Women are weaker than men. Why? Because evolutionarily it was more effective to divide tribal life into roles — one requiring strength, such as hunting and fighting, and one requiring nurturing, such as creating and raising children.
Men are closer to rough nature. Women are closer to soft infants. It worked more effectively that way.
Roman Simon
re4mat0r@nostrz.org
npub1vqfw...awwd
Thinker. Explorer. Speaker. ₿usinessman. Sharing deepest insights from my personal experience.
You can enjoy life when you’re in an environment you’re suited to and accustomed to living in. But if you want to level up, you can’t enjoy it right away — you’ll be stressed, worried, scared, and tired until your body and mind adapt. Then, once you’ve become suited to the new environment, you can enjoy life there… until you decide to level up again. It's either progress or enjoyment.
[Shooting the communication masterclass for Warrior's Path] 

How do people decide whether to trust someone? Most have no clue how the world works, so their only option is to rely on feelings. They listen to someone and then simply feel like trusting them or not. This is where most delusions and deceptions live.
"To get stressed less in the gym and make it easier..."
You’re missing the point — you go to the gym to get stressed more and make it hard.
"To make your life easier you need money..."
Again, missing the point — you understand life and conquer it by swimming in shit, not in honey.
Never set a goal to make anything easier. Aim to explore, understand, and level up. That’s when life gets exciting.
People love the idea of voting and will defend it because it gives them a feeling of choice and freedom. Unfortunately for them, the system is set up so that elections change nothing, as everyone in politics is sponsored by the same money. Whoever gets elected, the banksters win.
When a professional guitarist explains how to play the guitar effectively, you probably won’t fully agree with or feel comfortable about everything they say — simply because you’re not a professional guitarist.
Your skills, experience, and understanding are far below theirs, and some of their advice may contradict your beliefs or habits.
As a beginner, your perspective is limited, making it hard to accept insights from someone at a much higher skill level.
For instance, a professional guitarist might insist that holding the pick or positioning your hand in a certain way — though initially uncomfortable — is necessary for high-level playing.
As a novice, you might find their advice unnatural or even wrong, simply because it conflicts with your current comfort zone or limited knowledge.
This exact dynamic applies equally to other fields of life. When someone who is exceptionally good at business gives you strategies that contradict your current practices or intuition, you’re likely to feel uneasy or skeptical.
A financially successful individual explaining how to build wealth might challenge your existing financial beliefs and spending habits, causing discomfort or disbelief.
Similarly, when a philosopher or someone deeply wise in life gives you insights about existence, purpose, or happiness, you may instinctively resist their perspective if it challenges your existing worldview.
Even health advice from a true expert — such as recommending difficult dietary or lifestyle changes — can seem uncomfortable or hard to accept.
This discomfort and disagreement are precisely why most people don’t learn, don’t grow, and don’t progress.
Instead of openly receiving superior information, most people immediately reject it if it doesn’t align with what they already think or feel.
They choose the comfort of familiar misconceptions rather than the discomfort of confronting better and truer knowledge.
Growth always involves discomfort because new insights inherently challenge our existing views and habits.
If you genuinely want to progress, you must learn to accept that true experts will often tell you things that feel wrong or uncomfortable at first.
But that discomfort is a signal of growth. Embrace it, question your own beliefs, test their advice through direct experience, and watch yourself grow.
You don't need money to be happy. Happiness comes when you conquer yourself and your world. All the hardships are gifts from the universe to make it happen.
One sheep on the farm told the others that if it became the shepherd, everything on the farm would be great. All the sheep would be happy and free, there would be no sheepdogs or fences, and the wolves would be gone.
You don’t have a lot of money because you can’t handle it.
BELIEF, KNOWLEDGE, UNDERSTANDING
These are the three fundamental levels through which we interact with reality.
Each represents a different depth of connection with the truth, and each stage builds upon and eventually replaces the one before it.
1. BELIEF — The first layer of reality
Belief is the weakest and most superficial level of interacting with the world. It requires no personal experience and no direct observation. Instead, it relies entirely on accepting what others say — parents, teachers, religions, media, or culture.
