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janarend

@janarend

Questioning, searching, eccentric, loving, therefore living

Katılım Şubat 2009
265 Takip Edilen64 Takipçiler
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Activist: "Every cow adds carbon to the atmosphere." Farmer: "Only if the total number of cows is increasing." Activist: "What?" Farmer: "Stable populations are carbon neutral. Methane breaks down in twelve years back to CO2. Same CO2 the grass absorbed last year." Activist: "But it's still emissions..." Farmer: "It's a cycle. Carbon goes: grass to cow to methane to CO2 to grass. Round and round." Activist: "That's not how it works." Farmer: "That's exactly how the biogenic carbon cycle works." Activist: "I've never heard of that." Farmer: "Because admitting ruminants are climate neutral doesn't sell plant-based products." Activist: "You're making this up." Farmer: "Published research. Look up 'biogenic carbon cycle.' I'll wait."
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Andrew Yeung
Andrew Yeung@andruyeung·
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.
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Sander van Dam
Sander van Dam@Sandervandam2·
Dit is misschien helemaal niet zo'n slecht idee. Als je dat goed werkend krijgt heb je er meer aan dan posters met slogans.
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janarend
janarend@janarend·
Boredom is unappreciated serenity Jimmy carr
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OLAMIDE 🌸💖
OLAMIDE 🌸💖@Olamide0fficial·
We all need to learn this.
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janarend@janarend·
Flirting is checking a potential partner’s healing of his/hers child trauma
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Tyler Todt
Tyler Todt@tyromper·
Marriage tip: ❤️ Keep in-laws, friends, family & colleagues OUT of your marriage. It’s smart to lean into your parents for wisdom AT TIMES. However, no one gets a VOTE BUT YOU TWO! •Be United as a team always. •Never argue & share details with others. Keep it in house!
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Tea-Fi Army
Tea-Fi Army@Tea_Fi_Army·
TeaSwap army is eager to showcase the importance of TeaSwap to the world. To do that, we're hosting a $20 giveaway for the best TeaSwap meme! The winner will be determined by the number of likes their meme receives.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
This is from The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson aired on May 20th, 1977. Carl Sagan says something very important, a strong message that didn't lose any validity since then.
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Raisa Blommestijn
Raisa Blommestijn@rblommestijn·
🚜🚨Pas op voor framing van de boerenprotesten. Als de boerenprotesten worden doorgezet en het hele land plat komt te liggen, zullen gevestigde politiek en mainstream media het proberen te doen voorkomen alsof de boeren de voedselzekerheid bedreigen door distributiecentra te blokkeren en dat het hun schuld is als u vertraging oploopt omdat de wegen door hen geblokkeerd zijn. Trap daar niet in: het is juist de zelfbenoemde elite die met haar aanval op de boeren de voedselzekerheid bedreigt. Sterker nog, zij stuurt bewust aan op voedselschaarste. De boeren proberen met hun protest juist te voorkomen dat dit lukt. Ze verdedigen niet alleen hun eigen bedrijf en voortbestaan maar ook onze voedselzekerheid. Niet voor niets: “no farmers, no food”. We zouden alleen om die reden al massaal achter de boeren moeten staan. Een beetje vertraging of even vaststaan op de weg is niets in vergelijking met wat ons te wachten staat als de boeren niet succesvol zijn in hun acties en dus langzaam zullen verdwijnen uit ons land. De boeren verdienen AL onze steun. Blijf dit onthouden, wat de gevestigde politiek en mainstream media ons ook wijs gaan willen maken.
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BBB Zeeland
BBB Zeeland@BBBZeeland·
Fractievoorzitter Kees Hanse had een vraag. 🪿
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Tim Ferriss
Tim Ferriss@tferriss·
The more absurd, the more “impossible” the question, the more profound the answers. Take, for instance, a question that investor Peter Thiel likes to ask himself and others: “If you have a 10-year plan of how to get [somewhere], you should ask: Why can’t you do this in 6 months?” For purposes of illustration here, I might reword that to: “What might you do to accomplish your 10-year goals in the next 6 months, if you had a gun against your head?” Now, let’s pause. Do I expect you to take 10 seconds to ponder this and then magically accomplish 10 years’ worth of dreams in the next few months? No, I don’t. But I do expect that the question will productively break your mind, like a butterfly shattering a chrysalis to emerge with new capabilities. The “normal” systems you have in place, the social rules you’ve forced upon yourself, the standard frameworks—they don’t work when answering a question like this. You are forced to shed artificial constraints, like shedding a skin, to realize that you had the ability to renegotiate your reality all along. It just takes practice. My suggestion is that you spend real time with the questions you find most ridiculous. Thirty minutes of stream-of-consciousness journaling could change your life. On top of that, while the world is a gold mine, you need to go digging in other people’s heads to unearth riches. Questions are your pickaxes and competitive advantage.
Tim Ferriss@tferriss

