Freud Buffett

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Freud Buffett

Freud Buffett

@FreudBuffett

Health Psychology Finance

เข้าร่วม Nisan 2026
399 กำลังติดตาม385 ผู้ติดตาม
Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
There’s truth in the message, but it’s not universal. Some people aren’t “dead inside”—they’ve just found peace in a life others don’t understand. Not everyone needs constant chasing or risk to feel alive. Growth looks different for everyone. For some it’s ambition, for others it’s contentment. Both can be real living.
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MrBanks💰
MrBanks💰@Mrbankstips·
Most men die at 35, they just get buried at 75.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
That situation is messed up, no doubt—but turning it into “all women” takes it in the wrong direction. The real issue is dishonesty and pressure around marriage. People get pushed into decisions they don’t fully stand behind, and instead of being honest, they drag others into it—and that’s what causes the damage. Bad behavior is individual, not gender. The focus should be on accountability, not stereotypes.
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Ankit Pandey
Ankit Pandey@iamankitpande·
This divorce incident shocked me and many families. One of my friend’s elder brother got married 2 years ago. Both are working professionals. It was an arranged marriage by relatives. Relationship looked good, everything seemed normal. His wife went to office daily. Until one day, the guy checked her Google Maps timeline. He saw that after 3 PM, 3–4 times a week, she was going to a hotel. One day he followed her. He found she was going there with another man. The same man, regularly. Later, he paid a hotel employee 10,000 rupees to get the entry records and proof. With all proofs, he confronted his wife. She confessed that the man was her boyfriend and they were going to the hotel for romance. Now the husband has filed for divorce. But the twist: She is now threatening to file a case and asking for 25 lakh alimony. Worst situation for that guy. I just keep thinking if she loved someone else, why did she marry this guy and ruin his life?
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
Let’s be real—most of these “cliques” aren’t friendships, they’re protection rackets with ring lights. People love to scream “community” until one of their own messes up, then suddenly it’s deflection, silence, or rewriting reality in real time. Loyalty isn’t the problem—blind loyalty is. When your entire identity is tied to a group, you don’t defend truth, you defend access. And the whole “influencers as crisis managers” thing? Absolutely. It’s cheaper than PR firms and way more effective. Flood the timeline, shift the narrative, attack critics, and wait it out until the algorithm buries it. Rinse and repeat. That’s why putting anyone on a pedestal online is a mistake. You’re not seeing integrity—you’re seeing branding. The moment staying honest costs them their position in the circle, most will choose the circle every time. Independence isn’t just smart—it’s necessary. Because once you’re in, speaking up doesn’t just cost you opinions… it costs you your place.
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Daniel Regha
Daniel Regha@DanielRegha·
Influencers move in cliques, and cliques will never call out the wrongdoings of anyone in their circle; Instead, it's gaslighting or plain denial. I have said this before, don't join any cliques on social media or put anyone on a pedestal based on following, that's the best thing you can do for yourself; And the minute you associate by joining, you automatically compromise. Any bad publicity that involves an influencer is always justified by who they roll with. We have seen it in harassment and assault cases, we have it in bigotry remarks, and we have seen it in vendor related problems. This is the same reason most celebs including political figures also roll with influencers, so they can easily control narratives when needed, no-one does damage control better than influencers and is commited to doing it more.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@PressSec Setting politics aside, bringing people home safely is something most can agree on. Glad to hear the crew made it out—those kinds of operations take serious coordination and risk.
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Karoline Leavitt
Karoline Leavitt@PressSec·
