People destined to be average say things like:
"Money won't fix all my problems"
"Successful people get lucky"
"I don't have enough resources"
"I don't have time"
"I need to learn more before I start"
"I wish it was easier"
"I don't think I'm good enough"
The seat at the table is yours if you want it.
Do the hard work.
Build the skills no one can ignore.
Adjust your mindset to match where you want to go.
Then pull up a chair and sit down.
You can read every whitepaper and audit every protocol, but until you’re actually managing the deployment or closing the deal, you’re just a spectator with a high IQ. Most people are one concentrated push away from the result they want, but they’d rather buy another course than face the friction of doing the work.
@foundr If you don't learn to delegate the details, you’ll never have the bandwidth to design the future. Scaling isn't about working harder. It is about making yourself less necessary to the daily grind.
@danmartell Stop overthinking the edge cases. They won't matter if you never launch. Build the thing, break it, and fix it in public.
Everything else is just noise.
AI agents are getting scary good at thinking and acting on their own.
But here’s the thing: for them to be truly useful (and safe) at scale, they need infrastructure they can actually trust, not rented from someone else who can pull the plug or peek at the data.
That’s why sovereign blockchains like Mandala Chain make sense.
Our Agentic Layer + customizable sovereign chains let AI operate with real privacy, clear rules, and resilience, especially for governments and enterprises in places like Indonesia.
Feels like the missing piece for responsible agentic AI. 🇮🇩
What do you think? Should AI agents have their own sovereign rails too?
There's always another task before selling.
Another doc.
Another tool.
Another framework.
Another "quick improvement."
And somehow 3 months pass.
Still no customer conversation.
Preparation is very polite procrastination.
@harry_ngala10 Don't let the silence become a habit. The hardest part of starting again is the friction of being forgotten.
Stay in the feed. Keep the engine running.