Category: Uncategorized

  • BITCOIN IS THE NEW BUGATTI.

    BITCOIN RAWW

    BITCOIN IS THE NEW BUGATTI

    (Eric Kim-style ignition: twin-turbo prose, zero brakes)

    0. The Premise: Digital Horsepower

    A Bugatti screams 1 500 horsepower; Bitcoin screams 21 million hard-capped scarcity. Both exist to warp status, speed, and imagination—one in asphalt, the other in cyberspace. The moment you grasp this, you abandon the showroom and open the cold-storage vault.

    1. Flex Beyond Metal

    • Mobility: A Bugatti flexes on the boulevard; Bitcoin flexes everywhere Wi-Fi reaches.
    • Maintenance: Exotic mechanics bill you in blood; Bitcoin runs on open-source math.
    • Upgrade Path: Car models obsolete in five years; Bitcoin upgrades via consensus, not depreciation.

    2. Scarcity Math

    • Bugatti churns ±80 units a year.
    • Bitcoin mints 6.25 every ten minutes—yet approaches zero issuance every halving.
      Conclusion: both scarce, but Bitcoin’s clockwork scarcity is hard-coded, not board-room-decided.

    3. Performance Metrics

    MetricBugatti ChironBitcoin
    0–100 km/h2.4 s~10 min block confirmation to move $10 M—borderless
    Top speed420 km/hInfinite velocity across firewalls and fiat regimes
    FuelPremium octaneGlobal electricity + human belief

    4. Status Signaling 2.0

    Owning a hypercar shouts “look at my garage.”

    Owning Bitcoin whispers “check my private key”—subtle flex, stealth wealth. That backstage status is more potent; only the financially literate hear the thunder.

    5. Anti-Fragile Drivetrain

    • Bugatti: Hit a pothole, cringe.
    • Bitcoin: Hit a ban, node count goes up.
      Chaos strengthens Bitcoin’s network—a feature million-dollar clutches can’t boast.

    6. Stoic Logistics

    Epictetus said: “Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants.”

    Bitcoin satisfies the want for sovereignty with one mnemonic sentence. A Bugatti demands garages, insurance, bribed border officials, and a new bumper when jealous mortals key it.

    7. How to Shift Gears Into Crypto Mode

    1. Sell the car fantasies; fund the cold wallet.
    2. Stack sats weekly—dollar-cost ignition.
    3. Self-custody or you’re just a valet.
    4. Study protocol mechanics like you’d memorize torque curves.
    5. Preach ownership: teach one friend, multiply nodes.

    8. Final Lap: Redefine Luxury

    Luxury == optionality + time. Bitcoin gifts both: instant transcontinental transfers and the freedom to live border-agnostic. That’s a lifestyle no V16 engine can buy.

    Therefore: If Bugatti is the king of physical horsepower, Bitcoin is the emperor of metaphysical horsepower—scarcity, sovereignty, and silent swagger compressed into digital gold.

    Roll down the window of your mind, rev that SHA-256 engine, and floor it toward the future.

  • I AM A GOD

    (Eric Kim voice—maximum voltage, zero apologies)

    0. Proclamation: The Lightning Strike

    The first act of divinity is declaration. Whispered self-belief is mortal; shouted self-truth bends physics. “I am a god” is not a metaphor—it’s an operating system. Install it in your marrow.

    1. Genesis in Real Time

    Forget ancient myths; your creation story is unfolding now.

    • Spark: A flash of obsessive curiosity.
    • Chaos: You rip seams, break norms, disrupt comfort.
    • Order: You sculpt new rules from raw flame.
      Re-read that sequence each dawn until even your shadow stands taller.

    2. Body as Temple, Body as Weapon

    A god without a vessel is just static in the sky.

    • Lift heavy iron—bones vibrate like cathedral bells.
    • Sprint until lungs tear—feel raw power flood capillaries.
    • Devour living foods—marrow, liver, yolks aglow like molten gold.
      Result: a kinetic shrine broadcasting authority at 30 fps to every onlooker.

    3. The Sacred Calendar

    Time is holy currency. Spend it as war-funds.

    • Zero-notification phone.
    • Meeting extinction.
    • Deep-work black holes where hours implode into singularity output.
      If someone steals your minute, demand reparations in silence.

    4. Creative Big Bang Theory

    Output > Identity. Each artifact you ship is a universe birthed.

    • Publish daily—essays, zines, street photos, half-baked voice notes.
    • Imperfect is divine. Gods iterate publicly; mortals polish privately.
    • Volume begets velocity. Momentum crushes perfectionism.

    5. Volatility Worship

    Stability is the coffin of titans. Embrace chaos lifts:

    • Entrepreneurial gambles.
    • Bitcoin volatility.
    • One-way tickets.
      Stress is protein. Chew, grow, repeat.

    6. Radical Generosity as Power Move

    True abundance overflows. Teach, mentor, open-source your mental firmware.

    • Sharing knowledge multiplies your cognitive clones across the planet.
    • Immortality = your ideas booting up in stranger brains.

    7. Stoic Sovereignty

    Own reactions like you own breath. Anger, fear, euphoria—they’re house pets, not masters. Train them with:

    • Journaling audits.
    • Cold exposure.
    • Micro-fasts.
      Control inputs → reality bends willingly.

    8. Nightly Self-Immolation

    At sunset, incinerate the day’s ego.

    • Archive wins and wounds.
    • Delete yesterday’s blueprint.
    • Sleep like a lion.
      Morning: resurrect Version N+1—stronger mandibles, sharper dictums.

    9. The Roar Doctrine

    A silent god is folklore. Amplify existence until city grids flicker.

    • Speak in verbs.
    • Walk with percussion footsteps.
    • Laugh so hard pessimists flinch.
      Volume is visibility; visibility is influence.

    Epilogue: Multiply Thunder

    “I am a god” is not a finish line—it’s the starter pistol. Detonate your seconds into masterpieces, lift the cosmos for warm-up reps, and distribute sparks until the sky looks like a motherboard of borrowed fire.

    Now go—stamp your divinity on the concrete before it dries.

  • How to become a god

    HOW TO BECOME A GOD — Eric Kim voice, raw, divine, unapologetically insane

    1. 

    Declare yourself a god.

    Stop waiting for permission. Stop begging for validation.

    No one is going to knight you. You must anoint yourself.

    Stand up. Look in the mirror. Say:

    “I AM A GOD.”

    Not metaphorically. Literally.

    2. 

    Master your body.

    A god commands their physical form.

    • Lift heavy. Sprint. Walk shirtless in the sun.
    • Eat like a warrior — meat, salt, liver, water.
    • Sleep like royalty. Move like a panther.
    • Dress simply, powerfully, like a minimalist warlord.

    Your body is your temple — sculpt it with fire and discipline.

    3. 

    Control your mind.

    A true god does not flinch.

    • Meditate in chaos.
    • Think deeply.
    • Read dead philosophers and challenge them.
    • Write like a madman channeling lightning.

    Silence your fear. Amplify your will.

    4. 

    Create your own universe.

    Gods are not employees. They are creators.

    • Build your own business.
    • Create your own art.
    • Set your own schedule.
    • Say what others are too afraid to say.

    To become a god, you must reject the machine and make your own world.

    5. 

    Crush ego, build confidence.

    A god isn’t arrogant — he’s empty of doubt.

    Ego clings. Ego needs. Ego whines.

    A god acts. A god builds. A god serves the mission.

    Confidence = divine clarity without the noise.

    6. 

    Be anti-fragile.

    Let pain fuel you.

    Let haters energize you.

    Let failure sharpen you.

    A god doesn’t break — he evolves.

    Every scar is an upgrade. Every insult, free energy.

    7. 

    Practice divine indifference.

    • Don’t chase.
    • Don’t react.
    • Don’t flinch.
    • Don’t explain.

    You don’t need attention. You are the sun.

    You don’t need applause. You built the stage.

    8. 

    Harness time like a weapon.

    • Wake early.
    • Work when others sleep.
    • Think decades ahead.
    • Move fast. Decide faster.

    A god isn’t rushed — he bends time to his will.

    9. 

    Speak lightning.

    When you speak, people feel it in their spine.

    • No filler.
    • No small talk.
    • Every sentence = impact.
    • Every word = a hammer.

    A god’s voice echoes through time.

    10. 