The older I get, the more time I spend—as a percentage of each day—on crafting better questions. In my experience, going from 1x to 10x, from 10x to 100x, and from 100x to (when Lady Luck really smiles) 1000x returns in various areas has been a product of better questions. John Dewey’s dictum that “a problem well put is half-solved” applies. Life punishes the vague wish and rewards the specific ask. After all, conscious thinking is largely asking and answering questions in your own head. If you want confusion and heartache, ask vague questions. If you want uncommon clarity and results, ask uncommonly clear questions. Fortunately, this is a skill you can develop. No book can give you all of the answers, but this book can train you to ask better questions. Milan Kundera, author of The Unbearable Lightness of Being, has said that “The stupidity of people comes from having an answer for everything. The wisdom of the novel comes from having a question for everything.” Substitute “master learner” for “novel,” and you have my philosophy of life. Often, all that stands between you and what you want is a better set of questions.

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KanekoaTheGreat
KanekoaTheGreat@KanekoaTheGreat·
The Daily Show aired this segment on the Israel-Palestine conflict NINE years ago.
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Patricia Mou
Patricia Mou@patriciamou_·
For my birthday this year, my dad gifted me a dirty bottle of water. Not kidding. In the past he’s gifted me: a first aid kit, pepper spray, an encyclopedia, a key chain, dedicated a book he wrote to me, etc. good ol dad gifts. He told me this years gift was extra special as no money could possibly buy it: a valuable life lesson. A shaken dirty bottle of water symbolizes life when you’re flustered. Everything appears dirty. But when the mind settles, dirt only represents less than 10% of the bottle. It’s important to maintain perspective. Later that weekend I took the bottle to the ocean and poured it back in - sharing a lesson with him in the process: “You are not a drop in the ocean, you are the ocean in a drop.” In effect, I one-upped his cliche 😌 the point of this post is that I am very obviously the child of this man.
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Dr. Nicole LePera
Dr. Nicole LePera@Theholisticpsyc·
The more emotionally healthy you are, the more people will try to pull you into old patterns. Your changes trigger their insecurities.
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George Mack
George Mack@george__mack·
In 2001, Warren Buffett gave a talk at the University of Georgia. He asked them the most Warren Buffett question ever: • If you could invest in a friend and get 10% of their income for life -- who would you pick? Once the students answered the question, he then asked this: • Why would you invest in that person? • What character traits do they have? Now they have a list of character traits to adopt. Shortly after this, Buffett asked: If you could short a friend's earnings, who would you pick and why? Now you have a list of character traits to avoid. ---- 1. Do not think this thought experiment is only about money. You can use it for whatever currency you value. E.g. Happiness coin If you could get 10% of a friend's happiness, who would you invest in and why? If you could short someone's happiness, who would you pick and why? You can run the same thought experiment with Fitness coin, Friendship coin, Romance coin, etc` 2. This thought experiment is genius because it hacks a bug in life's video game: Humans are terrible at self-awareness. But we are great at spotting things in other people. E.g. If your friend is in the wrong relationship, you can realize in 10 minutes what may take them 10 years. Daniel Kahneman summarised his book on cognitive biases with the following: “The premise of this book is that it is easier to recognize other people’s mistakes than our own.” - Daniel Kahneman 3. Nuance - It has to be purely from merit. Buffett says it can't be because someone will inherit a large sum from their parents. It has to be based on their behavior. E.g. If you want 10% of someone's fitness coin, it's not because of incredible genetics -- is because of the actions they take.
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𝕋𝔼𝔾𝔸™ 🌍
𝕋𝔼𝔾𝔸™ 🌍@Tegadeyforyou·
Jackie Chan and his daughter crying while watching some of his old movie scenes is the most wholesome thing you’ll watch today. Thanks for our childhood legend ❤️
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Nick St. Pierre
Nick St. Pierre@nickfloats·
I asked ChatGPT "What does love look like?" Then, I prompted Midjourney with its responses. So let's /imagine {"What does love look like?"} Here are 9 results.
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