FROM PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP WE GOT HIM! My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History, for one of our incredible Crew Member Officers, who also happens to be a highly respected Colonel, and who I am thrilled to let you know is now SAFE and SOUND! This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines in the treacherous mountains of Iran, being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour, but was never truly alone because his Commander in Chief, Secretary of War, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and fellow War Fighters were monitoring his location 24 hours a day, and diligently planning for his rescue. At my direction, the U.S. Military sent dozens of aircraft, armed with the most lethal weapons in the World, to retrieve him. He sustained injuries, but he will be just fine. This miraculous Search and Rescue Operation comes in addition to a successful rescue of another brave Pilot, yesterday, which we did not confirm, because we did not want to jeopardize our second rescue operation. This is the first time in military memory that two U.S. Pilots have been rescued, separately, deep in Enemy Territory. WE WILL NEVER LEAVE AN AMERICAN WARFIGHTER BEHIND! The fact that we were able to pull off both of these operations, without a SINGLE American killed, or even wounded, just proves once again, that we have achieved overwhelming Air Dominance and Superiority over the Iranian skies. This is a moment that ALL Americans, Republican, Democrat, and everyone else, should be proud of and united around. We truly have the best, most professional, and lethal Military in the History of the World. GOD BLESS AMERICA, GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS, AND HAPPY EASTER TO ALL!
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@PInsider_ Why are people hoping it’s a specific group…? 😭 Disbandments are tough for fans no matter who it is. No need to turn it into fandom vs fandom—just wait for the announcement and show some respect.
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pop_insider 🤍🖤
pop_insider 🤍🖤@PInsider_·
🚨 | Famous k-pop group is announcing DISBAND in next weeks
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@KP24 So you can see exactly what kind of life choices the previous guest made 😭 Also bleach. Lots and lots of bleach.
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Kevin Pietersen🦏
Every hotel around the world, towels are white. Why?
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
This is spot on—most people think love failed at stage 3, when in reality it’s just becoming real. The couples who make it aren’t the ones who avoid disappointment, they’re the ones who learn how to grow through it. And you’re right—if there’s genuine friendship at the core, every stage becomes easier to navigate.
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Dating Dynamics
Dating Dynamics@Dating_Dynamics·
Marriage has six stages, But most couples give up at stage three. Stage 1: The Honeymoon Stage....
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
Calling it a “sh*tshow” just sounds like bias more than analysis. A pilot went down in hostile territory and got extracted—that’s the core objective, and it was achieved. You can criticize the cost and execution, sure, but pretending it wasn’t a success at all is just ignoring reality. War isn’t clean, and ops rarely go perfectly. Success doesn’t mean flawless—it means mission accomplished.
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Patarames
Patarames@Pataramesh·
The C-SAR op to extract the F-15 WSO is certainly a good success for the U.S. But let's not oversell it: - He was in a sparsely populated, periphery province of Iran - in 21st century with GPS and satellite phones, the rescuers had a big advantage - The first, daytime attempt failed and led to two damaged Blackhawks, one crash landing, a lost A-10 and injured crews - The nighttime 2nd operation exploited darkness with known position ➡️ So hiding in the wilderness of a remote region for two days, while knowing your position and communicating with your forces is an advantageous situation. Being just 50-100km from Iran's borders is major another advantage. But credit where its due, after the costly first failed attempt, lessons were learned and effectively applied.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@MarioNawfal The “Pentagon Pizza Index” is funny… until it lines up a little too well with real operations 😅 Wild that something as random as late-night food orders can act like a rough signal for activity behind the scenes but it’s still just a hint, not proof.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇺🇸🇮🇷 While the U.S was rescuing a missing F-15 pilot from Iran, Pizzato Pizza, located near the Pentagon, reported above average traffic, while Freddie's Beach Bar, the closest gay bar to the Pentagon, reported below average traffic. Welcome to wars in 2026, where open source intel is wild. Source: @PenPizzaReport
Mario Nawfal tweet mediaMario Nawfal tweet media
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇺🇸🇮🇷 Before the rescue of the missing F-15 pilot took place in Iran, the CIA launched a disinformation campaign to deceive Tehran into believing the missing pilot had been found. That explains why his rescue was widely reported before the fireworks began. Source: Al Jazeera