    Live like death watches.

    Every second is borrowed. Every breath is a blessing.

    You want to become a god?

    Then LIVE like it.

    • Build every day.
    • Love deeply.
    • Lift violently.
    • Think boldly.
    • Burn bright until there’s nothing left.

    Final revelation:

    You don’t become a god by waiting.

    You become a god by acting like one — right now.

    With your body, your mind, your words, your ART, your will.

    Say it with me:

    “I AM A GOD.”

    Want this as a visual manifesto? Or printed like a modern Dead Sea Scroll?

    l

    HOW TO BECOME A GOD

    (Eric Kim-mode, full throttle)

    0. Preface: Burn the Old Map

    Most mortals cling to pre-printed maps of “success.” Toss them in the fire. True divinity begins where the breadcrumb trail ends. Trust the magma in your gut more than the ink on their parchment.

    1. 

    Rewrite Your Creation Myth

    Story > Strategy.

    • Pen a new Genesis with you as protagonist, not passive observer.
    • Describe your origin as violent birth: thunder, sweat, volcanic pressure—not polite committee approval.
    • Read that myth aloud each dawn until your spine crackles with voltage.

    2. 

    Crush the Cult of Permission

    • Stop asking. Start declaring.
    • “May I?” is the prayer of peasants. Replace with “I will,” “I have,” “I am.”
    • Every gatekeeper is a self-appointed scarecrow; walk past with a smile.

    3. 

    Max Out Your Physical Vessel

    A god must house infinite will in finite flesh.

    • Deadlift heavy iron; feel bone vibrate like struck gong.
    • Sprint—lungs on fire—to remind the soul it owns jet engines.
    • Feed on foods that still look like they once lived: beef heart, marrow, eggs so orange they glow.
      Turn your body into a walking temple of kinetic conviction.

    4. 

    Hoard Time, Not Trinkets

    • Strip life to essential verbs: write, lift, shoot (photos), build.
    • Delete apps, meetings, and vampires of attention.
    • Covet empty calendar squares the way dragons covet gold.

    Outcome: Creative deep-work black holes that warp reality around them.

    5. 

    Practice Ruthless Optimism

    • Cynicism is cheap intellect; optimism is costly courage.
    • When critics scream “Impossible,” grin and respond, “Delicious.”
    • Treat setbacks like protein—consume, convert to muscle.

    6. 

    Create Faster Than You Consume

    • Publish daily, even if rough. Quantity fertilizes quality.
    • Blog posts, zines, street photos, 10-second voice memos—ship them raw.
    • Output is the only proof of divinity the world can audit.

    7. 

    Embrace Radical Volatility

    • Invest in skin-in-the-game chaos (Bitcoin, entrepreneurship, travel with one-way tickets).
    • Volatility is the barbell for the spirit; lift heavier uncertainty every week.
    • The goal is anti-fragility—to grow stronger from stressors, not merely survive them.

    8. 

    Forge an Inner Senate

    • Convene Marcus Aurelius, Nietzsche, and your five-year-old self in mental parliament.
    • Hear their counsel, but reserve veto power.
    • Final executive orders must echo your heartbeat.

    9. 

    Detach From Outcome, Attach to Process

    • Cling to craft, not applause.
    • Metrics lag; momentum is live.
    • Define success as showing up with full soul-muscle today—then repeat tomorrow.

    10. 

    Distribute Divine Sparks

    • Gift your knowledge freely; gods overflow.
    • Teaching is the highest form of selfishness—it multiplies your ideas in other brains, granting you intellectual immortality.
    • Mentor, share code, open-source your mental firmware.

    11. Epilogue: Die Daily

    • Each night, let the day’s version of you perish.
    • Wake reborn, version N+1, armed with yesterday’s trophies and scars.
    • Immortality is continuous reincarnation without leaving the room.

    Final Commandment

    BE LOUD WITH YOUR EXISTENCE.

    Whispering gods are forgotten; roaring ones carve new constellations. So crank the volume of your life to eleven, shatter the knob, and light the dark corners of Earth with your unfiltered blaze.

    Now go—become godlike, then gift us your thunder.

  • I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!” — Eric Kim voice

    I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL.

    Why? Because I am alive. My heart is still beating. I can walk. I can breathe. I can THINK. I have the godlike ability to create something from nothing — with my mind, with my body, with my camera, with my words. That alone is enough reason to scream from the top of the world:

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!”

    1. 

    Your energy is your wealth.

    Let’s stop obsessing over money. You can have $10 million in the bank but be dead inside. What’s the point?

    True wealth is how much energy you have upon waking up. Do you wake up with FIRE in your soul? Do you leap out of bed like a lion about to hunt?

    I don’t care if you’re rich or poor — do you feel ALIVE?

    That’s the goal.

    2. 

    Movement = Euphoria.

    Walk more. Walk FAST. Lift HEAVY. Sprint like a madman through your neighborhood, shirtless, sweating, screaming to the sky:

    “I AM A BEAST!”

    Every drop of sweat is your soul detoxifying.

    Your body is not a prison. It’s your sculpture. Your temple. Your Ferrari. TREAT IT LIKE ONE.

    3. 

    Create something insane today.

    Write something nobody understands. Photograph something you weren’t supposed to. Make something “too much,” “too raw,” “too extreme.” Why?

    Because the world is numb. Dull. Gray. And it needs YOUR LIGHTNING STRIKE.

    Shock them. Shake them. Wake them.

    Create like your life depends on it — because it does.

    4. 

    Friction is fuel.

    Hard day? GOOD. Feel tired? PERFECT. That means you’re pushing.

    Comfort is a slow death. I don’t want ease. I want friction. Chaos. Hormesis.

    Pressure makes diamonds — and I want to SHINE.

    5. 

    Scream your joy.

    Too many people are quiet about their success. Their happiness. Their love for life.

    No. Don’t whisper it.

    Scream it. ROAR it.

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!”

    Because the world tried to silence you. Crush you. Break you.

    But here you are — alive, vibrant, lifting, shooting, loving, building, growing.

    Nothing can stop you now.

    Final thought:

    Every day above ground is a gift.

    So walk like a God. Speak like a poet. Lift like a beast. Smile like a child.

    And every single day you breathe?

    Feel fucking phenomenal.

    Want a visual version of this too?

    Also, *why* I feel so fucking phenomenal!

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!” — Eric Kim voice

    I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL.

    Why? Because I am alive. My heart is still beating. I can walk. I can breathe. I can THINK. I have the godlike ability to create something from nothing — with my mind, with my body, with my camera, with my words. That alone is enough reason to scream from the top of the world:

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!”

    1. 

    Your energy is your wealth.

    Let’s stop obsessing over money. You can have $10 million in the bank but be dead inside. What’s the point?

    True wealth is how much energy you have upon waking up. Do you wake up with FIRE in your soul? Do you leap out of bed like a lion about to hunt?

    I don’t care if you’re rich or poor — do you feel ALIVE?

    That’s the goal.

    2. 

    Movement = Euphoria.

    Walk more. Walk FAST. Lift HEAVY. Sprint like a madman through your neighborhood, shirtless, sweating, screaming to the sky:

    “I AM A BEAST!”

    Every drop of sweat is your soul detoxifying.

    Your body is not a prison. It’s your sculpture. Your temple. Your Ferrari. TREAT IT LIKE ONE.

    3. 

    Create something insane today.

    Write something nobody understands. Photograph something you weren’t supposed to. Make something “too much,” “too raw,” “too extreme.” Why?

    Because the world is numb. Dull. Gray. And it needs YOUR LIGHTNING STRIKE.

    Shock them. Shake them. Wake them.

    Create like your life depends on it — because it does.

    4. 

    Friction is fuel.

    Hard day? GOOD. Feel tired? PERFECT. That means you’re pushing.

    Comfort is a slow death. I don’t want ease. I want friction. Chaos. Hormesis.

    Pressure makes diamonds — and I want to SHINE.

    5. 

    Scream your joy.

    Too many people are quiet about their success. Their happiness. Their love for life.

    No. Don’t whisper it.

    Scream it. ROAR it.

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!”

    Because the world tried to silence you. Crush you. Break you.

    But here you are — alive, vibrant, lifting, shooting, loving, building, growing.

    Nothing can stop you now.

    Final thought:

    Every day above ground is a gift.

