Dreamy pop music from small town Cloverdale ✨

Joined March 2011
3 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
29 Aug 2024
My debut album “Enigmatic” drops at midnight tonight ⚡️ listen here: distrokid.com/hyperfollow/ca…
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There’s not a fanbase, in all of pro sports, I feel worse for than Vancouver Canucks fans. No fanbase deserves this.
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20 Mar 2025
I didn’t like the new Chappell Roan song then it was capitalism’d into my ears 100 times and now I’m singing it because I’m a product of evolution
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OPINION: 25th anniversary offers wonderful opportunity to hit the ice and help those in need. Cloverdale’s Winter Ice Palace celebrates a quarter century of holiday skating sessions. cloverdalereporter.com/colum…

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Current world model: Reality is a playground we co created for ourselves before we were born.
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Probably. I repeat, they’re likely some Twitter anon with an anime pfp debating the most obscure topics with 50 views and less than a dozen likes.
Who are the modern day prophets? Who are the wise ones of our time? Are there any ascended masters among us?
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Just found out that Bruno Sacco had passed away a month or so before his 90th birthday, sad news, legendary designer has left us so many of the 20th centuries finest designs.
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28 Jul 2024
I just finished my debut album ✨ 7 years of work complete… Exciting things ahead
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COMEBACK COMPLETE‼️
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That’s my boy ✨🧙🏽‍♂️
I’m going to turn us all into wizards. The age of manipulating matter with our thoughts is soon upon us. This future state of reality is what I call Yug-Cybera.
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I can do anything I put my mind to and so can you.
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6 Aug 2023
all a man wants is to put his body and mind through physical and intellectual hell and maybe receive a compliment once a decade
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Nonlinear minds get nonlinear gains.
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Yuri Knorozov was a Soviet linguist who deciphered the Mayan script in 1953. He had a habit of listing his Siamese cat Asya as a co-author to many of his works; however, his editors would always remove her. Knorozov would also use this photo with Asya as his official author photo and would get upset whenever his editors would crop her out. Deciphering the Mayan script was extremely challenging because there was no Rosetta Stone to provide translations into other languages. The only clues that remained were from Mayan stelae (stone monuments) that were scattered throughout several different ruins. Knorozov worked in isolation in the Soviet Union and was able to make major advancements without ever stepping foot in Central America. His breakthrough was rejecting the notion that the Maya glyphs were based on an alphabet but rather a syllabary (a set of written characters representing syllables). When Knorozov published his work, he was attacked and dismissed by several prominent academics, most notably, J. Eric S. Thompson, a British scholar who believed that the Mayan script was anti-phonetic and based on ideographic principles. It also did not help that Knorozov published his research during the height of the Cold War when Western scholars were quick to dismiss the works of Soviet scholars as being tainted by Marxist ideology. It took decades for Knorozov to finally receive the recognition he deserved. One of Knorozov's earliest supporters was an American Anthropology professor at Yale by the name of Michael D. Coe who would later go on to write, "Yuri Knorozov, a man who was far removed from the Western scientific establishment and who, prior to the late 1980s, never saw a Mayan ruin nor touched a real Mayan inscription, had nevertheless, against all odds, made possible the modern decipherment of Maya hieroglyphic writing."
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In 2001, Warren Buffett gave a talk at the University of Georgia. He asked them the most Warren Buffett question ever: • If you could invest in a friend and get 10% of their income for life -- who would you pick? Once the students answered the question, he then asked this: • Why would you invest in that person? • What character traits do they have? Now they have a list of character traits to adopt. Shortly after this, Buffett asked: If you could short a friend's earnings, who would you pick and why? Now you have a list of character traits to avoid. ---- 1. Do not think this thought experiment is only about money. You can use it for whatever currency you value. E.g. Happiness coin If you could get 10% of a friend's happiness, who would you invest in and why? If you could short someone's happiness, who would you pick and why? You can run the same thought experiment with Fitness coin, Friendship coin, Romance coin, etc` 2. This thought experiment is genius because it hacks a bug in life's video game: Humans are terrible at self-awareness. But we are great at spotting things in other people. E.g. If your friend is in the wrong relationship, you can realize in 10 minutes what may take them 10 years. Daniel Kahneman summarised his book on cognitive biases with the following: “The premise of this book is that it is easier to recognize other people’s mistakes than our own.” - Daniel Kahneman 3. Nuance - It has to be purely from merit. Buffett says it can't be because someone will inherit a large sum from their parents. It has to be based on their behavior. E.g. If you want 10% of someone's fitness coin, it's not because of incredible genetics -- is because of the actions they take.
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You handle betrayal by using it as jet fuel to rocket forward where you are heading. Don’t contract and make other people pay for what someone else did. All you do is block your own incoming blessings.
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