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marabara

@marabara

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"Goodness does not declare itself as good. When the darkness breaks and dawn arrives, we simply realize that the sun has risen. Goodness has no name."
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Rule number one is: Don’t sweat the small stuff. Rule number two is: It’s all small stuff. And if you can’t fight it, and it’s going to happen anyway, you might as well try to enjoy it. — Robert S. Eliot
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Ratifying @procoin governance
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5000 👏
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5000 👏
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積善之家 必有餘慶, 積惡之家 必有餘殃 A household that accumulates good deeds is left with blessings, while a household that accumulates evil is left with misfortune. The I Ching tells us— its effects transcend generations, reaching even the descendants. Doing good or evil is like making regular deposits in a bank. At first, nothing seems to change, but one day, with time— the interest returns like a massive wave. 📖 Note: "積善之家 必有餘慶" is a phrase from the I Ching, recorded in the Wenyan (Commentary) on the Kun Hexagram. "積惡之家 必有餘殃" is a moral expansion added in later generations. The original text reads: "積不善之家 必有餘殃".
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11000 👏
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11000 👏
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🎲 The Monty Hall Dilemma 🎯 The Setup You're on a quiz show with 3 doors: 🚪 Door 1 🚪 Door 2 🚪 Door 3 One hides a car 🚗, the others have goats 🐐. 👣 How It Works You pick a door (e.g., Door 1). Monty opens another door showing a goat (e.g., Door 3). He asks: "Would you like to switch?" 🤔 Common Misconception “Now it’s 50:50, so switching doesn’t matter.” 📊 Probability Car behind your pick: 1/3 Car behind one of the others: 2/3 Monty reveals a goat → the unopened door now has a 2/3 chance. ✅ Conclusion Switching increases your chances. 💡 Takeaway People are more sensitive to loss than to gain, so they tend to stick with their initial choice out of fear of switching and being wrong. But intuition often misleads us— and the Monty Hall dilemma is a perfect example of that. That’s why we must learn to doubt our instincts and build a habit of trusting logic and probability instead.
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🍕 A Slice of the Future — The Legend of the Bitcoin Pizza On January 3rd, 2009, a quiet figure named Satoshi Nakamoto planted a digital seed. That seed was called Bitcoin. At first, no one understood it. For over a year, people simply watched. Then on March 17th, 2010, Bitcoin was traded online for the first time— worth just $0.003 per coin. “Real money for internet numbers?” But the real story began on May 22nd, 2010. A hungry programmer named Laszlo offered 10,000 BTC in exchange for two pizzas. He got them. And history was made— the first real-world purchase with Bitcoin. No one knew that those two pizzas would one day be worth over $1.1 billion. Now, we call it Bitcoin Pizza Day. Laszlo? He says he doesn’t regret a thing. He was just hungry— and the world hadn’t woken up yet. And so we remember: World-changing things often begin quietly— sometimes with nothing more than a pizza.
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In the silence before dawn, the child who rises first does not merely wake the day— they awaken their life.
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800 👏
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Human relationships begin with a single desire— the longing to be acknowledged. So "ally" and "enemy" are not divided by right or wrong, but by whether someone recognizes you or dismisses you. We connect with others more through emotion than reason. It’s not the correctness of words that moves us, but the respect carried within them that opens our hearts. So treat people with sincerity. Empathy runs deeper than logic, and respect lasts longer than being right.
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4800 👏
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In 1951, psychologist Solomon Asch conducted an experiment in which participants were asked to match the length of lines—a simple task—while a planted group deliberately gave incorrect answers. The results showed that 34% consistently conformed to the group’s wrong answers, 25% remained completely independent, and 41% shifted between conformity and independence depending on the situation. This experiment revealed that even in the face of obvious truth, human judgment can be distorted by group pressure. Social pressure is powerful enough to blur our perception of reality, and without critical thinking and inner courage, anyone can be led down the wrong path. Thus, we must learn this: the courage to follow truth, and the strength to hold onto our thoughts—even in silence.
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Those who shout that progressivism is virtue or conservatism is truth reveal only this— that they themselves are neither. The world is simpler than we make it. It is not the loudest, but the wisest— the thoughtful halves of left and right— who carry history forward, hand in hand. And when we come to know this quiet truth, we no longer meet difference with hatred, but greet it with respect.
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138 👏
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777 👏
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777 👏
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777 👏
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