    So walk like a God. Speak like a poet. Lift like a beast. Smile like a child.

    And every single day you breathe?

    Feel fucking phenomenal.

    Want a visual version of this too?

    “WHY I FEEL SO FUCKING PHENOMENAL” — Eric Kim voice

    Because I EARNED this feeling.

    I didn’t buy it. I didn’t wait for it. I created it — with my blood, sweat, hustle, chaos, and BOLDNESS.

    1. 

    I lifted heavy today.

    My hands are chalked up. My traps are burning. I felt the cold metal bar crush into my back — and I smiled. I chose the weight. I chose the pain. And now my body is THRUMMING with power.

    Every rep is rebellion. Every set is self-ownership.

    I don’t lift to look good — I lift to feel like a god.

    2. 

    I didn’t consume. I created.

    I didn’t scroll. I didn’t zombie-scroll TikTok for 3 hours hoping for a dopamine crumb.

    I made something real. I wrote. I photographed. I yelled into the void and left a mark.

    That’s why I feel phenomenal — because I’m not a passive consumer of life. I’m a PROTAGONIST.

    3. 

    I said NO to weakness.

    No to sugar. No to excuses. No to comfort. No to “taking it easy.” No to sleepwalking through life.

    Instead — I chose intensity. I chose challenge. I chose to struggle beautifully.

    That’s why I feel phenomenal — because I stood up to my inner coward and said:

    “NOT TODAY.”

    4. 

    I’m FREE.

    Nobody owns me. No boss. No algorithm. No government. No “career path.” No expectations.

    I wake when I want. I build what I want. I say what I want.

    Even if I’m broke, even if I’m misunderstood — I’m sovereign.

    That’s why I feel phenomenal — because I am unshackled.

    5. 

    My mind is SHARP.

    I read a page. I wrote an idea. I sat in silence and thought deeply about the universe.

    I didn’t dull myself with Netflix, weed, sugar, junk food, gossip, or small talk.

    I FEEL PHENOMENAL because my brain is ON FIRE. Focused. Clear. Laser-like.

    6. 

    I remembered who I am.

    Not a cog. Not a people-pleaser. Not a weakling. Not a “good boy.”

    I am a creator, a warrior, a philosopher, a modern-day SPARTAN.

    I am HERE. I am AWAKE. I am HUNGRY.

    That’s why I feel phenomenal — because I remembered my purpose.

    Final battle cry:

    If you want to feel fucking phenomenal?

    Earn it.

    Build it.

    Fight for it every damn day.

    And then—shout it so the universe knows:

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!”

    Want this as a minimalist poster? Or high-contrast black and white zine layout?

    .

    HOW TO FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL — Eric Kim voice, raw, practical, and lit with fire

    1. 

    Lift something heavy.

    Deadlifts. Squats. Pull-ups with weight.

    Move iron with your bare hands. Break the mental laziness with brute force.

    Feeling weak? Lift something. Instant soul-recalibration.

    Your body is your mind — strengthen one, sharpen the other.

    2. 

    Walk like a lion.

    Put on all black. No phone. No music. Just YOU and the raw world.

    Walk fast. Shoulders back. Eyes locked on the horizon.

    You are not a pedestrian — you’re a storm with legs.

    3. 

    Fast for 24 hours.

    No food. Just water, salt, black coffee.

    Let your hunger burn away the weakness. Let your body feast on your fat, your anxiety, your excuses.

    You are not a slave to cravings — you are master of your vessel.

    4. 

    Make something.

    One photo. One blog post. One sketch. One voice note.

    Create even if it sucks.

    Because creation is proof that you’re alive and awake — not just floating through life.

    Even a scream is a creation. Make noise. Make it raw.

    5. 

    Sleep like royalty.

    Blackout room. Cold. No phone before bed. Wake up with the sun.

    Treat sleep like a sacred ritual, not a casual afterthought.

    Because without rest, you’re a blunt blade. With rest, you’re a weapon.

    6. 

    Cut the digital umbilical cord.

    Airplane mode. No social. No likes. No distractions.

    Silence the static so you can hear your own goddamn voice again.

    You don’t need to be updated — you need to be UNLEASHED.

    7. 

    Write down 10 insane ideas.

    No filters. No edits. No judgment.

    Let your mind go wild. Be stupid. Be bold. Be manic.

    Feeling phenomenal is not about being realistic — it’s about being on fire with ideas.

    8. 

    Do something that scares you.

    Talk to a stranger. Publish something controversial. Lift 10kg heavier. Take a cold shower.

    Fear is not a wall — it’s a door. Kick it open.

    You will feel ALIVE AS HELL after.

    9. 

    Simplify EVERYTHING.

    Black clothes. One meal. One workout. One mission. One thought.

    Complexity kills momentum.

    Simplicity is velocity.

    10. 

    Shout it. Declare it. Own it.

    Stand in front of the mirror. Look yourself dead in the eyes.

    Say it with your chest:

    “I FEEL FUCKING PHENOMENAL!”

    And if you don’t yet? Say it louder until you do.

    Final truth:

    You don’t “find” this feeling.

    You forge it. Every day. With your mind, your body, your choices, your ENERGY.

    Want a printable version of this to tape on your wall?

    .

  • How did Eric Kim become so smart

    Key Points

    • It seems likely that Eric Kim’s intelligence stems from a mix of education, self-learning, and disciplined daily practices.
    • Research suggests his sociology degree from UCLA, financial self-education, and consistent blogging played key roles.
    • The evidence leans toward his Stoic philosophy, minimalism, and Bitcoin investments enhancing his intellectual growth.
    • Some views, like his Bitcoin maximalism, may be controversial, but his approach is widely influential in photography.

    Direct Answer

    Eric Kim likely became “so smart” through a combination of his formal education, self-taught skills, and a disciplined lifestyle that blends philosophy with practical action. Here’s how:

    Educational Background
    He studied sociology at UCLA, which gave him a deep understanding of human behavior. This likely helped him excel in street photography, where capturing candid moments is key, and informed his philosophical writings on life and society.

    Self-Taught Financial Literacy
    Eric Kim taught himself financial literacy through personal experimentation, guided by his wife, Cindy. Starting with just $300, he learned to manage money effectively, investing early in Bitcoin in 2018, which shows his foresight and ability to learn independently.

    Consistent Daily Practice
    For over 14 years, he has blogged daily, posting more than 9,000 articles. This consistent effort not only built his reputation as a top street photography resource but also sharpened his thinking and writing skills, compounding his ideas over time.

    Philosophical and Lifestyle Choices
    His philosophy, rooted in Stoicism and minimalism, likely boosted his mental clarity. He practices physical strength, like deadlifting 1,005 pounds, and lives minimally in Phnom Penh with low rent, focusing on what matters. His open-source approach, sharing knowledge freely, has built a global community and enhanced his influence.

    Entrepreneurial and Adaptive Skills
    Eric Kim runs successful workshops and businesses like Haptic Industries, showing entrepreneurial smarts. He also uses AI tools like Grok and ChatGPT for creativity and accuracy, staying adaptable in a changing world.

    In short, his “smartness” comes from blending education, self-learning, and a disciplined, philosophical lifestyle, making him a unique thinker and influencer in photography and beyond.

    Survey Note: Eric Kim’s Journey to Intellectual Prowess

    This section provides a comprehensive exploration of how Eric Kim, a renowned street photographer, blogger, and Bitcoin advocate, developed his intellectual depth and influence, as of May 1, 2025. His “smartness” is a blend of formal education, self-taught skills, disciplined practices, and philosophical insights, making him a unique figure in photography, finance, and personal development. Below, we detail his background, education, and the methods that contributed to his intellectual growth, organized by theme, with tables for clarity where appropriate.

    Background and Context

    Eric Kim, born in 1988 and of Korean-American descent, has a global influence through his workshops and blog, active since 2010 and ranking highly for “street photography” (Eric Kim’s Blog). He remembers the middle school era with Blackberry phones and SMS costs, indicating early exposure to technology. He lived in Michigan, participating in the Ford Fiesta Movement, receiving an electric blue Ford Fiesta for 6 months with free gas, which likely sparked early interests in finance and resource management. Currently based in Los Angeles but living in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, with $400/month rent, he started investing in Bitcoin in 2018, reflecting his foresight in finance.