When you believe, you are trusting someone else's version of reality without verification.
For example, a child might believe the Earth is round simply because a teacher said so. They’ve never seen the Earth from space or studied the evidence. They just trust the information because of the source.
Most people stay in the belief stage for most of their lives — they believe what they’re told about politics, health, success, relationships, or even themselves. And because they never verify anything, they can be easily manipulated.
2. KNOWLEDGE — second-hand interaction
Knowledge goes deeper. It is no longer blind belief. It is based on evidence, reasoning, and information passed on from other people.
At this level, you’re not just believing something — you can explain it, provide data, argue for it, and show some proof. But it still relies on intermediaries.
For example, a student who reads about gravity, studies equations, and knows about the experiments of Newton and Einstein, has knowledge.
They can calculate how fast something falls and why. But they haven’t conducted the experiments themselves — they’re using the experiences of others.
Knowledge is powerful but still limited. It can be wrong. It can be outdated. And it can be misunderstood. If your entire knowledge of relationships comes from books and videos, you may "know" a lot, but still fail when dealing with real people.
3. UNDERSTANDING — direct experience
Understanding is the deepest level. It’s what happens when you live through something, when you see it with your own eyes, feel it in your own body, and draw conclusions from raw reality.
For example, you may believe fasting is healthy. You may know the scientific benefits of fasting. But you only truly understand fasting when you’ve actually done it — when you’ve faced the hunger, the mental shifts, the physical changes, and the emotional rollercoaster. That’s understanding.
Another example: You may believe success requires hard work. You may know business principles. But until you’ve built a business from scratch, failed, lost money, dealt with people, and finally succeeded — you don’t understand what success really takes.
Understanding discards belief and replaces knowledge. When you understand something deeply, you no longer need to say "I believe" or "I know" — you understand. It changes how you move through life.
The goal of growth is to move from belief to understanding — in every area of life. Only then are you truly awake and in control.
Masculinity = high testosterone.
When you are masculine and engage in masculine activities — challenging yourself and others, doing hard things, staying physically active, and conquering the world — your testosterone rises.
Likewise, when you have high testosterone, you naturally want to do these activities.
Which came first, the chicken or the egg?
Sheepdogs aren’t there to defend the sheep from wolves — they’re there to boss them around and scare them into obedience.
This post is not about sheep.
In wild nature, there is no "work" in the way humans define it. No wolf lifts weights to get stronger. No tree practices to grow taller. Everything follows its natural impulse — survival, reproduction, expansion — without internal resistance.
But humans are different. We are not fully natural anymore. We’ve built systems — society, comfort, safety nets — that remove us from raw nature. In this artificial environment, instincts get dulled, bodies get soft, minds get lazy. So the path back to strength, clarity, and excellence feels like "work" because it goes against what the system has trained us to do — obey, consume, relax, blend in.
Most people reject the concept of "doing the work". It’s because they want to stay natural inside an unnatural world — which leads to weakness, mediocrity, and suffering.
But the truth is this:
The work only feels artificial until you become natural again.
When you strip away junk food, screens, fake emotion, and noise — and reconnect with challenge, silence, danger, and real effort — you stop "doing work" and start living.
Nature doesn’t "do work", it IS the work. 

Do you believe that just because you live in a civilized society, you don’t need to race your Ferrari at maximum speed, or use your body’s maximum strength and agility, your intellect, your creativity, and your willpower? 

If you need women to become successful, you need to grow up.
People who know the system’s narrative well and can communicate with others become successful. They are just as delusional as everyone else, though.
Sheep are not allowed to be violent toward each other. Only shepherds and sheepdogs can be violent.
I don't like pleasure. I don't like comfort. I don't like entertainment, safety, stability, predictability, and ease either. What do I like? Challenge! Exploration. Communication. Progress. Greatness. 

When you are on junk food, it's like when you don't have legs and are in a wheelchair — there's no motivation and energy to do great things.
Sheep are doing whatever they like — eating, shitting, sleeping — and enjoying themselves most of the time. Sometimes they’re bossed around by the shepherd or the sheepdog, but that’s nothing. Isn’t it real freedom?