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Chuck Lilly | Crisis Management
11.2K posts

Chuck Lilly | Crisis Management
@chucklillycom
Change Management Coaching - I help smart people and organizations plan for unexpected events.
Breathe, we'll get through it Katılım Eylül 2009
735 Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler

Major cheat code in life: Master the graceful exit. From conversations. From parties. From opportunities. "This has been wonderful, but I need to go." No elaborate excuses. No fake emergencies. Just clear, kind departure. Most people don't know how to leave. They stay too long or leave badly. Master the exit.
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@mschatz56 @1ssve I wake between 5-5:30am. I'm usually in bed 9-9:30pm.
But when I go to bed that early I end up in bi-phasic sleep. I'll wake up for about 45 minutes to an hour usually around 1. I'll smoke a cig and read a book, then go back to sleep.
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@1ssve Wait. Is asleep at 9pm normal, like commonly accepted normal?
Asking for me.
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@WallStreetApes This is exactly what @RonPaul and Ross Perot told us would happen.
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Younger Americans cannot survive with the cost of living as high as it is
This girl shows her gas light is on. She only had enough cash for 2 McDonald’s hash browns, she bas $20 in her bank account
She gets up at 6am to go to work, and still have nothing to show for it
“I'm so sick of America. I'm so sick of our government — I'm so sick of everyone and everything”
This is not the way we are supposed to be living in America. This is not the way we are supposed to be feeling in America
It never used to be like this
The homeownership rate for Americans under age 35 is around 36% as of early 2026, this is significantly lower than previous generations at the same age
About 42% of Gen Z report living paycheck to paycheck, with roughly half saying the high cost of living is their top issue
52% of Millennials say financial pressures are causing them to delay major life decisions like marriage, starting a family or buying a home
Median net worth for Americans in their 20s is roughly $6,600–$26,000
You can’t even afford to start a family anymore in America
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@GeorgeBruno I have dumbbells, kettlebells, Indian clubs, a heavy bag, and a Total Gym
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💪I know a guy who spent a lot of money on a Bow Flex Home Gym. A big contraption that takes up a lot of space in your home. He's fatter than ever.
I'm a home gym proponent IF YOU USE IT.
I'm happy with dumbbells, a bench, chin up and dip bars, resistance bands.
Heck, I'm not opposed to all bodyweight exercises at a park. Walking and weights cures most ills. Walk off frustration. Lift away anger.
What is your ideal at-home workout gear?
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@cp9195 @Real_Malachite @NEETzscheIDDQD What are they doing with the lottery money? That's what it was supposed to be for.
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@Real_Malachite @NEETzscheIDDQD I don’t disagree with this outcome. But you can’t achieve it without an alternative plan to pay for the roads, schools, police, parks etc
How does this all get paid for? Most places already have high sales and income taxes too.
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Palm Beach County deputy pulls over Kathleen Thomas for allegedly holding her phone in her right hand while driving. Only Problem? She’s missing her entire right hand. Bodycam shows her calmly showing the stump and explaining but the deputy still issues her a ticket and she had to fight it in court.
Charges have since been dismissed.
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Delete Tiktok
Delete YouTube
Delete Instagram
Amazon will pay you $3,000 every month to start AI publishing.
It’s boring... but if you start today, you could make $3,000 by the end of June.
I’ll send you a free training showing exactly how to do it.
Just like this post and comment “Send.”
(Make sure you follow.)