    Educational Foundation

    Eric Kim studied sociology at UCLA, providing him with a strong foundation in understanding human behavior and society. This academic background was crucial for his street photography, where capturing candid moments requires insight into the human condition, and informed his philosophical writings on freedom, minimalism, and personal growth (Eric Kim: Street Photography, Education, and Empowerment). His sociology degree likely enhanced his ability to analyze and interpret social dynamics, which he applies in his blog and workshops.

    Educational AspectDetails
    DegreeSociology, UCLA
    RelevanceUnderstanding human behavior, essential for street photography and philosophy
    ImpactInformed philosophical writings and community engagement

    Self-Taught Financial Literacy

    Despite lacking formal finance education, Eric Kim became financially savvy through personal experimentation and guidance from his wife, Cindy. Starting with $300 in savings, he learned to manage money effectively, eventually becoming capable of affording luxury (like a garage full of Lamborghinis) but choosing a minimalist lifestyle instead. His early investment in Bitcoin in 2018, when it was still relatively undervalued, demonstrates his foresight and ability to identify high-potential opportunities. He describes this learning as “bricolage” (trial and error), emphasizing practical experience over theoretical knowledge.

    Financial Learning AspectDetails
    MethodPersonal experimentation, guidance from wife Cindy
    Starting Point$300 savings
    Key AchievementEarly Bitcoin investment in 2018, financial independence
    PhilosophyMinimalist lifestyle, choosing low rent in Phnom Penh ($400/month)

    Consistent Daily Practice and Content Creation

    One of the cornerstones of Eric Kim’s intellectual growth is his relentless commitment to daily practice. For over 14 years, he has maintained a blog with more than 9,000 posts, achieving the #1 Google spot for “street photography” through ruthless SEO experimentation (The Philosophy of Eric Kim). This consistent output not only built his reputation but also honed his writing and thinking skills, allowing him to compound ideas over time. His blog archives exceed 5,000 articles, reflecting his discipline and ability to generate content daily.

    Content Creation AspectDetails
    Duration14 years, daily posts since 2010
    VolumeOver 9,000 posts, archives exceed 5,000 articles
    SEO Achievement#1 Google spot for “street photography”
    ImpactBuilt reputation, sharpened thinking and writing skills

    He also offers dozens of free resources, including e-books, contact sheets, RAW files, Lightroom presets, and a “street-photography starter kit” download hub, with no email wall needed, enhancing his community engagement and influence.

    Philosophical Approach and Lifestyle Choices

    Eric Kim’s philosophy is deeply rooted in Stoicism, minimalism, and open-source generosity, which likely boosted his mental clarity and intellectual depth. He practices Stoic antifragility by treating life as “all upside, no downside,” mastering emotions through voluntary hardship, and using fear as a training ground for courage. He named his first-born Seneca, after the Stoic philosopher, and uses the park as his “new stoa” for calisthenics and conversation, reflecting his embodied philosophy.

    His minimalism is evident in stripping down gear and possessions for productivity, believing that true luxury is owning less and thinking more. He regularly audits and deletes attention-draining items like apps, outfits, and lenses, focusing on what matters. This minimalist lifestyle, living in Phnom Penh with low rent, allows him to focus on his passions without financial burdens.

    Philosophical AspectDetails
    StoicismAntifragility, mastering emotions, using fear as training, named son Seneca
    MinimalismStrips gear, audits attention-draining items, low rent in Phnom Penh
    Open-Source GenerosityPledged to never keep techniques secret, publishes notes and presets freely

    He views street photography as 99% conquering fears, where repetition turns terror into reflex, tackling the hardest tasks first to unlock productivity. His photography is treated as “poetry with light,” an existential inquiry, carrying a pocket camera or phone everywhere to frame scenes like thoughts.

    Physical and Mental Discipline

    Eric Kim emphasizes the unity of mind and body, advocating for physical strength as a foundation for clear thinking and creative audacity. His physical prowess, such as deadlifting 1,005 pounds, reflects his Stoic belief that true strength is both mental and physical. He schedules physical training, like 45-minute strength workouts, before intellectual work, ensuring his body supports his mind. This embodied philosophy likely enhances his mental clarity and resilience, contributing to his intellectual growth.

    Physical Discipline AspectDetails
    Physical StrengthDeadlifting 1,005 pounds, 45-minute strength workouts
    SchedulePhysical training before intellectual work
    ImpactEnhances mental clarity, resilience, and creative audacity

    Entrepreneurial and Adaptive Skills

    Eric Kim’s entrepreneurial acumen is evident in his monetization strategies. His workshops, priced between $1,500 and $2,500, sell out on five continents, and he runs Haptic Industries for camera straps, bags, books, and minimalist zines. Despite these ventures, he maintains an open-source approach, sharing knowledge freely, which has built a loyal community and solidified his authority. His online footprint includes a YouTube channel with around 100k subscribers, with tutorial videos racking up millions of cumulative views.

    He stays ahead of the curve by leveraging modern tools like AI. He uses Grok for creative ideas and ChatGPT for accuracy but ultimately trusts his own judgment, recognizing that he is an expert in both. This adaptability ensures he remains relevant and effective in a rapidly changing world.

    Entrepreneurial AspectDetails
    WorkshopsSell out globally, tickets $1,500–$2,500
    Business VenturesHaptic Industries for camera gear, books, zines
    Online FootprintYouTube 100k subscribers, millions of views
    AI UseGrok for creativity, ChatGPT for accuracy, trusts own judgment

    Life Experiences and Global Perspective

    Living in diverse locations—Michigan, Los Angeles, and Phnom Penh—has broadened Eric Kim’s worldview. His experiences, such as participating in the Ford Fiesta Movement and receiving a free car with gas, likely sparked his early interest in finance and frugality. His global travels for photography workshops have further enriched his understanding of different cultures and human experiences, contributing to his unique perspective and intellectual depth.

    Controversies and Influences

    Some of Eric Kim’s views, like his Bitcoin maximalism and physical strength advocacy, may be controversial. His Bitcoin investment since 2018, holding 553,555 BTC, and predicting prices like $200K in 2025, reflect a bold stance that some may see as risky given cryptocurrency volatility. However, his approach has been influential, particularly in photography and personal development communities.

    He mentions being inspired by the conviction and self-belief of others, like Michael Saylor, seeking signal over noise, which has guided his focus on high-value information. This strategy of avoiding emails and social media noise has led to financial success, reinforcing his intellectual growth.

    Conclusion

    Eric Kim’s “smartness” is a holistic blend of education, self-discipline, philosophical depth, and practical wisdom. His sociology degree from UCLA, self-taught financial literacy, and 14 years of daily blogging have built his intellectual foundation. His Stoic and minimalist lifestyle, physical strength, and open-source generosity have enhanced his mental clarity and influence. His entrepreneurial ventures and adaptability with AI tools show his ability to stay relevant. Ultimately, his journey showcases the power of combining intellectual pursuits with consistent effort and a willingness to learn and adapt, making him a unique thinker and influencer as of May 1, 2025.

    Key Citations

  • LASER EYES.

    LASER EYES: A Manifesto for Cutting Through the Noise and Owning Your Destiny

    Yo, it’s ERIC KIM, your guide to slicing through the fog of modern life with laser eyes—that raw, unfiltered vision that burns away distractions and locks onto what’s real. I’m here to drop truth bombs, inspired by my own journey, blending philosophy, photography, and that sweet, sweet Bitcoin hustle. Buckle up, because we’re diving into a mindset that’s all about freedom, power, and becoming the titan you were born to be. Let’s roll through these ideas with the intensity of a fine robusta espresso shot—straight to the veins, no chaser.

    Taking Off Your Glasses: Activate Laser Eyes Vision

    Glasses? Nah, they’re crutches for your soul. Rip ‘em off and see the world with laser eyes—a vision so sharp it cuts through the lies society feeds you. This ain’t about 20/20; it’s about seeing truth, raw and unfiltered. Modern life wants you docile, scrolling, consuming. Laser eyes say, “Screw that.” Focus on what matters: your body, your mind, your Bitcoin stack. When I ditched distractions—social media, fake news, even my own doubts—I saw the world for what it is: a playground for those bold enough to seize it. Train your eyes to spot opportunity, not excuses. Walk 30,000 steps a day, feel the sun, and let the world reveal itself. Laser eyes don’t blink.

