The Lindy Effect. Basically, the test of time. If something has survived for 10 years, it's probably gonna survive another 10 years, or so the thinking goes. The Apple Vision Pro is too new so I bet it won't last. This is straight out of Nassim Nicholas Taleb's books, can't remember which one. They are all good :)
That's interesting about Ivermectin being safe and effective. I try to stay away from pharma products in general (let food be thy medicine is my philosophy), but might look into getting some just in case. I also heard the same great reviews on low dose naltrexone (LDN). Not to be confused with LND ;)
Hey Nostr. I keep having to update my status and website URL even though I have the setting set to "never". I'm using Damus on IOS (hi Will Damus). Any advice why my updates don't save permanently?
On Society #It'sOn
Society is inherently a bottoms-up organism. It is alive, sentient, and fractal. Similar to a branch that is just a smaller version of a tree, a tree within a tree if you will, a person is a localized encapsulation of the society that he or she occupies. Our communities are a grassroots effort, created one person at a time. That is why you matter. We all matter regardless of our superficial outward appearances. It is our inner core, our innate value system that is at the heart of the issue. Just because we can't see the forest for the trees, doesn't dilute our minuscule or self-less contribution to society. It all adds up, even if the mathematical operation is not entirely clear. Our coming together to form villages, towns, cities, states or nations is a form of dancing. There are steps, moves, thoughts, wonder, rhythm and blues. If we keep each other, observe the scenery, notice the unassuming, we are capable of harmonizing into a tapestry full of beauty. A gestalt where the sum is indeed greater than its constituent parts. We complement each other and then once seen from a suitable distance, we become worthy of a heartfelt compliment. Sincerity is the true measure of the polite society. It isn't about suppressing our base instincts or inappropriate thoughts underground, never to see the light of day. Rather, it is a natural process of deep knowledge or insight regarding one's own proclivities. An honest measure of a man. Today, we mistake saying things like people can make a difference as being hubristic or grandiose at best, or transacting in pleasant but hallow platitudes at worst. A form of empty gestures to lubricate the crowd or disarm the interlocutor with harmless charm. I can make the argument that this statememt is objectively true, more than we realize. We all know if not consciously but unconsciously, how our society these days is in the grips of the cult of personality. It is not headed in the right direction with nameless figures who build a solid foundation on which we stand. We are just captured in some sort of arbitrary team whether they are political, commercial or cultural through which we interact. Our sight ability is framed by them, these larger-than-life figures, irrespective of the health status of our eyes. This is most obvious, but least visible when it comes to money. The modern city-state is no longer a beacon of prosperity, a shining rock on the hill. Our urban metropolis is but a gloried piedpiper luring the children to sure death in the mines of fiat currency, the dollar-based economy. The longer you work, the harder you have to save; the better you invest, the worst the fall. For life to improve and our world to reset, we must wake up and see the water. Did I lose you, dear reader? Surely you have heard of the viral college speech by David Foster Wallace. In it, he told the now famous joke of the elder fish asking the kiddies, how the water is today? When the elders were gone, the young fish turned to his friends and asked, "what the hell is water?" How do you ensure you are swimming in clean water? How do you know if your environment is healthy? By this I do not mean environmental science and climate change debates. I mean, are you promoting an us versus them world? Is your "religion" zero-sum? In other words, for me to win, you have to lose or vice-versa. Or do you believe in an abundant future, forever better, perpetually additive like a number line set on a course to infinity and beyond? Are you a parent who doesn't run out of love when multiple children are born? Do you possess a never-ending pit of love? My worldview is best described as rising tides lifts all boats. I want a compounding sum total. I want la dolce vita. Not just for me but for the neighbors. In case your mouth has inadvertently formed into a “mother knows best” type of smirk, let it be known that I am not a hapless simpleton. This wish upon the star is not naive or misguided. No, I was not born yesterday or sheltered from the harsh realities of life. It is because of how tough my life has been that I am willing to confront the truth of our current age. We live in a nihilistic swimming pool which promotes a "live today, die tomorrow" mentality. The currency doesn't hold value. We toil endlessly for an un-gratifying weekend break or long overdue vacation only to find we need to earn more to cover our indulgence and makeup for extravagances. In the end, how can I really live well, if others are suffering? How do I enjoy life, if children are crying? How can there be goodness in the world, if evil reign supreme? How deep should we bury our collective heads in the sand to pursue false happiness? I want true happiness. I want to swim in clean waters. Join me in my effort to clean the water. Switch off your TVs, throw out your newspapers, ignore the politicians. Sell your dollars. Buy Bitcoin. Hold it in your own keys for safekeeping. Only then can we finally see straight. Society on.
I find that wrapping my head with a really tight scarf, as if to "choke" off the blood flow really helps. It's a family secret since a bunch of us get migraines often. I heard somewhere that headaches have to do with the speed of blood flow in your vessels but who knows if that's true.
