Do you think it stops??
So many ppls learn or stay in university not because it's their passion, not because it had a better opportunity, not because it pays you well ....but because people or families expect you to honor them. Wearing gawon , receiving a paper from professor , bringing degree or masters to their home, that family became an icon for the community around....but what do u get from this?
Do you think it stops there. Ur family decide your name , race, mindset, what you love ,what you learn, who you marry to and when you marry(especially for girls), when to have kids, how u become rich (there not rich yet they wanna teach you abt money), how to live a better life(most of them don't , they live in illusion). How can we believe that. At last we blame ourselves cause we trust untrustworthy become disappointed then repeate the loop to the next generation. You must love your family but trust them with no logic bruv ur cooked.
So many ppls learn or stay in university not because it's their passion, not because it had a better opportunity, not because it pays you well ....but because people or families expect you to honor them. Wearing gawon , receiving a paper from professor , bringing degree or masters to their home, that family became an icon for the community around....but what do u get from this?
Do you think it stops there. Ur family decide your name , race, mindset, what you love ,what you learn, who you marry to and when you marry(especially for girls), when to have kids, how u become rich (there not rich yet they wanna teach you abt money), how to live a better life(most of them don't , they live in illusion). How can we believe that. At last we blame ourselves cause we trust untrustworthy become disappointed then repeate the loop to the next generation. You must love your family but trust them with no logic bruv ur cooked.
Follow ur passion not expectations and family. At least you would take responsibilities for your action.
I keep forgotten to post abt my gym lately
Chest day from
8:30 -10:00
Chest day from
8:30 -10:00
Take a look at some of the most. powerful, rich, and famous people in the world. Ignore the trappings of their success and what they’re able to buy. Look instead at what they’re forced to trade in return—look at what success has cost them.
Mostly? Freedom. Their work demands they wear a suit. Their success depends on attending certain parties, kissing up to people they don’t like. It will require—inevitably—realizing they are unable to say what they actually think. Worse, it demands that they become a different type of person or do bad things.
Sure, it might pay well—but they haven’t truly examined the transaction. As Seneca put it, “Slavery resides under marble and gold.” Too many successful people are prisoners in jails of their own making. Is that what you want? Is that what you’re working hard toward? Let’s hope not.
Mostly? Freedom. Their work demands they wear a suit. Their success depends on attending certain parties, kissing up to people they don’t like. It will require—inevitably—realizing they are unable to say what they actually think. Worse, it demands that they become a different type of person or do bad things.
Sure, it might pay well—but they haven’t truly examined the transaction. As Seneca put it, “Slavery resides under marble and gold.” Too many successful people are prisoners in jails of their own making. Is that what you want? Is that what you’re working hard toward? Let’s hope not.
A Scientist Says Humans Will Reach the Singularity Within 20 Years
An American computer scientist-turned-futurist, Kurzweil has long believed that humanity is headed toward what’s known as “the singularity,” when man and machine merge. In 1999, Kurzweil theorized that artificial general intelligence would be achieved once humanity could achieve a technology capable of a trillion calculations per second, which he pegged to occur in 2029.
Experts at the time scoffed at the idea, figuring it’d be at least a century or more, but with Kurzweil’s timeline only a few years off—and talk of AGI spreading—that decades-old prediction is beginning to loom large.
An American computer scientist-turned-futurist, Kurzweil has long believed that humanity is headed toward what’s known as “the singularity,” when man and machine merge. In 1999, Kurzweil theorized that artificial general intelligence would be achieved once humanity could achieve a technology capable of a trillion calculations per second, which he pegged to occur in 2029.
Experts at the time scoffed at the idea, figuring it’d be at least a century or more, but with Kurzweil’s timeline only a few years off—and talk of AGI spreading—that decades-old prediction is beginning to loom large.
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
Some one share this with me and am shocked.
Thinking I should dig a little bit abt jizia(taxation) for JEWS and CHRISTIANS🤔🤔
CUTTING BACK ON THE COSTLY
“So, concerning the things we pursue, and for which we vigorously exert ourselves, we owe this consideration—either there is nothing useful in them, or most aren’t useful. Some of them are superfluous, while others aren’t worth that much. But we don’t discern this and see them as free, when they cost us dearly.”
—SENECA, MORAL LETTERS, 42.
“So, concerning the things we pursue, and for which we vigorously exert ourselves, we owe this consideration—either there is nothing useful in them, or most aren’t useful. Some of them are superfluous, while others aren’t worth that much. But we don’t discern this and see them as free, when they cost us dearly.”
—SENECA, MORAL LETTERS, 42.
Of Seneca’s many letters, this is probably one of the most important—and one of the least understood.
He’s making a point that goes unheard in a society of ever-bigger houses and ever more possessions:that there’s a hidden cost to all that accumulating. And the sooner we’re aware of it, the better.
Remember: even what we get for free has a cost, if only in what we pay to store it—in our garages
and in our minds. As you walk past your possessions today, ask yourself: Do I need this? Is it
superfluous? What’s this actually worth? What is it costing me?
You might be surprised by the answers and how much we’ve been paying without even knowing it.
He’s making a point that goes unheard in a society of ever-bigger houses and ever more possessions:that there’s a hidden cost to all that accumulating. And the sooner we’re aware of it, the better.
Remember: even what we get for free has a cost, if only in what we pay to store it—in our garages
and in our minds. As you walk past your possessions today, ask yourself: Do I need this? Is it
superfluous? What’s this actually worth? What is it costing me?
You might be surprised by the answers and how much we’ve been paying without even knowing it.
Forwarded from AstroSpark Alliance
🌍Fun Fact: In 1964, Zambia tried to launch a human to the Moon before the USA and USSR! 🇿🇲
A high school science teacher named Edward Makuka Nkoloso created the “Zambian Space Program” using oil drums as training capsules!
A high school science teacher named Edward Makuka Nkoloso created the “Zambian Space Program” using oil drums as training capsules!
😄 It didn’t make it to space, but it made history as Africa’s bold dream!
https://news.1rj.ru/str/boost/AstroSparkAlliance
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How you wanna be remembered as??
As the time passes by I realized
#Logic is the most beautiful thing we humans ever came up with.
#Logic is the most beautiful thing we humans ever came up with.
Because it’s the only common ground we have to agree or disagree. It’s tough to talk to people who just follow anything blindly, without logic. But if what you do or believe is truly based on logic, you can win anyone’s heart.(whose not blind)