nzsquirrell

570 posts

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nzsquirrell

nzsquirrell

@nzsquirrell

Crypto-degenerate since 2013, on and off developer

Middle Earth เข้าร่วม Ocak 2020
74 กำลังติดตาม142 ผู้ติดตาม
CryptoRank.io
CryptoRank.io@CryptoRank_io·
GM, most undervalued project?
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CryptoAmsterdam
CryptoAmsterdam@damskotrades·
Lot of altcoins currently doing this. Drop some tickers below and I’ll do a few chart requests.
CryptoAmsterdam tweet media
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@scottmelker this one ain't new ... Israel been wanting to light the fuse for many years
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@CarpeNoctom Just get it over and done with, it's where we're all heading..
GIF
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@scottmelker Trump says a lot of shit - and usually the opposite is actually happening.
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@DatCryptoLife Great read mate. What's scary is the number of people out there blind to all of this. Shit's going to get real, and real ugly.
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J@j_intradaytrade·
Me and my students average 10-40R weekly While most traders can’t even get results like this in 6 months I’m feeling generous Comment ‘SS’ and I’ll DM you my full A-Z course on this trading model for free (must be following)
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@TheRealPlanC been here for both. FTX / Luna happened sharper and quicker, this has just been a long slow bleed ever since 10/10. Makes it feel worse, even tho we're in a much better place now.
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Plan C
Plan C@TheRealPlanC·
My intuition was right. Turns out this was a great poll question.
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Plan C
Plan C@TheRealPlanC·
When was Bitcoin sentiment worse?
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Mercury
Mercury@TraderMercury·
@Pentosh1 gonna prepare for the egg bullmarket by buying a % supply of all eggs there is absolutely no downside to this thesis.
Mercury tweet media
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🐧
🐧@Pentosh1·
eggs are down 95% in the last year chart is likely bottoming imo, there's a bullish div forming and a macd crossover this might be an easy 3-5x in the future
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
my two are much the same age. the other afternoon, what started as squirting one with a small water pistol left over from a xmas cracker evolved into an afternoon of full-on water warfare, all 3 of us thoroughly drenched. most fun we've had together in ages. those are the moment's that are now few and far between... cherish them and encourage them when it happens.
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Chad McDonald
Chad McDonald@mac51246·
@scottmelker My 2 kids are 18 & 16 and time with them is slipping much faster than I would have ever expected. It's estimated that 95% of the time you spend with your child will have passed by the time they are 18. I'd give anything to go back to those younger years.
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The Wolf Of All Streets
The Wolf Of All Streets@scottmelker·
If you were old, how much would you pay to spend one ordinary afternoon with your children when they were young again? Not a milestone. Not a birthday or a graduation. Just a random day. The noise. The mess. The questions. The laughter. The exhaustion. Bedtime stories you’ve read a hundred times. Be honest with yourself. The number wouldn’t make sense. You’d drain accounts, sell assets, rewrite every financial plan you ever had without hesitation. You’d trade almost anything for a few hours of something you once had for free. And yet, when that time was actually available, most of us sold it cheaply. We didn’t think of it that way at the time, of course. We told ourselves a story. We were working hard. We were building something. We were providing. We were doing it for them. That story is comforting, and it’s not entirely false. But it’s incomplete. Children don’t experience provision the way adults do. They experience presence. They don’t measure love in college funds or net worth statements. They measure it in attention, consistency, and shared moments that feel insignificant until they’re gone. They don’t remember how hard you worked. They remember whether you were there. This is where the trade becomes uncomfortable to look at. We exchange time during the only window it exists for money we could have earned later. We trade a non-renewable asset for a renewable one and tell ourselves we’re being responsible. Money can be earned again. Time with young children cannot. That doesn’t mean don’t work. It doesn’t mean abandon ambition or stop providing. It means be honest about the cost. Because every late night, every missed dinner, every postponed trip is a decision to push life into a future that may not look the way you expect. We tell ourselves we’ll make it up later. When things slow down. When the next milestone is reached. When there’s more margin. “Someday” becomes a holding place for good intentions. But kids don’t live in someday. They live in now. What makes this especially tricky is that nothing feels wrong in the moment. Life looks fine from the outside. Bills get paid. Careers progress. Stability increases. We smooth consumption and manage stress and tell ourselves we’re doing the right thing. And in many ways, we are. But there’s a hidden risk no one talks about: postponing life until the window for the most meaningful experiences has quietly closed. One day, your kids don’t ask you to play anymore. They don’t need you to read to them. They stop wanting to tag along. The ordinary moments dry up without an announcement. And only then do you realize how valuable they were. That’s when the thought experiment stops being hypothetical. If you’re older, you already know the answer to the question. You’d pay anything. And if you’re younger, the uncomfortable truth is that you’re currently holding something priceless and trading it away incrementally for something replaceable. This isn’t about guilt. It’s about clarity. Work matters. Providing matters. Building a future matters. But so does recognizing when “enough” has been reached and when the marginal dollar costs more than it’s worth. Especially when the payment is time with people who will never be that age again. I don’t want to look back one day and realize I optimized perfectly for a future version of life that never arrived. I want to be present for the one that’s happening now, even when it’s inconvenient, exhausting, and messy. Because one day, I’d give anything to buy back time I once gave away without thinking twice. This is part of the same question I’ve been working through lately. Not answers. Just uncomfortable math. Money compounds. Time doesn’t. And some of the most valuable things we ever own can’t be bought back at any price once they’re gone.
The Wolf Of All Streets@scottmelker

