pellucid
1.5K posts


🚨 New Launch:
Since so many people asked for the prompts I use to create books...
I’m finally releasing the exact Claude prompts behind multiple 6-figure AI eBooks.
Inside:
• Find niches people already pay for
• Write full chapters in minutes
• AI cover prompts that get clicks
bonus resources to kickstart your first book.
Free (for now).
Like + Comment “Doc”
I’ll send it to you.
(Follow so I can DM)
⏳ Taking this down in 24 hours.

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@Mikeachim I was half excited eating a claim about aliens engineering an opening at the Straits
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@per_arneng @Manifest_Lord The stoics were right, so were the buddhists, after surplus food and leisure, the environment stopped taxing and meliorating our wants and emotions… The result: An excess of wants, desires, and emotions that are easily frustrated and prone to going awry..
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This seems more about human biology and psychology than quantum physics. Stress can overload your nervous system, making it harder to focus and think clearly. When you are calm and composed, you are more likely to stay focused and produce useful, relevant thoughts.
This aligns well with my own experience. It also feels somewhat stoic, because it emphasizes staying calm, managing your internal state, and not becoming overly attached to outcomes.
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@ObviousRises Nature really doesn’t give a toot; jungle, sea, desert, tundra; it eats ego for breakfast
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I remember seeing the movie Into The Wild and thinking he was the biggest dumbass, rich spoiled liberal douche fresh out of (paid for) college thinks he can brave ALASKA (the last frontier) with ZERO survival training or knowledge and everything would be handy dandy? He brought minimal gear/survival equipment and would literally have died the first night had he not found the bus, he refused to take advice or even buy a map (a local literally offered to draw him a free map to a safe place/area and he said "he didn't need it") the dude was 100% the perfect example of a liberal Californian and was an absolute arrogant retard.
Oh and (because I just have throw this in there) the dude was so lucky he actually scored a whole moose, instead of properly preparing/storing it and keeping it cool he let it rot.
You know what F*CK Christopher McCandless he got what he deserved.
Sorry but this shit just makes me so mad. The blatant and absolute disrespect for not only Alaska but for wildlife and nature itself, I hate smug liberal Californians so much its unreal.

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@AveryDaye My friends neighbor openly admits he was caught by a bunch of dates being placed on the beach in Africa; after which they came on a boat for more.. Little did they know they were being trapped…
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@LetUsGetHonest @DrJackKruse Genius is greatness of purpose, modest means, and astonishing results
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@DrJackKruse Re: the last sentence on your post, "Agnes story, a stunning story can be found here." -- where, exactly? I see no link, or cite. Thanks for telling it, but wondering what brings it up today (and source). Thanks.
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Agnes Pockels was nineteen years old when she noticed something strange in the dishwater.
It was 1881. She was standing at the sink in her family's home in Brunswick, Germany, watching the way grease moved across the surface of the water. The way soap changed everything. The way the surface itself seemed to have properties she couldn't explain.
Most people would have finished the dishes forgetting it.
Agnes Pockels wrote it down.
She would have liked to study physics at university. But in Germany in 1881, women were not permitted to attend university.
She devoured the physics books of her brother, teaching herself the mathematics and theory that formal education had denied her.
She needed a way to measure what she was observing. So she built one.
In 1882, she developed what she called a Schieberinne—a sliding trough.
With this homemade apparatus, Agnes Pockels began a decade of solitary research.
She had found the moment when a single layer of molecules, one molecule thick, formed across the surface.
She calculated that a single molecule occupied about twenty square angstroms of surface area. This threshold would later be named the "Pockels Point" in her honor.
Ten years. No laboratory. No colleagues. No mentors. No funding. Just a woman at kitchen sink, making measurements of stunning precision. And no way to publish any of it. She was isolated.
Then, in 1890, she read an article in a German science journal. The English physicist Lord Rayleigh—one of the most celebrated scientists in the world—had been studying the properties of water surfaces. He was asking questions remarkably similar to her own.
She wrote to him.
On January 10, 1891, she sent Lord Rayleigh a twelve-page letter in German, outlining a decade of research. She described her apparatus, her methods, her findings. She was modest almost to a fault:
"My Lord, will you kindly excuse my venturing to trouble you with a German letter on a scientific subject? ... For various reasons I am not in a position to publish them in scientific periodicals, and I therefore adopt this means of communicating to you the most important of them."
Rayleigh read the letter. He recognized immediately what he was holding.
On March 2, 1891, he forwarded it to the editor of Nature, the most prestigious scientific journal in the English-speaking world, with a covering letter:
"I shall be obliged if you can find space for the accompanying translation of an interesting letter which I have received from a German lady, who with very homely appliances has arrived at valuable results respecting the behaviour of contaminated water surfaces.."
Ten days later, Agnes Pockels's research was published in Nature under the title "Surface Tension."
She was twenty-nine years old. She had never set foot in a university. And her kitchen experiments had just entered the scientific record.
Agnes stunning story, a soul-stirring story can be found here

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pellucid รีทวีตแล้ว

Tech billionaire Michael Lynch built his fortune on understanding probability—until his untimely death at sea. His yacht, the Bayesian, faced a terrifying and tragic culmination of a series of highly improbable events, and sank. The inside story: wired.com/story/mike-lyn…
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Thanks for reading!
I've spent 20 years researching what actually moves the needle on health.
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Patrick Sullivan Jr.@realPatrickJr
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@Mappy6984 That is no way to crest a wave, never go head-on. Always go on an oblique angle 45° port or starboard.
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pellucid รีทวีตแล้ว

@juleshorn01 Do you exhale through the nose as well, or is it okay through the mouth?
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7.What looks weird to the world…
Is the reason I feel calm, connected, and strong in my body again.
You wanna feel aligned? Start with your face.
If you enjoyed this thread, follow @juleshorn01
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