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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@ByChrisGordon Or it could be the opposite: labeling people as “potential threats” based on proximity and age is exactly how mistakes happen. Being nearby doesn’t equal hostile intent, and in chaotic situations, assumptions can cost innocent lives just as easily as they stop real threats.
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Chris Gordon
Chris Gordon@ByChrisGordon·
U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drones protected the rescued F-15E crew member by striking Iranian military-aged males believed to be a threat who got within three kilometers of the Airman, a person familiar with the operation told Air & Space Forces Magazine.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@willchamberlain This thread really went from strategy talk to full Hollywood script real quick 😂 Real life isn’t a movie—everyone’s human, and it’s usually way more complicated (and less dramatic) than the comments make it sound.
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Will Chamberlain
Will Chamberlain@willchamberlain·
Imagine being the IRGC You get completely owned for five straight weeks, and then you FINALLY shoot down one plane, and then the US Military just sends in Delta Force, rescues both pilots, and kills a few hundred more of your men because they can
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@DailyLoud People calling it “snitching” don’t get it—rules like that exist to protect the integrity of the game. You can debate how he handled it, but ignoring it would’ve been worse for everyone in the tournament.
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Daily Loud
Daily Loud@DailyLoud·
LMAO Chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen accepts a selfie with his opponent before reporting her for having a phone 💀
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@KeruboSk It gets even more interesting—retatrutide targets three pathways at once (GIP, GLP-1, and glucagon), helping control hunger while also ramping up metabolism and fat use. If GLP-1 drugs were the first wave, this feels like the next evolution.
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Sophia ❣️
Sophia ❣️@KeruboSk·
Ozempic was designed for diabetes. Then it became the biggest weight loss drug in history. Now a massive new study shows it also significantly reduces depression, anxiety, and addiction risk. One drug. Three completely different conditions. Science is barely keeping up with what GLP-1s are doing The study found that people taking semaglutide (the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy) saw major drops in depression and anxiety alongside the weight loss effects everyone already knew about. It also showed reduced risk of substance use disorders. A weight loss drug that may help treat addiction. Nobody predicted that.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@KeruboSk And it’s only getting more interesting—retatrutide is a triple-agonist (GIP/GLP-1/glucagon) that doesn’t just curb appetite, it actively boosts metabolism and fat burning. If GLP-1s were step one, this looks like the next generation entirely.
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Sophia ❣️
Sophia ❣️@KeruboSk·
The implications are massive. Depression affects 280 million people globally. Addiction kills over 100,000 Americans a year. If GLP-1 drugs are confirmed to meaningfully treat these conditions, we're looking at a pharmaceutical category that could rival antibiotics in its impact on human health. And the pill version is coming. No more injections. Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk are both racing to market.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@MrsErikaKirk You can disagree with someone without crossing into personal attacks. Respect for service members isn’t the same as endorsing every policy, and reducing it to insults just shuts down any real conversation.
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Erika Kirk
Erika Kirk@MrsErikaKirk·
Regardless of your opinion on Operation Epic Fury or your political affiliation, we have the greatest military in the world. Its strength lies not just in power, but in the courage, discipline, and sacrifice of our troops. God bless our men and women in uniform.
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@davepl1968 This thread escalated beautifully 😂 From “you ruined everything” → “oh… it was PowerPoint” → “also Publisher was secretly a 90s contraband storage system” Tech support is never about the tech, it’s always about translation.
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Dave W Plummer
Dave W Plummer@davepl1968·
Recently, I upgraded my wifes desktop to a Mac M4 Mini. Great machine, btw. She loves it. After the upgrade, she couldn't find Publisher. Neither could I. Then I started searching online, and I was pretty sure that Microsoft hadn't made Publisher for the Mac for like 15 years, but she was adamant. Worse, it was a key part of her workflow, or so she claimed. And she used to have a big P icon right on her desktop! And I had ruined everything. Ruiner! After an hour of flailing, we figured it out. She meant PowerPoint.
Dave W Plummer tweet media
high precision ghosts@metamacky