I want to die completely broke. When I tell people this, I usually get one of two reactions. Either they assume I’m joking, or they assume I’ve lost my mind. Sometimes both. So let me clarify before anyone forwards this to a financial planner in panic. I don’t mean reckless. I don’t mean irresponsible. And I definitely don’t mean unprepared. What I mean is that I don’t want to die having optimized my entire life around a number that only matters when my ability to actually use it is gone. We talk constantly about the time value of money. A dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow because it can be invested, compounded, and put to work. Time increases its potential. Life, however, works in the opposite direction. Time doesn’t increase the value of experiences – it usually decreases it. Certain experiences are simply more accessible, more enjoyable, and more meaningful at specific stages of life, and no amount of money later can fully replicate them. When you’re younger, you’re sitting on an asset that quietly depreciates every year: health, energy, physical capability, curiosity, and a tolerance for discomfort. A dollar at 35 buys a fundamentally different life than a dollar at 75. Pretending otherwise is comforting, but it’s not honest. Life has a time value too, and it doesn’t compound. When people hear “die broke,” they often picture irresponsibility or excess. That’s not what I’m describing. I’m talking about intentional depletion – using money as a tool to maximize life while you’re able to live it, rather than stockpiling it indefinitely for a future version of yourself that may not exist in the way you imagine. Saving matters. Security matters. Optionality matters. But past a certain point, additional saving delivers diminishing returns while the cost of waiting keeps rising. Saving for retirement makes sense. Over-saving at the expense of living doesn’t. We’re taught to treat retirement as the main event – sacrifice now so you can enjoy later. Delay life so you can eventually live it. But that framework assumes a lot: that your health cooperates, that your energy remains, that your relationships are intact, and that your interests don’t change. Most of all, it assumes experiences are interchangeable across time. They aren’t. The trip you take at 35 is not the same trip at 70, even if it’s first class. Skiing with your kids, traveling with friends, pushing your body, starting something new – these things are perishable. They don’t age gracefully, and postponing them doesn’t preserve value. It destroys it. There’s also a strange moral judgment baked into personal finance culture that equates delayed gratification with virtue and present enjoyment with failure. I don’t buy that. There’s a meaningful difference between consumption that disappears and spending that compounds in memory, perspective, relationships, and confidence. Experiences don’t show up on a balance sheet, but they pay dividends in ways that money never can. Your memories are what matter in the end, not your net worth. This way of thinking has also changed how I view legacy and what I want to give my kids. I don’t care about leaving behind generational wealth the way I once did, especially not as a lump sum that shows up only after I’m gone. If I’m going to give them anything meaningful, I’d rather do it while I’m alive – when it can actually shape who they become. I want to use my resources earlier to give them experiences, exposure, and tools that help them build confidence, curiosity, and resilience. Travel that broadens perspective. Opportunities that stretch them. Lessons about money, risk, work, and independence learned through experience, not inheritance. I want them to understand how to create value, how to adapt, and how to rebuild if things fall apart. I still want to leave them with enough. But “enough” isn’t a massive number waiting at the end of my life. Enough is a foundation, plus the skills to stand on their own. Unlimited money can become a crutch. Capability is freedom. I’d rather they inherit confidence than comfort – and I’d rather be around to help them learn it than hope they figure it out after I’m gone. Everyone talks about the risk of running out of money. Almost no one talks about the risk of running out of time. And even less people talk about the tragedy of wasting valuable hours of your youth working for money that will never get spent. What a waste of your valuable time. We’re very good at smoothing consumption – using money, planning, and credit to keep life stable while quietly deferring the things that actually make it meaningful. From the outside, everything looks fine. Under the hood, life is being postponed. The biggest gamble isn’t that you won’t have enough someday. It’s that someday arrives and you’re no longer capable of the life you spent decades planning for. I want to die broke not because I don’t value money, but because I value life more. I want to use my resources to create memories while they’re available, not just affordable. To save enough to be secure, but not so much that I defer living indefinitely. To leave my kids with a foundation, not a cage. I don’t pretend this is the right answer for everyone. I don’t even pretend it’s my final answer. But if the time value of money matters, then the time value of life matters more.

