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Henry "Hank" III
57 posts


@___DNP @ronsterd89 Wtf is an electrical engineering manager?
You manage electrical engineers?
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@ronsterd89 He is buying pampers and formula. Low income people should not have kids….
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@ronsterd89 The person infront of him in-line had a declined card?
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@musings_blonde My first born i was up throughout the night every night.
My wife handles the second on her own.
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Every time my sister’s baby woke at night, her husband got up, changed the diaper, and handed the baby to her to nurse.
It worked for them.
After my son was born, it became clear my husband was not built for middle-of-the-night duty. From 12–5:30 a.m., I was on my own.
But every morning he took the baby, let me sleep, and had hot coffee waiting when I woke up.
That worked for us.
There’s no one-size-fits-all in parenting, despite what 𝕏 discourse would have you believe.

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@Chizitere_xyz Providing a stay at home lifestyle for my wife and the kids wasn't enough for her.
I need 10 hours that will finish a project im deeply passionate about finishing... been trying to find my 10 hours for literally 3 months now.
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When a woman in her thirties or forties wakes up, realizes she feels unfulfilled in a stable marriage, and decides to blow up her entire life to "find herself," society throws a parade for her. She gets a book deal, a podcast, and absolute applause. Her choice to abandon her vows in pursuit of her own personal happiness is framed as a brave, empowering, Eat Pray Love awakening.
But if a man wakes up at forty, realizes he has spent the last two decades working a soul-crushing job he hates purely to fund everyone else's lifestyle, and decides he wants to finally live for himself? He is absolutely demonized. He doesn't get a parade; he gets diagnosed with a "pathetic midlife crisis." He is labeled a selfish monster who abandoned his post
Asanwa.sol@Chizitere_xyz
What opinion about Men do you have that makes people feel like this?
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@MikeCalcara Obama killed this with "cash for clunkers".
Now we got no spare parts :(
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I work with a lot of parents buying cars for their teenage or college-age kids, and almost every conversation starts the same way.
"I don't want to spoil them. I'm thinking something used, maybe $15,000."
I get it. You learned to drive in a beat-up Civic with a tape deck and manual windows. It built character. But that strategy doesn't work in 2026.
Ten years ago, $15,000 bought you a reliable 3-year-old Honda with 40,000 miles and full warranty coverage.
Today, $15,000 gets you a 7-year-old car with 85,000 miles, no warranty, and a laundry list of deferred maintenance you won't know about until something breaks. So you're setting yourself up for repair bills that will easily exceed the cost of a newer car.
You're worried they'll wreck it. You're worried they won't appreciate it. Fair concerns. But is it really worth the trade-off? If you can afford it, buy newer.
The statistical likelihood your teenager gets in an accident is high. Do you want them in a car with airbags from 2012, or one with the latest safety tech?
You want your teenager to learn responsibility? Make them pay for gas. Make them pay for insurance (or part of it). Make them maintain it. But don't compromise on safety because you're worried about spoiling them.
The "old beater" built character when old beaters were $3,000 and still reliable. That's not the world we live in anymore.

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@ronsterd89 Well... yeah.
My gravy forms a crust when it gets cold like it should.
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Like how I would install a raspberry pi on every security camera network installation i did. It only had one purpose, ping the cameras and text me if any go offline.
I was able to call the customer "Hello, mark, it appears the camera overlooking your second garage door isnt responding. When would you like me to schedule a service?"
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If you worked at Goldman Sachs, there would be an expectation — unstated but absolute — that you read the Financial Times before client meetings.
That you have an informed opinion about macroeconomic conditions and how they affect your client's sector.
That you show up to every conversation already knowing things the client hasn't told you.
Nobody at Goldman sends a junior analyst into a pitch who hasn't done two hours of prep on the target company.
Nobody at McKinsey presents a recommendation without first developing a point of view based on data the client didn't hand them.
That standard exists because the fees justify it.
And the fees justify it because the standard produces outcomes that cheaper alternatives can't.
Here's the thing: you can adopt that standard right now, regardless of what you charge or who you work with.
Nothing is stopping you from doing the research.
Nothing is stopping you from forming a genuine thesis.
Nothing is stopping you from showing up to every single call having already done work that most of your competitors won't do in the entire engagement.
The difference between a $5K/month operator and a $25K/month operator is mostly not skill. It's this standard applied consistently.
What does consistent application look like?
You invest in your environment because your environment signals your standard.
The background on your Zoom calls, the quality of your camera, how you're dressed.
These aren't vanity — they're signals.
They tell the prospect, before you've said a word, whether you take yourself seriously.
And whether you take yourself seriously tells them whether to take you seriously.
You develop opinions in public.
Not just content — actual positions.
Opinions create status delta.
Opinions attract the clients who want to work with someone who has a point of view, not just a service menu.
You read. Not self-help. Not money Twitter. The industries your clients are in.
The macro forces shaping their decisions.
The regulatory changes, the market consolidations, the competitor moves that are creating urgency or anxiety in their boardrooms right now.
That's the professional standard. And it's available to you today.

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@ThrillaRilla369 Sammy Sosa vs mark mcguire.
Watched M.Jordan play baseball.
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@brockpierson Old school multiplayer move. Throw a proximity mine on an ammo box. Collect ammo box, but mine remains, but invisible. Enemy player grabs ammo box and blows up😂
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@Snowglobe4meme @messedupfoods I dont think you start pushing till like 60.
Source - Me, almost to 40.
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That’s a good way to learn. I didn’t learn as much as I should growing up with a mechanic next door. I did learn if he was out front drinking beer hiding from his wife and watching me work on something that he would get so frustrated watching me mess it up that he would come do all the work himself. I started messing up on purpose so he would do all the work😂
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Told my son this would take 45 minutes.
Three hours later, one skinned knuckle, and a few words I’ll blame on the breaker bar, we got there.
He’s got the orange gloves. I’ve got the humility.
But he can change his own brakes now. On his future truck. In the driveway where it belongs.
The guys who know how to work on things are the same guys running service businesses and buying fleets.
If that’s you, let’s talk.

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