"If you are wondering what to do, just listen.". - Allan Watts
GM
I've been tinkering with this idea for a few days now—hoping to have it polished and ready for you all to read by this weekend. Sneak peak below In a world overflowing with gadgets, new cars, flat-screen TVs, and more, I've noticed something peculiar about human behavior: we treat our mass-produced items like priceless artifacts in a museum. We encase our smartphones in bulky cases, slap on screen protectors, apply thin films to our laptops, park brand-new cars under covers to avoid a single bird dropping, and even shrink-wrap TVs in storage to preserve that factory-fresh shine—all in the name of maintaining that "mint condition". But why? And more importantly, what does this say about our priorities when we often neglect the one irreplaceable asset we've had since day one—our bodies? This got me pondering: why lavish meticulous care on our possessions while treating our bodies with casual indifference?Let's unpack the "how" and "why" of our curator-like devotion to objects, blending psychological biases, economic incentives, and cultural norms. Then, I'll invert the lens: if we zealously shield replaceable gadgets, why do we neglect the truly irreplaceable—our bodies? Yet here's the twist: not every culture idolizes flawlessness. Some revere the grace of wear, and embracing that philosophy for our lives could unlock deeper fulfillment.
Is there a Nostr wallet or mobile app that securely stores my nsec (private key) on my phone? Ideally, it would allow me to log in to other Nostr clients/apps by simply scanning a QR code with my phone, without ever having to share or manually type my nsec.
GM You know the drill Go move
GM Go move Don't let bad weather stop you
GN Reality is a projection of your thoughts or the things you habitually think about
Highly recommend this read - The Waves" by Ken Liu “The Waves” is a masterclass in braided storytelling: hard sci-fi, ancient myth, and the ache of human longing all crash together like tides on an endless shore. The novella opens aboard the Sea Foam, where passengers face a choice: stay mortal, gene-edit for longevity, or upload into a collective AI. Liu intercuts their transhuman odyssey with creation myths retold in Maggie’s voice—Greek (Chaos birthing Gaia), Mayan (the Hero Twins and the maize god), Australian Aboriginal (the Rainbow Serpent carving rivers)—each tale refracted through the lens of the era that retells it. When humanity ascends to godhood, shedding time itself, the story doesn’t end in triumph—it loops. The ultimate beings, now pure pattern, feel a tug of nostalgia for beginning. They seed a new universe, deliberately forgetting their own history so that fresh myths can rise. The last line is a gut-punch: the gods choose mortality again, just to taste the salt of a story that can still surprise them. Read it twice—once for the science, once for the myths humming underneath. Two year ago I wrote Yugas, Pyramids and Bitcoin, Drawing from ancinet hindu mytholgy, mordern technolgoy then a ficitionall singularity The text explores Hindu concepts of Kali Yuga (current age of decline, lasting until 428,899 CE) and Kalki Yuga, linking them to humanity's technological trajectory, including devices like Apple Vision Pro, Neuralink, synthetic embryos, and bioweapons, potentially leading to a loss of human essence and a shift from 3D to 2D existence (binary, computer-like reality without matter or present time).It draws parallels between ancient pyramids—as enduring structures with hidden secrets and proof-of-work—and Bitcoin's protocol, which embeds numerological patterns like 3, 6, and 9, suggesting Bitcoin as a "digital pyramid" for future 2D beings, possibly built by 3D ancestors.The author speculates on lost civilizations or dimensions, mind-body dualism (echoing Neuralink via the pineal gland), and the possibility of transcending to 4D through enlightenment, while embracing Bitcoin as a tool for truth in this downward path.
GM Go Move Today I dint feel like moving, but forced myself and got it done
@YakiHonne guys used page after over year must the UX has improved quite a bit ... Keep up the great work Onward