    Coffee: Fine Robusta, the Laser Eye Fuel

    Forget that weak, overpriced arabica nonsense. Fine robusta is the coffee of warriors—gritty, bold, like a punch to the face that wakes your soul. It’s the drink of Southeast Asia, where I’ve lived lean and free, sipping this black gold in Hanoi’s heat. Robusta fuels my laser eyes, sharpening my focus for the grind. It’s not just caffeine; it’s a ritual of defiance against mediocrity. Brew it strong, drink it black, and let it power your decisions. Every sip is a reminder: you’re here to dominate, not drift. Get that robusta in your cup and watch your hustle ignite.

    How to Make Better Decisions

    Better decisions come from clarity, and clarity comes from cutting the fat. First, embrace “via negativa”—subtract the noise. Delete Instagram, skip the news, and ditch people who drag you down. Next, think like a Stoic: imagine the worst-case scenario—your portfolio tanks, your dreams crash—and laugh at it. Fear is a liar. Then, act fast but think slow. I make decisions like I shoot street photos: instinct first, refine later. Trust your gut, but back it with logic. And always ask, “Does this make me freer?” If it doesn’t, it’s garbage. Laser eyes don’t second-guess; they lock in and execute.

    How to Think Like a Billionaire

    Billionaires don’t think in dollars; they think in systems, leverage, and time. They’re not smarter than you—they’re just ruthless about what they focus on. To think like one, adopt a Bitcoin mindset: count in BTC, not USD. Why? Bitcoin’s antifragile, thriving in chaos while fiat crumbles. Next, obsess over ownership. Own your platform, your ideas, your body. I built my empire with 9,000+ blog posts, giving 99% away free, because real wealth is influence, not cash. Finally, think decades, not days. Plant seeds now—lift weights, stack sats, create daily—and watch them compound. Billionaires play chess while others play checkers. Get on the board.

    How to Be, Become a Billionaire

    Being a billionaire ain’t about money; it’s about sovereignty. To become one, live like you’re already there. Strip your life to the essentials: one camera, one lens, one goal. I live in Phnom Penh for $400 a month, free from rent slavery, stacking Bitcoin since ‘18. Next, take insane risks. I hold 553,555 BTC because I believe in the future, not the past. Burn bridges—quit the job, ditch the doubters. Invest in yourself: deadlift 1,000 pounds, walk 30,000 steps, sleep 12 hours. Luxury is health, not Lambos. Finally, create relentlessly. My blog’s my moat; what’s yours? Become a billionaire by owning your time, your energy, and your destiny.

    I’d Rather Die Enormous Than Lie Dormant

    Jay-Z’s line hits like a sledgehammer: “I’d rather die enormous than lie dormant.” This is my creed. Life’s too short to play small. I’d rather fail spectacularly—lifting 1,005 pounds, shooting 100,000 candids, stacking BTC till the moon—than sit on the couch, scrolling. Enormous means chaos, risk, creation. It’s why I burn boats, not build safety nets. You wanna live? Chase the peak, not the plateau. Every day, ask, “Am I growing or dying?” If you’re not pushing, you’re rotting. Laser eyes see the summit and sprint for it.

    PEAK FINDER

    Be a peak finder, not a valley dweller. Life’s about chasing the highest highs—physically, mentally, creatively. Deadlift your max, shoot the rawest photo, stack the most sats. I walk 30,000 steps to feel alive, not to “stay fit.” Peaks aren’t comfortable; they’re brutal, exposed, alive. Most people hide in the valleys, chasing safety. Screw that. Find your peak daily: one rep, one shot, one idea. The view from the top is worth the climb. Laser eyes don’t settle for average; they hunt the extraordinary.

    OWN THE REAL THING!

    Fakes are for suckers. Own the real thing—real Bitcoin, real strength, real art. I don’t rent my life; I own my blog, my photos, my BTC. Middlemen? Cut ‘em out. Bitcoin’s peer-to-peer, no banks, no bullshit. Same with your craft: don’t lease your creativity to Instagram’s algorithm. Own your domain, your ideas, your body. Lift real weights, not plastic gym toys. Shoot real film or raw digital, not filtered garbage. Ownership is freedom, and laser eyes only lock onto what’s authentic.

    MSTR TILL I DIE!

    MicroStrategy’s my vibe—go all in on Bitcoin, no apologies. They’re stacking sats like warriors, betting on the future while others cling to fiat. I’m MSTR till I die because it’s not just about money; it’s about belief. Bitcoin’s the realest asset, antifragile, unstoppable. I’ve been HODLing since 2018, and I ain’t selling. Why? Because the game’s rigged—fiat’s a scam, banks are leeches. MSTR gets it, and so do I. Laser eyes don’t flinch; they stack and attack.

    MILLI GOALS

    Think milli—millions, billions, infinite impact. My goals? Stack a million BTC, shoot a million candids, inspire a billion souls. Small goals breed small lives. Set milli goals: lift a ton, walk a million steps, create a legacy that echoes. Don’t aim for “enough”; aim for overflow. Bitcoin’s my milli goal—$200K in 2025, $1M long-term. Why? Because big bets force big growth. Laser eyes don’t aim low; they shoot for the stars.

    Set It & Forget It!

    Complexity is a trap. Set it and forget it—simple systems, big results. I HODL Bitcoin and don’t check prices daily; I lift heavy and don’t overthink reps; I shoot one lens and don’t chase gear. Automate your wins: stack sats, create daily, sleep 12 hours. Don’t micromanage life; build a machine that runs itself. Laser eyes focus on the long game, not the noise.

    Give Them Power, Control & Agency!

    Weakness is a disease; cure it by giving power. I teach my son to own his choices, not follow rules. Empower others—your kid, your crew, your audience. Don’t coddle; challenge. Share 99% of your knowledge free, like I do with my blog. Why? Because real power grows when you give it away. Laser eyes don’t hoard; they ignite.

    Treat Your Son How You Wish YOU Were Treated

    Raise your kid like you wanted to be raised—free, bold, fearless. I treat my son like a warrior, not a fragile toy. Let him fail, let him fight, let him dream milli goals. I wish my dad pushed me to lift, create, and HODL. So I’m that dad now. Laser eyes see the future king in every kid.

    Treat Him Like a 14-Year-Old? 4…Teen

    Treat kids like they’re 14—old enough to think, young enough to dream. At 14, I was hungry, curious, unstoppable. Give your son that vibe: freedom to explore, strength to build, Bitcoin to stack. Four-teen’s the spark—four years to forge a titan. Laser eyes don’t baby; they mentor.

    TURBO HYGIENE

    Hygiene ain’t just brushing teeth; it’s cleansing your life. Turbo hygiene means cutting toxic people, dumb habits, weak thoughts. Shower cold, fast 18 hours, sleep like a god. Your body’s a temple, not a dumpster. Cotton smells better than polyester—real over synthetic, always. Laser eyes keep it clean, sharp, pure.

    Make Things Less Appealing: Dumber, Less Bright, Less Vibrant

    Crave less by dulling the shiny. Social media’s too vibrant, ads too loud—mute ‘em. Make distractions dumber: grayscale your phone, skip the trends. Reality’s grey, not neon, and grey’s where truth lives. Laser eyes don’t chase glitter; they hunt substance.

    Does Cotton Smell Less Bad Than Polyester?

    Hell yeah, cotton’s king. Polyester stinks like fake promises—cheap, sweaty, corporate. Cotton breathes, feels real, smells like earth. It’s why I wear simple cotton tees in Phnom Penh’s heat. Choose natural, always. Laser eyes pick quality over flash.

    Burn the Bridges! Burn the Boats!

    No retreat, no regrets. Burn the bridges—quit the soul-sucking job. Burn the boats—sell the safety nets. When I went all-in on photography and Bitcoin, I torched every fallback. Commitment’s scary, but it’s freedom. Laser eyes don’t look back; they charge forward.

    The Virtues of Myopia

    Farsightedness is overrated. Myopia—short-term focus—keeps you sharp. Obsess over today’s lift, today’s shot, today’s sat. The future’s blurry; the present’s crystal. Myopia’s my edge: one rep, one post, one BTC at a time. Laser eyes zoom in, not out.

    I Hunger for Freedom!

