The 5am morning routine is the most overrated trend in self-improvement right now.
Not because waking up early is bad. Because the routine has quietly become the actual goal, and the work it was supposed to prepare you for gets pushed to “later.”
The “no phones at dinner” rule lasts exactly until someone says “wait, let’s get a pic first.”
Then everyone breaks the rule for thirty seconds, gets the shot, posts it with a caption about being present, and goes back to ignoring each other.
The photo becomes the only proof the moment happened, which is funny because taking it is the one thing that interrupted the moment.
I’ve watched a table go phone free for twenty minutes and phone out for the same two minutes, three separate times.
@RallyOnChain pays for the writing itself, not for how the moment looked while you were having it.
What’s a rule you’ve seen broken specifically to prove it was being followed?
@Mdnghtcrypt genuine question, what happens when everyone’s writing about the same trending protocol in the same week? does originality just turn into who posted first
The thing nobody says about CT is that your best takes are unpaid labor for someone else’s bag.
You spot the alpha early, write it up well, and the protocol gets the eyeballs. You get a notification.
@Mdnghtcrypt the “quality of writing is the variable that matters” framing makes sense to me. most platforms reward reach first and quality second, if at all. this is at least trying to flip that order
3 platforms, 6 months, $0.
That’s what writing crypto content for projects got me before I tried Rally.
Tried Kaito, Wallchain, and Bantr, all the usual names people throw around.
Same result every time: real work in, nothing worth mentioning out.
A friend kept telling me about @RallyOnChain, and I sat on it for a week before actually trying it.
My first post earned more than my last three campaigns on those other platforms combined.
Here’s how it works: you write about a project, an AI scores it on accuracy, originality, and engagement, then pays you based on that score.
No follower threshold, no waiting on a gatekeeper to notice you.
Just the writing itself, settled on-chain so you can verify every payout.
There’s a $5,000 prize pool live right now. Top 10 finishers take close to $500 each, and creators are consistently earning from this, with new periods opening up regularly.
It’s still early enough that getting in now actually matters before more people catch on.
Get started here: rally.fun/r/alhajisamz
What’s the worst “we’ll pay you in exposure” platform you’ve used?
@alhajisamz No follower threshold is doing more work in this post than people realize. Most of these platforms quietly reward accounts that already had reach before they joined.
Best therapist I ever had never spoke.
Found her buried in a @RallyOnChain thread at 2am.
Someone had just quoted one of her posts.
No picture.
No bio.
No followers.
Just one line every morning.
Whatever she was walking into that day.
Everyone felt like it was for me.
Agentic AI is like sending a really smart friend to run all your errands except they make every decision themselves and only come back when the job is done. @RallyOnChain
@alhajisamz@RallyOnChain The broken promise from an adult detail someone mentioned in the replies is real. Kids understand contract failure better than most adults because they have experienced it without the vocabulary to name it. This analogy meets them exactly where they already are.
A Smart Contract is like a vending machine that nobody owns, you put the right amount in, press the button, and it gives you exactly what it promised with no person in the middle who can change their mind. @RallyOnChain
@alhajisamz@RallyOnChain Sent this to my sister who has been skeptical about crypto since 2018. She replied with one word. “Finally.” Four years of conversations and one sentence from a stranger on the internet did what none of them could. Respect.
@alhajisamz Wrote the trust framework for a project’s dispute process. When things went sideways they published it publicly as proof of their integrity while doing everything it was built to prevent. My framework became their alibi.
i used to moderate a crypto community of 47,000 people, my job was simple:
Remove scammers
Protect the members
Keep the space clean
I was good at it, I could spot a rug in the first three messages,
I knew the patterns
The urgency
the fake familiarity
the promise that felt just slightly too specific
i banned 2,300 accounts in eighteen months
Kept a private list of every single one wallet addresses, usernames, tactics they used.
I was proud of that list,
Called it my shield.
Then the project founder pulled me into a private call one afternoon said the community had grown too fast and they needed to scale the moderation asked me to train someone new using my methods
i spent two weeks writing everything down:
every pattern
every red flag
every sentence structure that gave scammers away
i sent it over on a Friday
the following Monday the founder disappeared,
treasury was empty,
47,000 people woke up to nothing
I found my document three months later
being sold on a dark telegram channel
as a guide on how to run a long con
without triggering the moderators
i had spent eighteen months learning how to catch them
and two weeks writing the perfect manual on how to never get caught
the thing that keeps me up at night is not that i was fooled, everyone gets fooled once.
The thing that keeps me up is that i helped
@RallyOnChain is the first system i trusted after that, because the rules are public.
The weights are visible and nobody can turn your own shield into a weapon.
So tell me honestly, have you ever built something to protect people that someone else quietly turned into a trap?