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Roman Simon
re4mat0r@nostrz.org
npub1vqfw...awwd
Thinker. Explorer. Speaker. ₿usinessman. Sharing deepest insights from my personal experience.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
When someone says "I believe", I disengage, and stop communicating.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
If you are not where you want to be, there is something you don't understand. Find it and you may change everything.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Correcting problems and growing is actually much easier than defending your mistakes and delusions. Fear just holds you back. Ok, I have been wrong, and now what? Nothing. Laugh at me as much as you want, I am moving forward...
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
What most people try to avoid isn’t pain — it’s embarrassment. When you walk into the gym for the first time, you’re not afraid of pain, you’re afraid of people. You’re worried that, as a newbie, you might embarrass yourself. Experienced lifters feel far more pain than you do, and it doesn’t stop them. This happens everywhere — in business, communication, relationships, learning. And the best part is that the problem is completely imaginary. It exists only in your mind. People rarely ridicule others for incompetence. And even if they do, it doesn’t actually harm you — the real attack happens later, when you punish yourself mentally for it. Talking to strangers and stumbling, shying away, or freezing isn’t harmful unless you beat yourself up for it. Failing in business usually isn’t dangerous either. Asking questions and appearing incompetent is safe too. The moment you stop punishing yourself for “embarrassment” is the moment your life changes — when you finally start accelerating toward the life you truly want. — Warrior's Path
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
People want to prove to themselves that their beliefs are right. This is why they argue with others. Not to understand, not to learn, but to rationalize their misery.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
A bird’s advice about flying would be “just fly”, but it’s not that simple. You can follow this advice only if you’re a bird — anyone else wouldn’t be able to fly this way. This happens in many areas of life — people who are made for something share their routines, but most others can’t follow them. And it’s not about mindset either — no amount of mindset work will help a fish to fly. What’s missing here is understanding. We need to understand who we are and what we want — not just try to copy popular influencers which will lead to a failure. Everyone is unique, and we need to experiment to find what truly works. That’s where mind work becomes important. Building an effective mindset allows you to understand yourself, decide what you want, and experiment — progressing and winning. — Warrior’s Path image
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Wow. Most AI agents already refuse to discuss "controversial" topics. They just state I can't discuss that. Absolute censorship is almost here 😬
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Wow. Most AI agents already refuse to discuss "controversial" topics. They just state I can't discuss that. Absolute censorship is almost here 😬
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
"Eat protein" is a bad advice. Broccoli has 2.7g of protein, is eating lots of it a good health advice? No. Humans need to eat meat. Not protein. Meat!
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Humans are incredibly adaptable. We can use any resources available in any environment and make things work. And while that’s an amazing ability, it also creates confusion. You can eat different foods and still be healthy. You can train in many ways and still be fit. You can communicate differently and still be good at it. You can run your business in unusual ways and still make money. But not all methods are equally effective. Some people draw wrong conclusions from this. A man who walks from one city to another may claim walking is the best way to travel. Another who rides a bicycle may say the same about cycling. Just because something works doesn’t make it the most efficient. There are always more effective ways — always. But efficiency isn’t universal; it depends on many factors. If you want to become truly effective, start small, experiment, and progress through trying different things. The more you explore and adjust, the more you understand — and the more effective you become. — Warrior's Path
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Cowardice is the reason of most problems. Bravery is the solution.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
A bird thrown into water won’t start swimming, it will come out and fly away.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
A slow person runs 10km/h and a fast one — 30km/h. It's a 3 times difference. An airplane flies 700km/h — 70x difference. Sometimes it's not about how hard you work, but how smart you are.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Trying to build a house only by using a hammer won't end well no matter how hard you are nailing.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
Running harder and faster won't get you into New York from Paris, an airplane will. It's not always about hard work — sometimes it about leverage and technology.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
"Train hard for 5 years and become jacked" is not sexy. "Take this pill and become muscular" is. But reality doesn't care about your preferences, only about your investment.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
You don't make lots of money by working hard your entire life. You make it by understanding money.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
What we are trying to hide with all the distractions, luxury toys, status symbols, and other meaningless things, is our cowardice. Bravery is the ultimate flex.
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Roman Simon 4 months ago
What is the one most important thing that can change your life for the better the most?