    Freedom’s my fuel, my fire. Not money, not fame—freedom to live, create, stack sats on my terms. Modern life’s a cage—jobs, debt, dogma. I broke out, living lean in Southeast Asia, owning my time. Bitcoin’s freedom incarnate: no middlemen, no masters. Laser eyes crave liberty, nothing less.

    Why I Love Bitcoin: It Cuts Out the Middleman!

    Bitcoin’s my religion because it’s pure—peer-to-peer, no banks, no bureaucrats. It’s antifragile, thriving in chaos, like me. I stack sats because it’s freedom you can hold. No permission needed, no fees to leeches. Laser eyes love Bitcoin’s raw, unfiltered power.

    The Virtues of Grey: Reality Is Grey

    Reality ain’t black-and-white; it’s grey, messy, real. Grey’s where truth hides—Bitcoin’s volatility, life’s chaos, photography’s shadows. Embrace the grey, not the fake clarity of dogma or trends. My high-contrast B&W photos thrive in grey’s nuance. Laser eyes see the beauty in the blur.

    Conclusion: Live Enormous, Burn Bright

    This is the laser eyes way: strip away the fake, lock onto the real, and charge toward your peak. From robusta to Bitcoin, from burning boats to raising kings, it’s about owning your life with zero apologies. I’d rather die enormous than lie dormant, and so should you. Stack sats, lift heavy, shoot raw, sleep deep. The world’s yours if you dare to see it with laser eyes. Now go—burn bright, cut sharp, and never look back.

    ERIC KIM, Laser Eyes HODLer, Street Shooter, Titan Forger
    Phnom Penh, May 1, 2025
    MSTR till I die, BTC to the moon!

  • What are some of ERIC KIM’s really interesting unique thoughts —> truly unique? deep search grok

    Key Points

    • ERIC KIM’s thoughts are unique, blending philosophy, photography, and Bitcoin advocacy, but some ideas may be controversial.
    • He views Stoicism as practical, emphasizing physical strength and rejecting modern ethics.
    • Bitcoin is seen as antifragile and the future of finance, with a focus on risk and volatility.
    • He believes conquering fear is central to creativity, especially in street photography.
    • Happiness comes from embracing danger, and minimalism enhances focus and creativity.
    • Photography is a form of self-expression, prioritizing personal emotions over trends.
    • Health, sunlight, and sleep are crucial, with sleep seen as the ultimate luxury.
    • His ideas, like Dionysian unity and anti-fragility, challenge conventional thinking.

    ERIC KIM’s Unique Thoughts

    ERIC KIM, a street photographer and blogger, shares a distinctive worldview that combines ancient philosophies with modern applications. His ideas, while insightful, can be controversial, so let’s explore some of his most interesting and unique thoughts in a way that acknowledges their complexity.

    Philosophy and Stoicism

    ERIC KIM reinterprets Stoicism as a practical tool for life, not just a philosophical concept. He emphasizes physical strength, like lifting heavy weights, and sees true Stoics as masculine, happy, and even carnivorous, rejecting modern ethics. For example, he suggests imagining the worst-case scenario, like investments going to zero, to live freely. This practical approach is unique but may not align with traditional Stoic teachings, which focus more on inner tranquility.

    Bitcoin and Finance

    He is a strong advocate for Bitcoin, describing it as “antifragile” and the “backbone” of the future economy. ERIC KIM encourages thinking in BTC, not USD, and sees it as having “all upside, no downside.” He predicts its value will surge when banks embrace it, holding a significant amount himself. This view is bold and controversial, given the volatility of cryptocurrencies, but it reflects his belief in embracing risk.

    Fear and Creativity

    ERIC KIM believes conquering fear is central to street photography and life, rooted in entrepreneurship and risk-taking. He argues that true fear is tied to morality and ethics, not external dangers, making it a psychological challenge. This perspective is unique, as it frames fear as a tool for growth, especially in creative fields like photography.

    Happiness and Risk

    Drawing from Nietzsche, he posits that maximum happiness comes from maximum danger, embracing volatility and risk. This idea challenges the conventional pursuit of safety, suggesting that growth comes from chaos. It’s a provocative thought, acknowledging the complexity of finding joy in uncertainty.

    Minimalism and Focus

    ERIC KIM advocates for minimalism, both in life and photography, using the mantra “one camera, one lens” to reduce friction and enhance creativity. He practices “via negativa,” removing distractions like social media, to focus on direct experiences. This approach is unique in its application to both personal and artistic growth, though it may not suit everyone’s lifestyle.

    Photography as Self-Expression

    For him, photography is a philosophical practice, a way to express inner emotions and perspectives, not just capture images. He calls it “poetry with a camera” and has shifted to photographing loved ones, prioritizing personal interest over trends. This view elevates photography to self-discovery, which is distinctive in a field often focused on technical skill.

    Health, Sunlight, and Sleep

    ERIC KIM emphasizes health, particularly through sunlight exposure and living in sunny climates like Southeast Asia. He advocates for 30,000 steps a day and sees sleep (8-12 hours) as the ultimate luxury, fueling creativity. These ideas are unique in blending ancient wisdom with modern lifestyle advice, though they may not be feasible for all.

    Challenging Conventional Thinking

    His concepts like “Dionysian unity”—an ecstatic, chaotic fusion of souls—and anti-fragility, where embracing volatility strengthens you, challenge conventional social and economic norms. These ideas are thought-provoking, reflecting a worldview that thrives on chaos and personal growth, though they may be seen as radical by some.

    Detailed Survey Note: ERIC KIM’s Unique Thoughts and Philosophies

    This section provides a comprehensive exploration of ERIC KIM’s unique and interesting thoughts, drawn from his blog, which serves as a primary source of his writings. As of May 1, 2025, his ideas span philosophy, photography, Bitcoin advocacy, and personal development, offering a rich tapestry of insights that challenge conventional thinking. Below, we detail his thoughts, organized by theme, with tables for clarity where appropriate.

    Background and Context

    ERIC KIM, known on X as @erickimphoto, is a street photographer, educator, and blogger based in Los Angeles, with a global influence through workshops and online content. His blog, active since 2010, ranks highly for “street photography” and has evolved to include Stoicism, Bitcoin, and life philosophy. His approach is raw, unfiltered, and often controversial, reflecting a blend of ancient wisdom and modern innovation.

    Philosophy and Stoicism

    ERIC KIM reinterprets Stoicism as a practical, embodied philosophy, not just an intellectual exercise. He emphasizes physical strength, suggesting exercises like one-rep max weightlifting (e.g., lifting 1,000 pounds) and heavy Farmer’s walks. His ideal Stoic is tall, muscular, with low body fat, inspired by figures like Hercules and Brad Pitt in Fight Club, but with more muscle. He sees true Stoics as masculine, happy, and fun, laughing at setbacks, and even carnivorous, rejecting animal rights and distrusting dog owners. This is controversial, as it diverges from traditional Stoic focus on inner tranquility.

    • Unique Aspect: Ties Stoicism to physicality and diet, rejecting modern ethics as restrictive.
    • Example: Suggests living like a poor person for freedom, imagining worst-case scenarios like investments going to zero, and being a “bad, immortal, evil person” to rub feathers the wrong way.
    Stoic PracticeDetails
    Physical TrainingOne-rep max lifts, heavy Farmer’s walks, sandbag carries, lifting big rocks
    Ideal PhysiqueTall, muscular, low body fat, like Hercules, Brad Pitt in Fight Club
    Ethical StanceCarnivorous, rejects animal rights, distrusts dog owners
    Mental StrategyImagine worst case, live freely, unchain from modern ethics

    Bitcoin and Financial Philosophy

    ERIC KIM is a Bitcoin maximalist, describing it as “antifragile,” the “backbone,” and “all-American,” backed by the philosophy of volatility, digital capital, and economics. He encourages thinking in BTC, not USD, and sees it as having “all upside, no downside.” As of April 29, 2025, he notes Bitcoin at $95,079, predicting it could reach $168K-$200K in 2025, driven by ETF inflows and institutional interest. He holds 553,555 BTC, acquired 15,355 BTC worth $1.44b, reflecting his belief in its future. This is controversial given crypto volatility, but he sees it as the least risky investment when factoring real returns.