On Style #It'sOn
I once read somewhere that having a large budget or abundant access to the latest fashion counterintuitively leads to a decline in tase or sense of style. Apparently, the very act of having to do more with less, devise a "look" or make-do with last year's staples requires an out-of-the-box thinking and level of creativity that leads to an interminable sense of style. Very reassuring stuff, if you ask me. As someone who can't easily afford designer clothes, let alone be willing to partake in consumer-driven fast fashion trends, I patted myself on the back for having a great sense of fashion out of necessity, not mandate. Did you catch that, dear reader? I was being a bit sarcastic there, but only just a tad. I mean, really. Who declares oneself stylish? Who but a madman or madwoman insists they are a tastemaker? Isn't the proof of the pudding, in is its eating? Don't people have to compliment your presentation or even emulate it before you can announce your arrival as an influencer? Not to brag, but I did have a certified imitator at work once. She would literally go out and buy the same top I wore from H&M albeit in a different color. Black, if memory serves me correctly. I bet she would've worn the same color I wore, white, if the store still had it, so shameless she was about copying me. My then-husband bought me as a gift, a grey suede kitten heel from my favorite shop in London, a one-off designer who makes her shoes by hand. Not to worry, not only did she find a similar shoe on the web no doubt, but proceeded to parade it around the office as if I might have been the one copying her! So obscure a fashion note that was, it was obvious to anyone who cared to look what she was doing. No one said or did anything about her pathology. I began to suspect she had a crush on my boss, a handsome but firmly married man with children. She kept asking me questions about him as if I was his harem’s keeper. For some bizarre reason she must have thought her way to his heart was through my style. I started calling her "single Indian female" in my head, only because she was a first-generation American, with parents from the country of India. Which is sad because we started off being friends, I even ate her mom's homemade samosas, and played a game of tennis on her home grounds. In the end, I had to keep my distance after she began her campaign of terror, trying to supplant me through my clothes. Instead I fell ill and lost my job, almost my life. Scary stuff. There is diminishing returns to "imitation is the sincerest form of flattery". Anyways, let's move on to lighter fare, shall we. I meant to share a bit of gossip to go along with that story. When Selma Hayek married the owner of the French luxury brand LVMH, she, all of a sudden, had access to a dizzying array of wardrobe receptacles such that she became a fixture on the worst-dressed lists in the fashion magazines. Can you believe that? A woman who can actually pull off a potato sack if she wanted to, is all of a sudden advertised as the epitome of what not to wear. Any yet, it was true. The fashion press was ruthless; maybe they were jealous. I don't know, I can't say. I still think Selma can wear just about anything, ma'sh'allah, as we say in Arabic. It translates as "as God willed it to be". Wouldn't want anything to happen to her on my account. Besides, she, like me, is a dog lover. She told the funniest story on the Graham Norton show, on how she admitted to her husband that she had an affair with her hot co-star on a movie set, all made up, of course. She was hoping to distract him from the fact that she had brought home more strays after promising him not to. He was not phased at all and cooly responded the new dogs need to go after her theatrical admission . Now, that's what I call style. The French do have it. My ex-husband did as well. Fear not, dear reader. I am not advocating for designer clothes courtesy of Coco Chanel to capture that sense of "je ne sais quoi". In fact, the opposite is true. Those of us with money or even over-the-top beauty have it the hardest when it comes to style. It can easily breach the domain of the obscene, if you are not too careful. Wearing the latest must-haves and donning the most desirable items of the season is a sucker's game. All it says about you is how captured you are, or how much you are willing to pay a premium to signal to the world, or the fairer sex, you are sexy. So not sexy. What you should do instead is know thyself, as Socrates advocates. The path to true sex appeal is inward and endogenous, not outward or exogenous. Who are you? The Cheshire cat asked Alice when she found herself in the Wonderland. What moves you? What topics do you want to explore? What turns you on? For me, it is Bitcoin. In a way, it has always been Bitcoin before it was discovered. I wanted to know when the future is exactly. Do tell, I asked my Dad at the ripe old age of 5, when he flippantly dismissed me with the typical Arabic response, “in the future”, after asking for something I wanted, most likely a toy? I count that as my very first existential crisis. What do you mean there’s something called the future and I have to wait for it to materialize? I had a very high time preference as a child. Then I wanted to know how things actually worked so I took apart our VCR and put it back together, minus a few screws which I couldn't quite remember where they went. The VCR still worked. Phew, my parents won't kill me; at least not today. When it comes to the screws in my head, I can't be quite so sure. Just like style, you will have to show me. My most vexing question was also to my Dad who worked in the field of international development, when I asked him with a straight face when development? Why hasn't Africa industrialized yet so we can finally go home? I didn't get a satisfying answer, and my Dad died in 1997. His heart gave out on the streets of Nairobi, just hours shy of Valentine's Day. I would like to believe that his heart was in the right place, even if his profession might not have been. Inevitably, I will ask the uncomfortable question, make the obvious gaffe, say the wrong thing. Was it something I said? I find myself asking that question more often than not but thankfully not all the time. Did I do that? Most likely I did, Urkel, and family does matter. I am missing the iconicly over-hiked up suspenders though, just not the suspense. Just in case a normie is reading this, I most definitely do like fashion, fashion magazines, beauty editors and fashion insiders. I have a timechain composed of not Bitcoin, otherwise I could have become a nauseating imbecile already, dressed head-to-toe in Gucci driving an Audi R8. Just kidding, Tom Ford is no longer head designer and I lost that sexy feeling. Rather, I have glossies from most of the countries I have lived in or visited, spanning many years, documenting my life's journey. I almost lost it all during my move from my previous apartment when I was a married woman, to my current abode, a half-way house where I subsist as a divorcee. Other priceless items of my life were permanently lost, including memorabilia from my childhood, mostly of my late father’s. One thing is for sure, I do like a distinct, ever playful, arty-farty even child-like type of style. That's the kind of person I am. Can you tell? That I am my father's daughter. Buyer beware.
On second thought, I think I didn't read it somewhere. I believe it was a throwaway line in the movie Phantom Thread, Daniel Day Lewis's swan song. Our favorite method actor. If you haven't seen it, enjoy.
I thought that Signature bank did not fail.
My understanding is it was solvent but was "choked" by force because it serviced the "crypto" industry. Still, cool post. I spotted my local bank in WI, Norwest, which was bought up by Wells Fargo in the mid-nineties. I still bank with WF. Thank god for Bitcoin.
Whoa! That's some simulation at work. The way I was taught that saying is "war is bad but exciting. Peace is good but dull". It puts a whole new spin to it, right?
Notes by Bitcoinium | export