When you try to reach the top of a building, every step up the stairs doesn’t get you to your destination. Effectively, each time you do a step and don’t reach it, you fail. But this is exactly what you need to do to finally reach it — make enough failed steps until you succeed.
Roman Simon
re4mat0r@nostrz.org
npub1vqfw...awwd
Thinker. Explorer. Speaker. ₿usinessman. Sharing deepest insights from my personal experience.
Selling your genes, tribe, family, nation, children, or future — that’s where the real money hides. That’s why traitors are so rich. 

There’s only one thing you need to understand that will change everything: whatever you feel, think, imagine, fear, or believe is not reality. It’s only a version of reality in your head — most likely distorted, delusional, and inefficient. Yet this fantasy fully controls your life and shapes your future.
On one hand, that’s dangerous, because a weak or destructive illusion can ruin you. But on the other hand, it’s powerful, because once you understand this, you can create a new vision — one so effective it allows you to conquer the world.
Are you ready to become the master of your universe?
— Warrior’s Path 

If you use your car as intended, give it the right fuel, and keep up with maintenance, it will drive and age well.
This post isn’t about cars.
Playing basketball, you can believe you will score, or you can understand it. These two paths lead to completely different lives.
The problem is that people look for ways to delegate their responsibilities. That’s why they need gods, governments, leaders, and communities — to carry the weight they don’t want to bear themselves.
When we look at different animals, we see their differences clearly. No one expects lions to communicate with sheep, or birds to talk with fish or insects and understand each other. But with humans, because we look alike, we assume we can understand each other and expect others to act in ways we accept.
The truth is deeper. Humans are even more different from each other than animals. Animals are simple — they live for survival and reproduction. Humans carry thousands of layers on top of those instincts: cultures, childhood traumas, societal pressures, and influences from others. These layers shape each person into something unique.
That’s why finding someone who is exactly like you, who truly understands you, is almost impossible. This is the root cause of misunderstandings, miscommunication, and broken expectations.
We fail to see the simple truth: humans are even more different than animals. Accept this and start interacting with people as individuals. 

Lions understand how hard it is to catch prey because they do it, but no matter how much they try, they will never explain that struggle to zebras.
For zebras, life is simple — grass is always there, and eating it is easy.
In the same way, most people coast through life withoutmuch struggle, and trying to explain to them how hard you’re working for success is meaningless.
Just do whatever it takes to achieve it, because in the end everyone admires the result.
When zebras see a lion, they don’t question the effort — they just start shaking. 

Life is competition. Whether you accept it or not, the game doesn’t change. Those who are smarter, stronger, and more efficient rise to the top. Those who refuse to play fall behind.
If you resist this truth, you handicap yourself. You won’t sharpen your skills, you won’t adapt, and you won’t win. But the moment you accept reality — that life is competition — everything changes. You start treating growth, efficiency, and strength as necessities, not options. You begin to play with intent.
And once you play with intent, progress accelerates. You become better, sharper, harder to defeat. And that’s when you start winning — not by denying the competition, but by embracing it fully.
— Warrior's Path 

Some people speak noise, others speak wisdom. The difference is usefulness. Information that describes reality, that can be understood, applied, and used to predict outcomes or improve effectiveness, carries value. That’s why it stands apart.
It can appear in any form — a story, a formula, a statement, a film, a documentary, a book. The form doesn’t matter. What matters is whether it sharpens perception of reality and helps action become more effective. When it does, its value is undeniable.
Information that lacks this quality — that doesn’t connect to reality, doesn’t guide, doesn’t improve — fades away, forgotten. The world filters it out, because only what is useful survives.
Salesmen for cheap cars chase clients, argue, and try to prove that what they’re selling is good enough. They rely on persuasion because the product doesn’t speak for itself.
Salesmen for Ferraris don’t need to chase anyone. They don’t need to explain, justify, or convince. They simply drive the car, and its value is self-evident. Those who recognize it come on their own.
People work the same way. If you build yourself into real value — into something rare, powerful, and undeniable — you don’t need to chase or beg for attention. You only need to show up, live it, and let your presence do the talking.
Imagine you own the most powerful computer ever built — the kind of machine capable of decoding the universe, solving problems no one else can, reshaping reality itself. And what do you do with it? You open a browser, scroll endlessly, chat meaninglessly. The machine runs, but its true capacity never awakens.
That’s exactly what happens with most people. You’ve been granted the most powerful “computer” in existence — your mind, your body, your ability to act. Yet if you spend it on trivialities, on distractions, on simple loops of comfort, you waste the very thing that could make your life extraordinary.
The real question is not whether you have power — you do. The question is whether you’re directing it toward the hardest, most meaningful tasks: building, creating, exploring, overcoming, shaping the world. If not, then yes, you’re running the equivalent of “browsing” on a supercomputer. You are alive with infinite potential — are you using it, or are you just letting it idle on simplicity? 

