Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi
Thatdude4lyfe
606 posts

Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

My father is 83 years old and has studied US stocks for almost 52 years.
He summarized some simple rules for beginners:
1. Price falls 5% → Hold
2. Price falls 15% → Buy 10%
3. Price falls 25% → Buy 25%
4. Price rises 5% → Continue holding
5. Price rises 15% → Continue holding
6. Price rises 25% → Sell 10%
7. Price rises 35% → Sell 20%
8. Price rises 45% → Sell 30%
9. Price rises 60% → Sell 40%
10. Price rises 100% → Sell everything
Discipline + patience = stable long-term growth.
(Save this later).


English
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

Follow the correct people
@RichardHeartWin
@cryptosolv
@CryptoCoffee369
@SAINTwolfVISION
@FastAbdoul
@CryptoChat7
@TamTamHEX
@CristinaHype
@HighAltitudeInv
Who have I missed
English
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

Aquí el segmento del 'In Memoriam' de los SAG Awards 2026.
Arrancó con James Van der Beek y cerró con Robert Redford.
🕊️🤍 #SAGAwards
Català
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

@TonyLaneNV That dude either had a death wish or a mental disorder or both.
English

🚨 NEW BODYCAM FOOTAGE RELEASED
The traffic stop that went viral now has bodycam showing what actually happened.
Deputies in San Marcos pulled over a red Hyundai Sonata for a vehicle code violation late at night.
While checking the car, they noticed registration inconsistencies and damage to the steering column, raising suspicions the vehicle could be stolen.
Then things escalated.
Police say the 33-year-old passenger ignored repeated commands, rolled up his window, reached toward the floorboard, and armed himself with a semiautomatic handgun.
Officers safely removed the 21-year-old driver, but the passenger refused orders to drop the weapon and raised the gun.
At that point, five deputies and an officer opened fire.
The man was pronounced dead.
The original video sparked intense debate online… but now the bodycam is adding new context to what unfolded.
After seeing the details - what’s your conclusion? ⬇️ 🇺🇸
English

@PulseProveX This account is the most optimistic in all of pulsechain.....heck, all of crypto. Keep bringing that good energy.
English

@bE_uniQuE_AI @PulseProveX We're just not used to this level of optimism. Lol
English

#PULSECHAIN SOMETHING BIG IS COMING...
BE READY FOR THE BEST MOVE RH COULD DO, THIS WILL BE OUR YEAR.
STAY FOCUSED.
$PLS $PLSX $HEX
English
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

JUST IN: OKX Wallet has support for PulseChain.
They have token prices, logos and show LP positions etc.
You have to manually add custom tokens, but they have support.
@wallet thank you.
$PLS $PLSX $HEX

English
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

@LibertySwapFi How do you get $PCOCK? I couldn't find it on PulseX.
English

I have a dream that one day this market will rise up and live out the true meaning of decentralization, that middlemen will be no more.
I have a dream that traders will put down their leverage and buy spot, that they will sit with former degens at the table of brotherhood
I have a dream that coins will rest in private wallets, that Jane Street will rebrand to be a cozy bakery
I have a dream that one day a man will not be judged by his PnL screenshots, but by the length of his HEX stake.
I have a dream today.

English
Thatdude4lyfe retweetledi

He once lost him in a script. This time, there was no script to soften the goodbye.
When Patrick Dempsey arrived to pay his respects to Eric Dane, the moment carried a weight no camera could capture and no audience could fully understand.
They had once stood side by side in the charged corridors of Grey's Anatomy Derek Shepherd and Mark Sloan, friends, rivals, brothers in everything but blood. Their chemistry defined an era of the show. Their arguments crackled with ego and affection. Their reconciliations felt earned. On screen, they navigated betrayal, forgiveness, loyalty, and love. Off screen, they shared something quieter but just as real: years of work, growth, and shared memory.
At the memorial, there were no dramatic monologues. No perfectly lit close-ups. Only a man standing before the reality that his friend was truly gone.
Those who saw Patrick that day said he was composed, but changed. Grief did not erupt; it settled. It lived in his eyes. He greeted family members gently. He lingered longer than expected. When he stood in silence, it felt less like an actor paying tribute and more like a brother trying to reconcile the permanence of loss.
For years, fans had associated them as a pair McDreamy and McSteamy two halves of a dynamic that helped shape modern television drama. But in that quiet space of farewell, there were no nicknames. Only Patrick. Only Eric.
It is said that Patrick spoke softly about laughter. About long shooting days that turned into late-night conversations. About the strange bond that forms when two actors spend seasons inhabiting lives so intertwined that fiction begins to blur with memory. He did not dwell on fame. He spoke about presence about how Eric had a way of filling a room without trying, about his humor, about the warmth beneath the confident exterior.
Grief, especially between men who shared years of camaraderie, often comes without spectacle. It shows itself in stillness. In the tightening of a jaw. In the pause before a sentence finishes. Patrick did not need grand gestures to express what had been lost. The silence around him carried enough.
Perhaps what made the moment most painful was the echo of their shared history. On screen, Patrick’s character once said goodbye in hospital rooms and tragic finales. Those scenes were rehearsed. This one was not. There was no director to call “cut.” No rewrite to ease the ending. Only the undeniable truth that some partnerships end not with conflict, but with absence.
As he left the service, witnesses recalled that Patrick turned back once just briefly as though imprinting the moment into memory. Not as an actor honoring a co-star. But as a friend saying farewell.
Because beyond the fame, beyond the cultural phenomenon, beyond the decades of storytelling, what remained was simple and human:
Two men who once stood shoulder to shoulder in fiction.
And one man now standing alone in reality.
Some stories never truly end… they just stay with us. 💔

English