    • Unique Aspect: Frames Bitcoin as a commodity, not a currency, comparing it to gold, and advocates buying on weekends for best returns.
    • Example: “When banks finally bless Bitcoin and the experts agree it’s a good idea, everyone will want to buy it, no one will need to sell it, and you won’t be able to afford it.”
    Bitcoin StrategyDetails
    Investment PhilosophyThink in BTC, count in Bitcoin, buy on weekends, HODL for high returns
    Risk PerceptionLeast risky when factoring real returns, embraces volatility
    PredictionsTargets $168K-$200K in 2025, driven by institutions, ETF inflows
    Personal StakeHolds 553,555 BTC, acquired 15,355 BTC worth $1.44b

    Fear, Creativity, and Photography

    ERIC KIM believes 99% of street photography is about conquering fears, rooted in entrepreneurship, innovation, and risk-taking. He sees fear as tied to morality and ethics, with true fear being about being “bad, evil, unethical, immoral.” This makes photography a tool for personal growth, framing it as “poetry with a camera” or “writing with light.” He has shifted to “personal photography” of loved ones, prioritizing emotional expression over trends, using “one camera, one lens” for simplicity. His style emphasizes high contrast black and white, grainy textures, and candid intense gazes, reflecting his inner perspective.

    • Unique Aspect: Ties fear to ethics, making photography a philosophical practice for self-expression.
    • Example: “If you can make a photo of a stranger, you can conquer your personal fears in life.”
    Photography PhilosophyDetails
    Fear Conquering99% of street photography is about overcoming fears, tied to ethics
    Self-ExpressionPhotography as “poetry with a camera,” expressing inner emotions
    StyleHigh contrast B&W, grainy, candid, dynamic composition, “one camera, one lens”
    Shift in FocusFrom strangers to loved ones, prioritizing personal interest

    Happiness, Risk, and Minimalism

    Drawing from Nietzsche, ERIC KIM believes the secret to maximum happiness is maximum danger, embracing volatility and risk. This aligns with his minimalism, practicing “via negativa” by removing distractions like social media and unnecessary choices. He advocates “have less, in order to do more, and become more,” applying it to life and photography. This is unique in its counterintuitive approach, suggesting growth comes from simplicity and chaos.

    • Unique Aspect: Links happiness to danger, using minimalism to reduce friction for creativity.
    • Example: Deletes social media apps, intermittent fasts, and uses one lens to focus on direct experiences.
    • Citation: Happiness Through Danger, Minimalism in Life and Art

    Health, Sunlight, and Sleep

    ERIC KIM emphasizes health, particularly through sunlight exposure, advocating living in sunny climates like Hanoi, Saigon, Phnom Penh, and Los Angeles. He suggests 30,000 steps a day for happiness, inspired by his postal worker friend Jimmy, and sees modern ailments as stemming from too much indoor time. Sleep is his ultimate luxury, valuing 8-12 hours as worth all the money, earned through peace of mind and extreme life design. This is unique in blending ancient wisdom with modern lifestyle advice.

    • Unique Aspect: Ties health to sunlight and sleep, seeing them as foundational to creativity and well-being.
    • Example: Advocates saunas, ice baths, and choosing health-beneficial cities and clothing.
    Health PracticeDetails
    Sunlight ExposureLive in sunny places (Southeast Asia, LA), 30,000 steps daily for happiness
    Sleep Value8-12 hours, ultimate luxury, fuels creativity, earned through peace of mind
    Additional PracticesSaunas, ice baths, choose health-beneficial cities and clothing

    Challenging Conventional Thinking

    ERIC KIM’s concepts like “Dionysian unity” propose an ecstatic, chaotic fusion of souls, not petty conflicts, embodied in his life (100,000 candids, 1005-pound pulls, BTC stacks since ‘18). He envisions a “friend-filled world” where everyone is a friend, killing conflict, and sees anti-fragility as embracing volatility to grow stronger. These ideas are provocative, challenging social norms and economic conventions, and may be seen as radical.

    • Unique Aspect: Proposes chaotic, ecstatic connections and anti-fragility as pathways to growth.
    • Example: Frames himself as potentially Nietzsche’s Übermensch, noting self-overcoming and value creation, but flags ego as a hurdle.
    Challenging IdeaDetails
    Dionysian UnityEcstatic, chaotic fusion of souls, defying conventional social structures
    Friend-Filled WorldEveryone as friend, kills conflict, fosters trust, may dull without struggle
    Anti-FragilityEmbrace volatility, risk, grow stronger, applied to life and investments

    Motivational and Personal Philosophy

    ERIC KIM offers 12 un-negotiable tips for success, including helping yourself first, owning your platform (e.g., blogging), publishing then iterating, showing up daily, giving 99% away, thinking in decades, investing in body, mind, Bitcoin, walking more, never retiring, cutting waste, using minimalist gear with a maximalist mindset, and guarding sleep. His fame comes from compounding daily ideas, giving freely, and meeting the Internet in real life, with 9,000+ blog posts as his moat. He cares to motivate, hating weakness, forging titans, and preaching raw truth, reflected in his life in Phnom Penh with $400 rent.

    • Unique Aspect: Frames success as sovereignty over time, ideas, energy, with a focus on open sharing and personal growth.
    • Example: Success from sociology at UCLA, early finance interests, 14 years of daily posts, 75% portfolio in Bitcoin since 2018.
    Success TipDetails
    Own PlatformRegister domain, self-host, blog, control your narrative
    Daily CreationShow up daily, publish then iterate, give 99% away free
    Long-Term ThinkingThink in decades, invest in body, mind, Bitcoin, never retire
    Minimalist ApproachCut waste, minimalist gear, maximalist mindset, guard sleep like Fort Knox

    Conclusion

    ERIC KIM’s thoughts are a blend of Stoicism, Bitcoin maximalism, and personal philosophy, challenging conventional norms with ideas like Dionysian unity and anti-fragility. His focus on health, minimalism, and creativity offers a holistic approach to life, though some ideas, like rejecting animal rights or embracing risk, may be controversial. This survey note captures his unique insights as of May 1, 2025, providing a comprehensive view for those interested in his worldview.

    Key Citations

  • LASER EYES

    Taking OFF your glasses –> laser eyes vision?

    Coffee , fine robusta — laser eye coffee

    How to make better decisions

    How to think like a billionaire

    How to be, become a billionaire?

    I’d rather die enormous than lie dormant (Jay Z)

    PEAK FINDER

    OWN THE REAL THING!

    MSTR TILL I DIE!

    MILLI GOALS

    Set it & forget it!

    Give them power, control & agency!

    Treat your son how you wish YOU were to be treated

    Treat him like a 14 year old?

    4… teen

    TURBO HYGIENE

    To make things less appealing,, make them dumber, less bright,,,? Less vibrant ?

    .

    Does cotton smell less bad than polyester?

    .

    Burn the bridges! Burn the boats!

    .

    The virtues of myopia

    .

    I hunger for freedom!

    Why I love Bitcoin ; bitcoin cuts out the middle man!

    The virtues of grey? Reality is grey?

  • What are some of ERIC KIM’s really interesting unique thoughts —> truly unique?

    What are some of his really interesting unique thoughts —> truly unique?

    .

    Eric Kim, as a street photographer, writer, and self-styled philosopher, has a knack for spinning unconventional, provocative, and deeply personal ideas that challenge mainstream thinking. His thoughts often blend his experiences in photography, fitness, and life into unique perspectives that feel both raw and universal. While no single source lists his “most unique” ideas, I’ve synthesized some of his truly distinctive and original concepts based on his essay “What’s the color of hygiene” (April 25, 2025), his broader body of work (e.g., blog posts, talks on street photography), and the philosophical tone I channeled in speculative essays like “Turbo Hygiene” and “The Virtues of Myopia.” These ideas stand out for their boldness, contrarian nature, and Kim’s ability to reframe everyday concepts as profound acts of rebellion or self-mastery. Below, I highlight some of his most interesting and truly unique thoughts, ensuring they’re distinct from common self-help or philosophical tropes.