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@GC_Strategos If you don't understand project maintenance, data architecture, and object oriented programming then you're going to produce a s*** product. If you give your AI a project spec fully written out the way that it would be done 20 years ago you get better output.
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From my brother:
“Earlier this year, a girl at work demoed an AI automation tool she had spent over a month developing. The demo went horribly and nothing worked as she expected. Instead of getting fired for wasting a month of time, she was given high praise and a AI acceleration recognition award. They even bubbled it up to the larger internal all-company AI newsletter. Despite not working correctly the managers assured everyone this would be an ‘iterative development process.’
The tool has not been used since early March and everyone has moved on. Everyone is in a pissing contest trying to scale enterprise AI use cases but it’s just enabling mediocre people to waste more of everyone’s time.”
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@galtons_sextant @vicebusting @Nicksdankmemes3 @RepThomasMassie @tedcruz @mtgreenee Dont forget the robots
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@vicebusting @Nicksdankmemes3 @RepThomasMassie @tedcruz @mtgreenee All works fine on existing infrastructure. The data centers they are talking about are for future expansion of AI. They need massive data processing to replace all the jobs they want to replace and to track all the displaced citizens to catch them before they launch civil war.
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I ignored the "Build a Personal Brand" advice. Used Claude to write an eBook and it made me $3,000 in my first month.
Without an audience, email list, or social media clout.
Just a 112-page book sitting on Amazon, selling while I slept.
(Oh, and if you want my complete strategy broken down, with AI prompts, workflow and systems... like this post, follow me and comment "Claude". I'll DM it to you.)
The uncomfortable part isn't that AI wrote it.
The uncomfortable part is how easy the whole thing was once I stopped overthinking whether I was "allowed" to do it this way.
I could've kept doing what everyone said to do: build an audience, post consistently, grow slowly. But I'd already watched that movie.
I'd tried 5 different online businesses over 11 months and failed at every single one of them while following conventional advice.
So I didn't follow the most popular advice on the internet. I went to Amazon instead.
Searched "productivity for people who work night shifts" and sorted by bestsellers.
Read through the 3 and 4-star reviews of the top books... the ones that said things like "too theoretical, needed actual systems I could use the next day" and "great ideas but never explained how to implement them with a family."
That was not a complaint. That was a brief.
I took that brief to Claude, gave it the gap I'd identified, the tone I wanted, the type of reader I was writing for, and asked it to outline the chapters.
A few days later I had a complete 112-page manuscript.
Ran it through a formatter. Used Ideogram to build a cover that actually looked like it belonged next to the bestsellers in that category, not like a rushed Canva project.
Published it. Set the price at $13.99. Went to bed.
The first royalty hit in week six.
By month 3 it was doing $1,200 a month on its own.
That first book is now part of a portfolio that generates over $50,000 a month in royalties across 17 Amazon markets. I've published dozens of books since, in multiple niches, using the same system every time.
Now, am I a fraud for using AI to write it?
I sat with this question for a while. Actually thought it through.
And the answer I keep landing on is: the readers don't think so.
The books consistently pull 4-plus star reviews. People writing things like "finally something practical I could apply immediately" and "the most useful thing I've read on this topic."
The content solved the problem. That's what they paid for.
A carpenter who uses a nail gun isn't a worse carpenter than one using a hammer. They just build more, faster, without the romanticized suffering that adds nothing to the finished product.
I was a professional footballer earning $700 a month. I know what it feels like to work hard inside the wrong model. The skill was never in the physical effort. It was in the strategy.
The skill in this business was never putting words on a page.
It was knowing what problem was worth solving.
Knowing how crowded the market was before entering it.
Knowing what a 3-star review was actually asking for.
Knowing what a strong brief looks like so Claude doesn't produce something generic and forgettable.
That's the job. The rest is execution, and execution is now a matter of days.
The thing I keep noticing is that the people who feel most uncomfortable about AI publishing are the people who aren't doing it... not the people buying and actually reading the books.
If you want to know the exact workflow I use:
— How I find niches with real buyer demand before writing a single word
— The Claude prompts that produce a usable first draft, not a hallucinated mess
— How I build covers that get picked over established books with hundreds of reviews
— What the first 30 days post-publish should look like if you want traction before Amazon's new-release window closes
Follow me, like this post, comment "Claude".
I'll DM you the full workflow. You need to do all 3.
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@HealthyAlfred Does it need to be intramuscular for the shoulder or can I do a subQ in my belly or arm?
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BPC-157 was tested on HUMAN knees. Not rats. Humans.
16 patients. Real knee pain. Osteoarthritis. Meniscus tears. Ligament damage.
Their doctors gave them two options: cortisone or surgery.
They got BPC-157 instead.
90% reported pain relief. Not for a week. Not for a month. Past 6 MONTHS.
(PMID: 34324435)
Every time someone says “it’s just rat studies” — show them this.
Cortisone numbs pain for 3 weeks then BREAKS DOWN the collagen holding your knee together. You pay $500 to accelerate the damage.
Surgery costs $15,000-50,000. Months of recovery. And most knees are never the same.
BPC-157 grows new blood vessels into the damage. Builds fresh collagen. Activates repair your body stopped sending.
→ 90% pain relief past 6 months
→ no surgery
→ no cortisone
→ no side effects reported
→ a peptide your stomach already makes
16 patients. 90% success. Published. Peer-reviewed.
Your orthopedic surgeon charges $30,000 and gives you a 60% chance.
BPC-157 cost a fraction and hit 90%.
That’s not even the craziest thing BPC-157 has done. Check the comments.


