HODL

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HODL
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A new world is struggling to be born.
Been shooting a ton of 35mm film lately. It’s so much better than digital photography. It really takes me back to a specific time and place. I love only having 36 shots per roll and having to be patient and wait for the right moment. Shooting less. Being contemplative. It’s like a meditation for me. And the photos are magical. Digital will never be able to replace the chemical reaction of light meeting silver halide. image
So you got rich on bitcoin? Neat! Pick your new rich guy quest. - bang whores in Miami - run for political office - start collecting cars - TRT and gym life - caribbean island political dissident - Puerto Rican shitcoin trader - family time - ranch in Wyoming - start a podcast - continue shitposting
Seems obvious but worth the reminder that your thoughts, language, and behaviors are deeply interconnected and by becoming aware of the sequence language ➡️ thought ➡️ action you can modify unhelpful habits and strengthen useful ones.
Why do we have so many hysterical people in society today? If you look at old news footage even 20-30 years ago most of the time people are relatively chill. If you go 100 years back people are reallyyyy chill, just like “then I was in the war and I killed 100 men, then I was shot through the left eye, then I came home and married my high school sweetheart but she died due to diphtheria. Then I got in a car crash and lost both my legs, but overall I can’t complain” It’s actually pretty rare to see someone overwhelmed to the point of hysterical shrieking, yet on the internet it’s extremely common place. I don’t think this is because life is harder now. If anything, it’s objectively easier, safer, and more comfortable than at almost any other point in history. What has changed is how emotion is rewarded. Today, emotional dysregulation gets attention, validation, amplification, and sometimes even status. Calm, restraint, and proportional reactions don’t go viral. Hysteria does. Outrage does. Collapse does. We’ve also externalized resilience. Instead of learning how to regulate discomfort internally, people are taught that every emotional spike deserves immediate external response agreement, soothing, outrage on their behalf. So you end up with a culture where being overwhelmed isn’t a temporary state to move through, it’s an identity to perform. And once hysteria becomes a social currency, you start seeing a lot more of it.
Imagine two armies fighting for control of an area. There’s an impenetrable fortress in the middle and where you can wait out the war. It will keep you completely safe, but you don’t know how long you will have to wait inside. This is hodling.