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Daniel Batten
Dsbatten@nostrich.love
npub13lky...lpsy
I like turning waste into power. Landfill gas. Eroding currencies. The human potential. danielbatten.co
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dsbatten 1 year ago
One of my clients coaches the CEOs and leadership teams of brand name companies and also a state governor. Last week he came to Costa Rica for three day to do some intensive one on one work with me. He had a list of plans to work through, but my intuition was telling me “Nah. He doesn’t know it, but what he needs is some breathwork.” So we spent 80% of the time on the breathwork and then afterwards he found he knew most of the answers on his year planning anyway, so we just crystallised a few things. We just got on a debrief call I asked how his week had been. He said this: “My meditations are more intense, deeper, and can go into it faster. I'm calmer. It's like everything has a new color in the world and My perceptions with other people are heightened. I can notice energy when someone's energy is "off" but I also feel free from the need to try to change that.. When someone in my team didn't complete a job the way I'd intended I found I didn't feel let down or angry or disappointed any more, I could see my part better too - where I hadn't communicated clearly. I knew what to do so that we corrected things without him feeling he'd failed. It's strange, it's like I'm trying to understand my new superpower. People have been asking me "Aren't your tired?" I have been telling everyone "No I'm so energized! Even after after 4 back to back long flights."” I’ve been teaching breathwork using SKY breathing (Art of Liviing) and I never get tired of hearing feedback like this. Breathwork and meditation is a lot like bitcoin. Most people don’t use it, most people don’t think they need it, most people are looking for solutions around the edges without seeing the root cause, but it’s the best of its kind.
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dsbatten 1 year ago
People have been asking me to open source the ways I’ve used to orangepill the large swathe of people who have swallowed the FUD and have environmental / “it’s used by criminals” type reservations about bitcoin. This is most of the early majority. AKA: the next wave of adopters. This week I finally was able to clear some space and write it up, so here it is. Enjoy!
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dsbatten 1 year ago
It’s a great project. And I know a few plebs have done something similar. Anyone else here on Nostr had experiences using miners to heat their home during the winter months in the way described below? View quoted note →
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dsbatten 1 year ago
Issue #21 of the Bitcoin ESG Forecast is out: "Game Theory Begins" Check your email and spam folders. 👇 www.batcoinz.com/p/021-game-theory-begins image
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dsbatten 1 year ago
Happy ending. Earlier today Environment America put up an article called "Bitcoin’s purposeless power problem" which was full of defunded claims about Bitcoin’s environmental impact. They have now removed their article from their site after I wrote to them pointing out numerous factual errors, with citations and data. image
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dsbatten 1 year ago
Bitcoin can give many freedoms. And … the highest freedoms, Bitcoin cannot give you. No asset or technology can. You can have all the self-custódiese Bitcoin, but … If your mind continually from past events, to future plans, and you are unable to have it stay anchored in the present, then you are not free If you get triggered and your emotions are decided by the words of others, then you are not free If you get irate and frustrated whenever someone criticises bitcoin then you are not free If you have many unrealised desires and ambitions that you believe you need to be fulfilled before you can be content, then you are not free. If your mind gets unsettled when events do not go the way you want without delays or imperfections etc, then you are not free If while maintaining money, you fear losing it in the future, then you are not free If you feel fear when you lose some money or resources from your life, then you are not free If after realising one financial goal you feel compelled to quickly set a bigger one, then you are not free.
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dsbatten 1 year ago
The final rabbit hole is consciousness
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dsbatten 1 year ago
I don’t have time not to meditate
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dsbatten 1 year ago
Over 2000 views in the 4 days since this went up If you know anyone who still believes Bitcoin is anything other than positive for the environment, and has a spare 27 mins to have their beliefs challenges, this is the video to send them.
