Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey
435 posts

Joseph P. Downey
@josephpdowney
JPD & Co. | Tier One Sales Operator | Sales Manager Alliance
Maryland, USA Entrou em Mart 2020
3.7K Seguindo290 Seguidores
Joseph P. Downey retweetou

Elon Musk cried on national television when his childhood heroes called him a fraud.
Neil Armstrong and Gene Cernan, the first and last men to walk on the moon, publicly testified against SpaceX. They said Musk was reckless. That private spaceflight was dangerous. That he was going to get people killed. They asked Congress to shut him down.
These were the men Musk grew up worshipping. The posters on his wall. The reason he built rockets in the first place. And they went on television and said he was a disgrace to space exploration.
In a 60 Minutes interview shortly after, Musk was asked about it. He started speaking and his voice broke. His eyes filled. He couldn't finish the sentence. The richest man in tech, the guy who argues with regulators and fires engineers mid-meeting, sat on camera and cried because his heroes rejected him.
He didn't stop building. He didn't change direction. He didn't even respond to them publicly. He just kept launching rockets until the rockets proved him right.
Armstrong never lived to see SpaceX land a booster. Cernan never saw Starship. The men who said it couldn't be done died before the man they doubted did it.
Most people need approval from the people they admire before they act. Musk got the opposite of approval and acted anyway. That's the gap. Not talent. Not money. The willingness to keep building while the people you love most tell you to stop.
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@naval With or without AI, you still have to execute.
Techniques are many.
Principles are few.
Techniques will vary.
Principles never do.
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Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou

Brett Favre once explained his practice mentality in one sentence:
“As far back as I can remember, when I went out to practice, every throw that I made, I wanted it to be the best throw you’ve ever seen.”
That is not a casual practice mindset. That is a standard.
Favre did not become one of the greats because every throw was perfect. He became one of the greats because every throw mattered to him. Practice was not just a place to get through the script, warm up the arm, or wait for Sunday. It was where he trained his intent, his confidence, and his competitive identity.
Quarterbacks reveal themselves in practice. Ball carriage discipline, base integrity, stride control, repeatable stroke, and accuracy all show up before the ball is ever judged by the result. When a quarterback treats every rep like evidence, the room feels it. The receivers feel it. The coaches feel it.
That level of determination compounds.
Greatness is rarely built in the highlight. It is usually built on a Tuesday, during a routine throw, when nobody in the stands is watching and the quarterback still demands the ball leave his hand with purpose.
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Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou

20 years of coaching taught me 10 things about building winners.
Most coaches never learn #7.
[THREAD] 🧵
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Joseph P. Downey retweetou

Elon said something that stuck with me.
He said the hardest part of being him isn't building the rockets, it's caring about everyone he can't save.
That single line changes how you see him.
Most people think the secret to Musk is intelligence. Or work ethic. Or risk tolerance. They miss the real thing.
His edge is that he has a heart.
In a world optimized for cold optimization, where every CEO is trained to maximize shareholder value and minimize emotional exposure, Musk does the opposite. He builds what moves him. He fights for what matters to him.
A 15 year old girl named Liv Perrotto designed a Shiba Inu plush in 30 minutes. She had cancer. Stage 4. The plush was her contribution to Polaris Dawn, the SpaceX mission that flew higher than any private spaceflight in history. She named it Asteroid.
The plush flew. It became the mission's zero g indicator. The first thing that floated when they hit space.
Liv died in January.
Before she died she wrote eight wishes for Elon. The eighth one was simple. Make Asteroid the official mascot of SpaceX.
She knew she wouldn't see it happen. She wrote it anyway.
When the request reached Elon, he didn't have to respond. He's the richest man alive. He gets thousands of dying wishes. Most go unanswered, that's just math.
He answered this one. He said yes.
Asteroid is now the SpaceX mascot. Because a 15 year old girl drew a dog and asked the most powerful man in the world to remember her.
This is the part nobody understands about Musk. He could have ignored it. The optimal capital allocation move was to ignore it. The brand calculation said ignore it. The lawyers said ignore it.
He didn't ignore it.
People debate whether he's a genius or a clown, a hero or a villain, a savior or a scammer. They miss the point entirely. The reason he keeps winning isn't his intelligence. It's that he hasn't optimized away his humanity.
The other tech founders are smarter at certain things. They have better processes. Better PR teams. Better political instincts. None of them would have made Asteroid the mascot of SpaceX. Most of them couldn't tell you the name of a child who died of cancer last year.
That's the gap. That's the moat. That's why he beats them all.
In a world that rewards detachment, Musk's superpower is that he still feels things. The Tesla mission was personal. The SpaceX mission is personal. Neuralink is personal because his son was non-verbal until eight. Even the Twitter purchase was personal, his obsession with free speech tied to his own censoring.
Every project is downstream of something he actually cares about.
That's why he can work 100 hours a week for 20 years without burning out the way normal people do. Burnout comes from doing things that don't match your values. He's never had to do that.
Liv didn't get to see her plush become the SpaceX mascot. But she wrote it down before she died, and the most powerful man alive said yes, because somewhere underneath the rockets and the satellites and the AI companies and the trillion-dollar valuations, he's still the kid who cried watching cartoons.
Most people lose this by 30. They call it growing up. It's actually atrophy.
@elonmusk kept it.
That's the whole secret.

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Joseph P. Downey retweetou
Joseph P. Downey retweetou

Police in Jacksonville, Florida save this young man’s life from jumping off the Dames Point Bridge (Tallest Bridge in Jacksonville) 🙏🏼
The young man was ready to take his own life but these officers spoke from the heart and got him to change his mind.
“I love you. We all love you. We wear this badge for many reasons. This is the main reason. To reach those whom the devil thinks he got. He ain't got you. We got you.”
Love this!!
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