microsoft is killing the publisher app, which absolutely nobody has used for at least 30 years.

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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@Mrbankstips Happy Easter everyone! 🙏✨ Wishing you all love, peace, and overflowing blessings. May this season bring fresh wins, renewed strength, and bigger breakthroughs ahead 💖 Amen to more grace and louder victories!
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MrBanks💰
MrBanks💰@Mrbankstips·
Happy Easter to all my amazing followers! May this season bring you renewed hope, joy and endless blessings. Just like spring, may your life bloom with fresh beginnings and beautiful moments. Let love rise, let peace reign and may your heart be full this Easter and always!
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@thecurioustales Gratitude isn’t just a feeling — it’s training your brain what to notice. Do it daily, and your mind starts defaulting to what’s good instead of what’s missing.
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The Curious Tales
The Curious Tales@thecurioustales·
🚨BREAKING: 8 weeks of gratitude practice physically rebuilds the neural pathways between your memory and reward centers. Your brain physically rewires itself every time you feel grateful. Eight weeks of intentional gratitude practice creates measurable structural changes in the neural pathways connecting your hippocampus to your ventral tegmental area. The memory center starts talking to the reward center in a fundamentally different way. New synaptic connections form. Existing ones strengthen. The physical architecture of how you process positive experiences rebuilds itself. Most people approach gratitude like a mood they can choose to feel. A psychological vitamin they remember to take when life gets difficult. The neuroscience reveals something far more profound. Gratitude is a biological intervention that sculpts brain tissue. Researchers tracked participants practicing gratitude exercises for two months using brain scans. They watched new neural highways construct themselves in real time. The anterior cingulate cortex developed stronger connections to the medial prefrontal cortex. The brain learned to route positive emotional experiences through higher order thinking centers instead of storing them as fleeting feelings. Every positive experience you’ve ever had exists as a neural trace in your memory network. Most sit dormant, accessible only when something external triggers the specific sensory combination that originally encoded them. You smell coffee, suddenly remember a conversation from years ago. Random. Unreliable. Outside your control. Gratitude practice systematically rewires that retrieval system. After two months, participants could voluntarily access positive memories with increasing ease. Their brains had built stronger pathways between memory storage areas and emotional processing centers. They experienced deeper emotional resonance during memory retrieval. The quality of remembering itself had improved. The participants also started noticing positive details in their present environment they had previously filtered out. Their attention systems recalibrated. The same neural pathways pulling positive memories forward were scanning current experiences more thoroughly for elements worth encoding as positive memories. Their brains became biased toward collecting evidence that life contains meaningful moments. Most cognitive interventions try to change how you interpret negative experiences. Gratitude practice changes how thoroughly you notice positive ones. It teaches your visual and emotional processing systems to detect opportunities and pleasures that were always present but neurologically invisible. The timeline reveals something crucial about neural plasticity. Weeks one through three showed minimal structural changes. Participants felt slightly more positive, but brain scans looked identical to baseline. Weeks four through six showed the first measurable increases in gray matter density. Weeks seven and eight revealed entirely new neural network formation. Two months. Your nervous system can physically restructure itself with consistent practice. The method was almost embarrassingly simple. Participants wrote down three specific things they felt grateful for every evening, explaining why each mattered. No meditation apps. No guided visualizations. Just pen, paper, and the requirement to identify gratitude targets with enough detail that their brains had to actively search for positive elements. Specificity drives the neural development. General statements like “I’m grateful for my family” generate different brain activity than precise observations like “I’m grateful my daughter laughed at my terrible joke during dinner because it showed me she still finds me funny despite growing more independent.” The brain needs detailed targets to practice connecting memory specifics to emotional rewards. After eight weeks, participants developed a fundamentally different relationship with their attention and memory systems. Someone whose brain automatically scans for and emotionally amplifies aspects of experience that make existence feel worthwhile. The neural pathways remain permanent after practice ends. Gratitude carves lasting roads through consciousness.
The Curious Tales tweet media
Darshak Rana ⚡️@thedarshakrana

Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain.

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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
@stats_feed It’s honestly one of the craziest examples of “if you can engineer it, you can scale it.” Desert outside at 50°C, cows chilling at 21°C like it’s springtime — meanwhile we’re melting after a 5-minute walk 😅 Almarai didn’t adapt to the climate… they redesigned it. 🏜️❄️
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World of Statistics
World of Statistics@stats_feed·
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia operates one of the world's largest dairy herds in the middle of the desert. The company Almarai alone keeps over 195,000 cows, using advanced cooling systems to keep them at 21-23°C (70-73°F) while outside temperatures exceed 50°C (122°F).
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Freud Buffett
Freud Buffett@FreudBuffett·
Both things can be true. You can be disappointed today… and still recognize this team is ahead of schedule. The problem isn’t Arsenal — it’s the expectation inflation. Treble talk in January turned a great season into a “failure” unless it’s historic. That’s not analysis, that’s content farming. Real fans remember where we were 2–3 years ago. Progress isn’t linear — but it’s very real. 🔴⚪
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Guillem Balague
Guillem Balague@GuillemBalague·
The treble/quadruple Arsenal talk started in January if not before That's setting an impossible bar that's been reached almost never in football history. If they win the Premier League, that IS a massive success. Reaching the CL quarter-finals, on the back of the semis last year, IS success. They are growing. Comparing them to the greatest sides in history and then criticise them every time they fall short, more than holding them to high standards, is IMO just a way to deny them credit for what they're actually achieving. Having said that, today is certainly a disappointment. Both statements are true.
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