

Your brain can learn anything if you practice it daily.
charlie
2.5K posts

@wonkatrader
🍨 #LL3 #TheOrder 🗝️ foodie 😋


Your brain can learn anything if you practice it daily.
















Qullamaggie on How Long to Go from 5k to 1 Million “How did you go from 5K to 1 million? 7 years. 8 years? No, no. That’s for losers. I think I did it in… you know what? I’ll check. So, let’s see from 2013. So, my accounts—like, this is after tax and after commissions and after living expenses—so my accounts were actually 9K in May 2013. That was the turning point for my trading. May of Fannie Mae happened in 20—I was down like 50% on the year, and that was the turning point. So, May 2013, I had 9100 in my training accounts. And let’s see when I did hit one million here. January 2018, I hit 1.4 million. So, somewhere in December 2017, my account reached 1 million. So, about three and a half years to get from 9K to 1 million.” “Like, if you have a small account, guys, it’s not hard to make a few hundred percent per year. It’s not hard if you have a small account. Like, really. You can make it if you’re a short-term swing trader. You can make most years probably a couple of hundred percent. And that’s the thing: you won’t have a small account after a few years. That’s the beautiful part.”


🧠 Mind as receiver, not creator. Psychologists are exploring a fascinating idea that challenges how we understand the human mind. Thoughts may not be something we actively produce. Instead, they may arise, arrive, or surface from deeper subconscious processes beyond conscious control. Rather than being authored moment by moment, thoughts appear automatically, often without warning or intention. Brain imaging studies show that neural activity linked to a thought begins milliseconds before a person becomes aware of it. This suggests awareness comes after the thought has already formed, not before. Meditation research supports this too, showing how thoughts emerge spontaneously when the mind is quiet, then fade when attention shifts. This perspective changes how we relate to anxiety, creativity, and self-judgment. If thoughts are received rather than chosen, then observing them without attachment becomes easier. Mental clarity may come not from controlling the mind, but from listening to it with awareness. The mind may be less like a writer and more like a radio, tuning into signals already in motion.




Like I always say. Being husband means being PM of the family. Make your wife’s schedule and force her to take breaks. Some women need regiment or their neuroticism will cause them overheat even when they don’t have work, like an engine in neutral.

What women call “mental load” and “emotional labor”is just self-created anxiety that they place on themselves by taking on more and more responsibility without being asked. Then that same woman turns around and presents this self-imposed stress as a form of sacrifice, using it to make their partner feel guilty as if they are doing everything alone in the relationship. A lot of the pressure comes from impulsive, non-essential tasks that don’t actually need to be done immediately or at all. But once the stress passes a personal threshold, it gets projected onto their husbands as if it is now their duty to absorb and fix it. What makes it more frustrating is the inconsistency. When they truly do not want to do something, they can clearly and forcefully say no. But when it is their own mind pushing them to overextend themselves, suddenly it becomes “mental load” and emotional labor that someone else is expected to manage. At that point, it is no longer responsibility, it becomes self-created pressure that is now affecting their mental health, and then their partner is blamed for not fixing it. Men are basically being blamed for an imaginary problem.


What opinion about women do you have that makes people feel like this?