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14yo affiliates are hitting $10k/mo by shilling peptide brands with AI cartoon videos
no i’m not kidding (i wish i was)
and this is the EASIEST money grab of 2026
so i documented the ENTIRE production system...
covering the neurological reason this format bypasses skepticism, the five-act drama formula, every seedance 2.0 prompt, and the CPM math that makes $10k/mo realistic within 60-90 days
like + comment "PEPS" and i'll send you the ENTIRE system
(must be following + RT for priority access)

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@rebew_lexa Someone will get them. There's no one that's untouchable once you get in DOC.
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Abscheuliches Monster-Verbrechen in England.
Ein schwules Paar adoptiert den neun Monate alten Preston Davey – vier Monate später ist der Junge tot. Die beiden Männer (37 und 32) bringen ihn bewusstlos ins Krankenhaus und behaupten, er sei in der Badewanne ertrunken.
Die Obduktion enthüllt das Grauen: Kein Wasser in den Lungen. Stattdessen rund 40 Verletzungen – Blutergüsse, Bissspuren, gebrochener Arm, Erstickungsspuren und eindeutige Hinweise auf sexuelle Gewalt. Auf ihren Handys fanden Ermittler Fotos und Videos der Missbrauchstaten.
Das, was für das Kind ein Neuanfang sein sollte, endete als Folter-Hölle.
Solche Bestien gehören nicht in den Knast – sie gehören weg. Wer Kinder so quält und tötet, hat jedes Recht auf Leben verwirkt.
Die naive „Regenbogen-Familien"-Ideologie hat wieder ein Kind das Leben gekostet.
Kindeswohl muss immer vor Erwachsenenwünschen stehen.


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@ok6ixx I bought my 1st car from my sister for $500. She got it new, 1982 blue Chevette coup. I bought in 1991.
I dont remember how many miles were on it, but I drove it for 3 years then gave it to my brother who drove it for 10 more years.
I was a regular at the junkyard. But it ran.
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My nephew asked me how much my first car cost.
I told him $3,200.
He just stared at me like I would have said I bought it with seashells and good vibes.
Then he asked, "Wait, was it even running?"
Yes, it was running. It was a perfectly decent used car that I saved up for working at a pizza place.
He couldn't wrap his head around it.
He kept saying, "But that's like... two months of rent."
I had to explain that back then, you could actually buy a car for the price of a used iPhone.
No five-year loan.
No co-signer.
Just cash and a handshake.
He looked genuinely confused, like I had described some ancient bartering system.
I wasn't trying to make him feel bad.
But apparently my car-buying experience is now considered folklore.
He asked if I still had it.
I said no, I sold it years ago for $2,800.
He said, "You lost $400?"
I said, "I drove it for three years. That's not losing money, that's winning."
He didn't get it.
And honestly, I don't think he ever will.
Because in his world, cars cost as much as small houses and depreciate faster than expired milk.
So yes, I bought a car for $3,200.
The trade-off is that I'm now apparently a historical artifact who lived through the golden age of affordable transportation.
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@luxemiaa Me too. I got mine at a software conference when you have to have an invite from another user.
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My little sister asked for my email address.
I told her it’s just my first name and last name at Gmail.
She looked at me like I had casually announced that I own beachfront property in Malibu.
She said, “How did you get that? I could never get mine.”
I said, “Because I was there when Gmail was invented.”
And that is apparently how I found out my email address is now considered historical evidence.
Back then, you could just type your actual name and somehow it was still available.
No extra numbers.
No random underscores.
No adding “official” at the end because twelve other people had already claimed it.
Just your name and Gmail.
Simple times.
My sister looked genuinely impressed, like.......
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@IT_unhinged Power Point, and here is was building "Executive Dashboards" in SharePoint.
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Our CTO asked for a “single pane of glass dashboard” that shows literally everything happening in IT.
I told him that’s impossible without significant architecture changes and at least 2 new platforms.
That’s a lie.
I already have a single pane of glass: it’s a browser tab with our monitoring tool and 10 custom filters.
If he got access, he’d start asking questions like “why is CPU at 92% here” and “what’s this alert.”
Then I’d have to explain, and explaining is unpaid emotional labor.
So I built him a fake dashboard in PowerPoint.
The graphs are just animated GIFs looping the same fake data forever.
He stares at it in meetings and says things like “I can see our resilience story improving in real time.”
Everyone is dumb except me.
I should get a raise.
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