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dsbatten 1 year ago
A short story about letting go, Bitcoin, and fate. How did this happen ??? Today, I'm living in Costa Rica, consulting to some of the world's top Bitcoin companies, asked to speak at conferences around the world on Bitcoin mining, and regarded as one of the key forces behind the narrative shift on Bitcoin and the environment. Til now, I've not shared the story of how this happened. My ego would love to say "I planned it", or say it was because of some special unique qualities in me. Neither are true. Sure I'm pretty good at analysing data. I'm also pretty good at communicating it back to people in a way that's meaningful. But there are people much better at both of those things than me. So here's what really happened. It was lock-down 3.0, 2020. Unable to go anywhere or do much, I went on an online meditation retreat. During that retreat I got an insight "reconnect with your friend Willy". I did. It turned out in the 5 years since we'd chatted, he'd become a globally respected Bitcoin analyst. We chatted like no time had passed. I asked how he'd made the shift from running tech companies to researching Bitcoin. He shared his story "I had 2 months spare, and a burning question about Bitcoin, and I just kept researching it until I got the answer." Because of that, this happened. It was early 2022. Bitcoin was getting hammered in the press for its environmental impact. It was reported to have been banned in China, and Telsa had ditched it, both citing environmental concerns. I held a small amount, and was on the point of ditching it too. But just before I did, I had a chance conversation with Vlatko, an environmentalist entrepreneur who'd started a climatetech company I'd invested in. He suggested I research it deeper before making the decision. As I sat down to meditate that evening, Willy's words invaded my tranquility "I had 2 months spare, and a burning question about Bitcoin, and I just kept researching it until I got the answer." That's when the second insight came: I needed to do the same. I cleared my diary and did something I'd never done: I researched for no other purpose than to get an answer. I worked long hours. I didn't eat much. I lost weight. I hunted down every piece of data I could about renewable energy, how grids worked, climate change, methane mitigation, Bitcoin mining, Bitcoin mining economics. I read the articles for and against Bitcoin. Then I spoke to renewable energy engineers, people actually doing Bitcoin mining, climate scientists, and grid experts. I extrapolated trendlines. I drew charts. I tested theories. I questioned sources. Everything led to the same conclusion: Bitcoin mining, as with other disruptive technologies in their first years, had been poorly understood (and on occasions gaslit), yet it would likely follow the same trend as solar to become a net positive to the environment. In fact not only that, it had the potential to become the most fast-acting form of climatetech the world had seen. All the other technologies we were investing in would have an impact after 2030. But this could have a substantial positive impact immediately on reducing methane emissions and building out the grid renewably. Then something unexpected happened: the week after I finished my research, GreenpeaceUSA kicked off an environmental campaign against Bitcoin. As a subscriber to Greenpeace, and someone who'd participated in actions with them shoulder to shoulder I was surprised. So I read the logic behind their campaign to see what they had discovered that I might have missed. My heart sank. They quoted studies that had been debunked, and were taking a one-sided view. It was clear they had not done even 5% of the research I just had, but rather had relied for the most part on some questionable accounts written by mainstream journalists, and the work of a certain central bank employee who’s models I had found lacked scientific integrity. I felt this strong intuitive voice inside me say “you should write a response”. Logically I didn’t see any point. I had no active followers to speak of. And the last time I’d used Twitter was a decade ago where I would regularly get one “like” per ten tweets if I was lucky. So I wrote a response on Twitter. I pointing out the errors in GreenpeaceUSA’s messaging. That one tweet changed everything. The post received over 600,000 views. I was asked to appear on two podcasts, and I was instantly connected to a global community of environmentalists, climate scientists, philosophers and renewable energy experts I didn’t know existed who, like me, had researched Bitcoin really thoroughly and realized it was an environmental net-positive. There was one thing that sat uncomfortably with me though. Bitcoin was, or seemed to be, using a disproportionately high amount of fossil fuel. This made me reluctant to advocate too strongly for Bitcoin mining. But then, another intuition came: a very precise intuition “The Cambridge model that everyone relies on is not factoring in offgrid mining. That’s causing it to overstate how much fossil fuel Bitcoin uses.” Yes, it wasn’t brilliant analysis, or research. It was a simple intuition I had that I followed. I still remember sharing “the Cambridge model does not factor in offgrid mining” with a twitter group I was part of. It was an out-of-character thing for me to say. I had no evidence for this statement. But I shared it nonetheless. And thank goodness I did. A day later, a member of that group said “You’re right”. He’d trawled through the Cambridge website and found in the fineprint of their methodology section an acknowledgement that offgrid mining was excluded. But not only that, they also excluded “methane mitigation”. I was amazed. Buoyed by the fact my intuition had been accurate, I decided to do something crazy, that I never would have done if I’d known how much work was involved. I decided to build a ground-up transparent model of Bitcoin mining, which used their data as a starting point, but addressed their inaccuracies. This work required me to hunt down as many bitcoin mining companies as I could and validate their hashrate, power consumption and renewable energy mix. There was no shortcut, just a huge amount of phonecalls, surveys, emails and cross-validation. Along the way, I made other discoveries about Bitcoin mining, how it was helping stabilize grids, reducing electricity costs through monetizing wasted renewable energy and just how much methane it was mitigating too. I spent the bulk of each day for two years building the model and publishing what I was finding on Twitter. The response was overwhelming. I was invited to speak at conferences and write articles. Michael Saylor started quoting my research. Leaders in the industry invited me to their podcasts. I had to start turning down ⅔ of all conference invitations, and podcast invitations. It was amazing, yet at the same time it meant that for two years I received very little income. This was supposed to take two months, not two years. This was crazy. While I was flattered by the level of outreach, I couldn’t feed a family on podcast invites. And I hadn’t been looking for new coaching