When a computer is idling, nothing useful happens. It doesn’t improve, it doesn’t solve problems, it doesn’t create value — it doesn't gain anything from idling — it simply consumes less energy. If that’s the goal, then idling makes sense — but why keep a machine running only to save energy? The point of turning it on is to use it for meaningful work.
You are the same. You are alive, “turned on”, already consuming energy. To choose rest as a strategy just to preserve that energy is the most inefficient use of your existence. Life isn’t meant to be idled away.
If you direct your energy into the most meaningful actions — into your growth, your purpose, your contribution — then every moment becomes valuable. You progress, you become stronger, and your life impacts others.
Look around: the modern world is not suffering from a shortage of energy. It’s suffering from a shortage of purpose. That’s what makes people idle — machines with power but no meaningful software running. The solution isn’t to save energy. It’s to direct it where it matters. 

What if you were born into chaotic, difficult conditions and were brainwashed by the people around you to adopt an inefficient slave mentality? Can you do anything about it?
You are reading my posts, which means you are already on your way toward progress and freedom.
Your default state right now may be inefficient, but if you decide and truly want it, you can change. You can install new, more efficient software that will help you transform your life. Nothing is predetermined if you are willing to change it.
What is more powerful and useful: a weak computer running highly effective, important software that solves critical tasks, or a very powerful computer idling or running meaningless processes? If we transfer this analogy to humans, is it the hardware — your genes — that determines your future and impact, or is it the software — your mentality?
Wolves and lions don’t get confused with sheep and birds because their appearance alone reveals what they are. But humans look almost the same — you can’t tell a prince from a peasant by looking. If a royal child is lost and raised in poverty, nothing in his appearance will reveal his origin. He will grow up believing he is poor, and the world will treat him that way.
So what defines our place, if not visuals? It is mentality. Humans live not by physical traits but by ideas, beliefs, and recognition. A child can be shaped by the narrative given to him. Raised as a slave, he will think and act like one. Raised as a king, he will think and act like a king. The mind is the battlefield, and childhood is where most battles are lost or won.
This raises the real question: if people can be programmed either way, what do you choose? Would you accept being brainwashed into a slave, obedient and small, or would you take the risk of brainwashing yourself into a prince — into someone with purpose, responsibility, and power? Because once you see that it’s possible, the choice is yours. 

While genetics have their place, they don’t decide everything.
Imagine a prince born into royal blood, but lost from the kingdom and raised by a poor family. No one knows his origin, so he’s treated as any other poor child and grows up as such. His genetics don’t grant him value in the eyes of others — because no one recognizes them.
But if he were raised in the palace, with everyone aware he is the prince, the world would treat him differently, and he himself would grow into that role. The difference is not the genetics, but the recognition and the way both he and others behave because of it.
So what truly defines worth? If you are the lost royal child — or if you simply decide that you are — everything changes the moment you start carrying yourself like one.
The world reacts not to hidden bloodlines, but to how you present yourself, the value you embody, and the way you choose to live.
Genetics may load the weapon, but it’s behavior, awareness, and belief that pull the trigger. 

If you feel like nobody and try to act like someone else just to be accepted, you won’t be very interesting.
But when you understand your uniqueness, recognize your value, and pursue your purpose, everything changes. Your behavior reflects that, and people naturally become interested.
Communicate with anyone and speak from the perspective of uniqueness. If they don’t see your value or aren’t interested, it doesn’t affect you — you keep moving forward.
Yet some will recognize that uniqueness, and they will be drawn to you. This is how you build YOUR circle. Try it. 

The problem with seeking cheap pleasure is that after you get full, you no longer pursue real pleasure.
This is the same issue with cheap food, fake intimacy, meaningless achievements, rationalization, fake praise, or fake love — any false substitute. The more you trade real experience for a fake one, the more you regress and the less satisfied you become with life.
Be smarter. It’s “cheap” only because it steals from your prosperous future.
— Warrior's Path 

We are solving real problems here. Problems that make people's lives miserable. The ones that don't allow you to accept yourself, communicate freely, enjoy your life, be healthy, find love, become financially independent, and be free.
— Warrior's Path 