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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@awawat @grok A gallery of sights you immediately want to unsee 😳
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Awawat
Awawat@awawat·
whatever you do, do NOT click on the @grok Media tab
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
$XPL - bottom has finally been found? 🤔
nzsquirrell tweet media
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@CastilloTrading Let's add starting a new war just to see if we can shake our the few left standing 😂
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Castillo Trading
Castillo Trading@CastilloTrading·
Crypto Industry spiraling Major crypto exchanges want stock market exposure, altcoins continue into a potential 5 year downtrend, Gold at ATHs, choppy trading environment, fearful greed index continues, October 10th massacre liquidated many participants, Eric Trump lied about Q4
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Frost
Frost@AlgoFrost·
Are you guys unburdened by what has been?
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nzsquirrell รีทวีตแล้ว
William Schuman
William Schuman@WilliamNKPCEO·
𝘛𝘩𝘰𝘶𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘰𝘧 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘥𝘢𝘺…. 𝐀 𝐬𝐨𝐜𝐢𝐞𝐭𝐲 𝐠𝐫𝐨𝐰𝐬 𝐠𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐭 𝐰𝐡𝐞𝐧 𝐨𝐥𝐝 𝐦𝐞𝐧 𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐭 𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐞𝐬 𝐰𝐡𝐨𝐬𝐞 𝐬𝐡𝐚𝐝𝐞 𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐲 𝐤𝐧𝐨𝐰 𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐲 𝐬𝐡𝐚𝐥𝐥 𝐧𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐫 𝐬𝐢𝐭 𝐢𝐧. 🌱 Building for the future is always misunderstood by those who only see the present. When your vision stretches beyond the next quarter, the next cycle, or the next headline, you’ll inevitably be met with noise, the naysayers who’ve never built, never risked, never endured. They’ll dismiss it as 𝘵𝘰𝘰 𝘴𝘭𝘰𝘸, 𝘵𝘰𝘰 𝘳𝘪𝘴𝘬𝘺, 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘸𝘳𝘰𝘯𝘨 𝘮𝘰𝘷𝘦, the usual chorus from the sidelines. But those who’ve actually done the work know that progress rarely announces itself with applause. It’s created quietly in patience, persistence, and conviction. I’ve been building successfully for over 30 years by tuning out the noise and staying locked on the target. That discipline has shaped projects that became global firsts. Smoke doesn’t forge iron, it takes fire, grit, and busted knuckles swinging the hammer to mold. Build with purpose, for those who will benefit tomorrow, even if they never know your name. Like planting that tree, do it because the world is always better when we think beyond ourselves. Lead with kindness, stand in positivity, and live with purpose. 🙏🏼
William Schuman tweet media
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Stacy Muur
Stacy Muur@stacy_muur·
Meanwhile, I keep growing my stablecoin yield portfolio. Lots of tokenless protocols with high APR + airdrop potential added recently. Need more ideas. Send them.
Stacy Muur tweet media
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
This goes in only 1 direction from here .... $NKP
nzsquirrell tweet media
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nzsquirrell
nzsquirrell@nzsquirrell·
@CastilloTrading And dilution is a real thing. Some will eventually run, but there's going to be a lot of bags left in the dust. Choose wisely.
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Castillo Trading
Castillo Trading@CastilloTrading·
Altcoins continue to show lack of strength. -Moves get retraced almost instantly -BTC and ETH flinch even a little and they nuke 10%+ -Money continues to get rotated around to the daily movers, even if they just launched 24hrs ago -No continued strength on any significant moves I understand the hatred spewed towards crypto and specially altcoins. But honestly, no one said it was gonna be easy. This shit isn’t a cake walk to financial freedom. Ups and downs necessary, capitulation is necessary. And it truly does seem like many have capitulated on altcoins for the most part. All of the hatred is understandable, especially since $BTC is +73% this year alone, and $ETH +250%. Your thoughts are valid and I understand why most people think altcoins are cooked and will never see another altseason again. The past few altseasons were glorious and this one is very underwhelming (if we can even call it that). Big account spam “alt szn” every time we see a little strength, only for them to slowly bleed. Altcoins are shit, until they are not. I doubt we see anything like we’ve seen in the past but I still think altcoins are due for some upside.
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