Nithya Shri
Nithya Shri@Nithya_Shrii·
Rich kids get capital. Middle class kids get “figure it out.” Poor kids get trauma and told it builds character. The starting line is not equal.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@____444cpa Right?? Sometimes it feels like everyone’s glorifying busy for no reason. It’s like ‘grind 24/7’—a competition lots of people signed up for without even realizing it.
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iya
iya@____444cpa·
fuck the hustle culture!!!!!!!!!!!
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@thesavvyghost Focus is a skill AND it’s leverage. Every uninterrupted hour stacks quietly, building outcomes most people never notice.
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Dave
Dave@thesavvyghost·
sometimes the most important thing is to quiet your mind and get to work. focus is a skill few ever harness.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@_TimKlauke_ It’s not about fewer hours; it’s about hours that multiply results. Focused work compounds in ways busywork never will.
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Tim Klauke
Tim Klauke@_TimKlauke_·
My goal isn't to work less. My goal is to work on what actually matters.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@JuliaEMcCoy Starting before you’re ready feels risky, but every imperfect step compounds into skill, insight, and leverage that the 'ready' never catches up to.
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Julia McCoy
Julia McCoy@JuliaEMcCoy·
The people who will thrive aren’t the smartest. They’re the ones who started before they were ready, adapted faster than everyone around them, and never stopped building.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@ComedicBizman This! Growth isn’t about chasing the next stage but about making the present stage compound. When you fully show up where your feet are, the future takes care of itself.
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Tej Dosa
Tej Dosa@ComedicBizman·
When young we want to be old. When old we want to be young. When broke we want to be rich. When rich we reminisce about the come up. When working we want to be vacationing. When vacationing we’re thinking about working. Reject the madness. Enjoy where your feet are.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@TheOvermanEthos The real leverage is in understanding your audience so deeply that every action you take compounds into value they’ll actually pay for.
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Saurabh
Saurabh@TheOvermanEthos·
Building isnt the main challenge anymore. Its figuring out which product/offer is worth building. Whats one problem your audience will pay big money to solve? Talk to your audience. Understand them well. Then build something helpful.
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Naume G.
Naume G.@naumeguveya·
@ubaakuete Connections matter, but they’re only leverage if you have something to offer. Relationships without skill or value rarely compound into real wealth.
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uba aku
uba aku@ubaakuete·
For those aiming for generational wealth, focus more on connections not hard work. Stop wasting your time!
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