Chevas A. F. Balloun
4.9K posts

Chevas A. F. Balloun
@chevas
Brand Author. Designer. https://t.co/YG0G4i5jnU - Building https://t.co/LfiTpCjv9Z - Your brain thinks in space, not just names. It's Christ or chaos.





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Satan asked Eve, “Did God actually say…?” Today, John Piper quoted what God actually said, and some on the Right did what Eve did in response to Satan. They added more to what Piper quoted than what Piper quoted. These same people are silent about Republicans considering a witch for Surgeon General.





The lobster has molted into its final form 🦞 Clawd → Moltbot → OpenClaw 100k+ GitHub stars. 2M visitors in a week. And finally, a name that'll stick. Your assistant. Your machine. Your rules. openclaw.ai/blog/introduci…

This is fascinating... the HEIGHT of the ceiling in the room you're working in has a DIRECT impact on how creative you are It's called the Cathedral Effect How it works: Your brain borrows metaphors from the physical world (space is one of the strongest) When a room feels tall and open, your mind unconsciously associates that with freedom and possibility - you zoom OUT When a room feels tight or enclosed, your mind goes into precision mode… attention narrows. You notice typos, spot mistakes, and hone in on details - you zoom IN Researchers found that people in high-ceiling rooms perform better on creativity. People in low-ceiling rooms perform better on detail orientation and error detection Churches and museums have soaring ceilings - meant to inspire awe. Libraries and war rooms are tighter - meant for concentration Startup brainstorms love lofts, and accounting teams love small rooms with doors Even coffee shops do this. The ones designed for deep work tend to be lower and quieter. The ones designed for conversation tend to feel more open So if you’re doing creative stuff - writing, designing, brainstorming - do it in a LARGE room with high ceilings. Then move to a smaller room to edit and proofread.