clients for ages, so while the work I was doing was some of my best ever, that lack of new outreach meant my business naturally started to atrophy. What was I supposed to do? My intellect was screaming "stop working for free". Yet I kept on doing more unpaid work, with most of my time split between Bitcoin research, and running volunteer breathing and meditation programs and followups for the The Art of Living. Again my intuition, which was virtually yelling at me so as to be heard above my intellect, kept cajoling and encouraging: “Keep going. Don’t stop” Eventually I finished, and to my great surprise, the model is now used in preference to Cambridge’s model by most institutions now, including numerous AI engines! The shock is not that people find merits in the model: I know it is a more accurate model to Cambridge’s. My surprise is that so many other people would adopt it over such an established institution. I still don’t know how this happened. Along the way, I’d also realized that my third climate tech fund had to involve Bitcoin mining on landfills: my research was showing me that the emissions mitigated per dollar invested were crazy: 45x more emission reducing than investing in solar infrastructure, and capable of good yields for wholesale investors also. Problem was, I was in the wrong country for international business. With my business partners in the States, and landfill projects in LATAM, it was time to move. My wife was incredibly supportive, and my daughters were up for the adventure, so we relocated to Costa Rica. Then the miraculous happened: my two worlds started to collide. A single tweet asking for some advice from the community on twitter led to the unintended, yet much appreciated, consequence of work offers within the bitcoin ecosystem. I was offered an advisory role at a large publicly listed mining company, a research role at another company, and a job helping create a Bitcoin mining video to be sent to regulators the world round. Then Lisa Hough said to me “you’ve got a gift coaching people. Have you thought of coaching Bitcoin companies?” Remarkably I hadn’t. Yet it was so obvious. One tweet later, a number of founders of Bitcoin companies enrolled to get coaching on gaining investment, growing their company, or navigating the challenges that come with running your own tech firm. I don’t know what will happen next. I had no plan when I started all this, and I still don’t - other than to keep listening to the intuitive pull, and to keep meditating so that the stray messages get filtered out so I can hear that voice clearly. But I have felt another intuition: “Bitcoin price is being suppressed because Sovereign Wealth Funds can’t adopt it. They can’t adopt it because their ESG investment committees are blocking it. You should talk to them and help them change their minds.” Again I did some research, and again this intuition was right. A youtube video of Kevin O’Leary on What Bitcoin Did randomly appeared on my Youtube list that same night. I watched in awe as Kevin O’Leary confirmed every word of this intuition, and then some. So apparently I’m going to start talking to Sovereign Funds and Pension Funds? I have no idea when and how. But that’s not my business to try and figure out. And any ideas I could figure out would be inferior to the divine plan. I’m simply listening to a wisdom higher than my own, and beyond what I could have done through my intellect or my experiences. When president Nayib Bukele who has performed a social and economic miracle in El Salvador was interviewed recently he was asked about his economic plan for his country. With a twinkle in his eye he smiled and said “First, seek God’s wisdom”. I found myself nodding my head. I knew what he meant. Whatever name we give to the power beyond us, we are not the doer, and knowing this opens us up to receive ideas beyond the conception of the rational mind. So, content not knowing the path ahead but trusting it’ll be great, that’s what I try to do each day. image
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dsbatten 1 year ago
I just write this on LinkedIn and i thought to share it here too. A place had opened up on my one year mastermind group coaching program. If you’re the founder of a tech company, you’ve already done at least your first raise, you’re looking to scale the next generation of leadership and you understand - not through ego but because it’s true - that you are both the most important asset and the biggest risk to the success of your company, and this asset can be greatly enhanced and derisked through the right coaching, then this may be a fit for you. The group is for highly committed people who want to give to as well as receive from a group of other highly committed tech entrepreneurs who will inspire you. To my knowledge, this program that’s currently unique in the world in that it’s not just about strategy and advice, but growing the habits, mindset and skillset technology company founders who can lead companies through exits in a state of optimal resilience, and happiness while enhancing relationships with those in your life who are not part of your company: no 100-hour weeks and sacrifice of personal well-being! Reach out if you’re sincere about knowing more. I’ve run these groups for more than a decade, and have had the honor of leading several through to exit (and their exits have been happy ones, made more likely through what they learned in this group). If you’re keen at the end of our call, I’ll also help you directly and honestly position this so it’s an easy “yes” for your board to sign off on.
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dsbatten 2 years ago
JUST IN: ECB announce first progress report on the digital Euro Features: - easier to surveil you - easier to deplatform you - easier to freeze your account - “just trust us bro” level privacy - limits on how much you’re allowed to hold in your account image
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dsbatten 2 years ago
3 hours is a long time. Long enough to orange pulled the person I sat next to on my flight. Not only that, she going to take it to her whole church, and also her cousin who is standing for the House of Representatives.
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dsbatten 2 years ago
Everyone needs a coach. In the history of modern sport has there ever been an athlete who won on the global stage without a coach? This principle applies to everyone who wants to change the world, not only athletes. Steve Jobs had a coach. Eric Schmidt had a coach. Jeff Bezos had a coach. I have a coach. If you want to change the world, you need a coach. Around the world, there are good people who can help you scale the technology and the commercials. But the mind that created the technology is more powerful than the technology, and that’s what a coach can optimise. Coaching often involves improving your capacity to positively influence current and future team members, investors and customers. And it always involves cultivating the right combination of skills, habits and mindset. One on one coaching works best for skill development. Coaching in a group is best for cultivating habits and mindset.