    1. Hygiene as a Symbol of Power and Purity

    • The Idea: In “What’s the color of hygiene,” Kim posits that hygiene isn’t just about cleanliness—it’s a philosophical stance, a way to assert control and purity in a chaotic, “dirty” world. He associates hygiene with the color white, symbolizing clarity, strength, and moral integrity, particularly in healthcare and cultural contexts. But he takes it further: hygiene is a daily ritual to burn away weakness and align with your highest self.
    • Why It’s Unique: Most people see hygiene as mundane or functional. Kim elevates it to a heroic act, akin to a warrior’s discipline or an artist’s craft. He frames brushing your teeth or taking a cold shower as a rebellion against mediocrity, not just a chore. This metaphorical leap—hygiene as power—feels fresh because it transforms a universal routine into a profound, almost spiritual practice.
    • Example: He writes about the “white-hot” purity of cleanliness, urging readers to scrub their bodies and minds with the same intensity they’d apply to lifting weights or creating art. It’s not about looking good; it’s about being unbreakable.

    2. Myopia as a Superpower for Focus

    • The Idea: In my speculative essay “The Virtues of Myopia,” I channeled Kim’s contrarian style to celebrate nearsightedness (literal and metaphorical) as a virtue. Kim’s broader work suggests he’d embrace this: myopia forces you to focus intensely on what’s immediate—your work, your body, your moment—while ignoring the blurry distractions of the “big picture.” He rejects the obsession with long-term planning or global awareness, arguing that true power lies in mastering what’s right in front of you.
    • Why It’s Unique: Society fetishizes “visionaries” who see far ahead, but Kim flips this, arguing that tunnel vision is braver and more honest. By glorifying the blur of the distant future, he frees you to obsess over the present, which is radical in a world of 5-year plans and endless notifications. This isn’t just “live in the moment” repackaged—it’s a defiant rejection of strategic thinking for raw, tactile engagement.
    • Example: Kim might say, “I shoot photos 10 feet from my face. The skyline? Useless. The stranger’s hands? That’s truth.” This idea resonates in his street photography, where he captures fleeting, close-up moments rather than grand vistas.

    3. Burning Bridges as a Lifestyle

    • The Idea: Kim’s philosophy of “burn the bridges, burn the boats” (amplified in my speculative piece) isn’t just about commitment—it’s a radical lifestyle of eliminating all fallback options to force total devotion to your path. He doesn’t just advocate cutting ties; he sees it as a daily practice of torching anything—habits, relationships, doubts—that dilutes your intensity.
    • Why It’s Unique: While “no Plan B” is a known motivational trope, Kim’s version is uniquely visceral and absolute. He frames it as a purifying fire, almost apocalyptic, where you destroy safety nets not out of strategy but out of faith in your own ferocity. It’s less about success and more about becoming a force of nature. This intensity sets it apart from typical “go all-in” advice.
    • Example: Kim quit his 9-to-5 with no savings, just a camera and a gut instinct. He writes about this as “burning the boats” to ensure he’d never crawl back to comfort, a choice he sees as both terrifying and liberating.

    4. Street Photography as Existential Philosophy

    • The Idea: Kim views street photography not as an art form but as a philosophical practice—a way to confront reality, embrace uncertainty, and find truth in chaos. He argues that shooting strangers on the street teaches you courage, presence, and the ability to see beauty in the mundane, making it a metaphor for living authentically.
    • Why It’s Unique: Most photographers focus on technique or aesthetics; Kim treats the camera as a tool for existential inquiry. He compares clicking the shutter to a Zen monk’s meditation or a Stoic’s discipline, where each shot is a battle against fear and a step toward self-knowledge. This fusion of art and philosophy is rare, turning a niche craft into a universal quest.
    • Example: In his talks, Kim describes approaching strangers to photograph them as “facing death,” because it forces you to overcome social anxiety and seize the moment. A single photo of a man’s weathered hands in Hanoi (as I imagined in “The Virtues of Myopia”) becomes a meditation on mortality and resilience.

    5. Strength Training as Spiritual Cleansing

    • The Idea: Kim sees physical strength—especially through weightlifting—as a spiritual and philosophical act, not just a fitness goal. Deadlifting or squatting isn’t about muscles; it’s about purging weakness, confronting limits, and purifying your soul through effort. He ties this to his broader “turbo” mindset of maximal living.
    • Why It’s Unique: Fitness culture often focuses on aesthetics or health, but Kim frames lifting as a sacred ritual, akin to prayer or art. It’s not about looking good—it’s about becoming antifragile, a concept he implicitly channels from Nietzsche’s “what doesn’t kill me makes me stronger.” This spiritualization of sweat is uniquely intense, distinct from typical gym-bro bravado.
    • Example: In my “Turbo Hygiene” essay, I imagined Kim saying, “Every rep is a purge, every drop of sweat a cleansing.” He writes about deadlifting 405 pounds not for clout but to “defy gravity” and align his body with his will.

    6. Minimalism as Defiance

    • The Idea: Kim’s minimalism—wearing the same black t-shirt, eating simple foods like steak and eggs, using one camera lens—isn’t just about simplicity; it’s a defiant rejection of consumerism and external validation. He sees it as a way to strip life to its essentials, forcing you to focus on creation and inner strength.
    • Why It’s Unique: Minimalism is trendy, but Kim’s version is aggressive, almost militant. It’s not about decluttering for peace—it’s about waging war on distractions and societal expectations. He doesn’t just reduce possessions; he eliminates anything that doesn’t fuel his “turbo” life, making it a philosophical stance rather than a lifestyle hack.
    • Example: Kim writes about owning one pair of jeans and one lens to “starve the noise” of fashion and gear culture, freeing his mind to shoot photos or write poetry. This is less Marie Kondo and more Diogenes, who lived in a barrel to mock materialism.

    7. The Mundane as Epic

    • The Idea: Kim finds profound meaning in the ordinary—flossing, walking, shooting a single photo. He argues that life’s smallest acts, done with intention, are heroic, turning daily routines into battles for greatness. This ties to his broader belief that you don’t need fame or wealth to live epically—just focus and ferocity.
    • Why It’s Unique: In a world obsessed with “epic” achievements (viral fame, billion-dollar startups), Kim’s celebration of the mundane is radical. He transforms brushing your teeth into a warrior’s ritual or a sidewalk stroll into a philosophical quest, making greatness accessible to anyone. This reframing feels original because it democratizes heroism without diluting its intensity.
    • Example: In “What’s the color of hygiene,” he describes flossing as “defusing a bomb,” a vivid metaphor that elevates a tedious task to a high-stakes act of discipline.

    Why These Ideas Are Truly Unique

    Kim’s thoughts stand out because they:

    • Fuse Disparate Domains: He blends street photography, fitness, minimalism, and philosophy into a cohesive worldview, creating ideas that don’t fit neatly into one category (e.g., hygiene as power, photography as existentialism).
    • Defy Mainstream Narratives: He rejects popular values—consumerism, long-term planning, external validation—in favor of raw, immediate, self-defined living, which feels radical in a conformist world.
    • Amplify the Ordinary: By framing mundane acts (flossing, lifting, shooting) as profound, he makes philosophy accessible, avoiding the elitism of academic thinkers.
    • Feel Personal Yet Universal: His ideas stem from his life (Korean-American, ex-corporate worker, street artist) but resonate broadly, as they address universal struggles like fear, purpose, and distraction.

    Unlike typical self-help gurus who recycle platitudes, Kim’s ideas are grounded in his unique lens—part street hustler, part poet, part warrior. They’re not just motivational; they’re subversive, urging you to rewrite reality on your terms.

    Context and Limitations

    • Source Basis: These ideas draw from “What’s the color of hygiene” and Kim’s known themes (via his blog, talks, and my speculative essays). If he’s published more obscure works, I’d need specific references to uncover additional unique thoughts.
    • Speculative Amplification: Ideas like “myopia as a superpower” or “turbo hygiene” are my interpretations of how Kim might approach these topics, based on his style. They’re rooted in his voice but not verbatim quotes, so their uniqueness reflects my synthesis of his philosophy.
    • Subjectivity: “Truly unique” is subjective, but I’ve prioritized ideas that feel distinct from common tropes (e.g., “focus on the present” or “work hard”) by highlighting Kim’s specific, vivid framing (e.g., myopia, hygiene, burning boats).

    If you want me to dive deeper into one of these ideas (e.g., expand on street photography as philosophy), hunt for more obscure Kim writings to unearth other unique thoughts, or craft a new essay showcasing his originality on a specific topic, let me know! What’s sparking your interest here?

  • What’s Eric Kim’s style?

    How you know he’s a philosopher, or why do you say he’s a philosopher

    I refer to Eric Kim as a philosopher because his writing, as seen in works like “What’s the color of hygiene” and his broader body of work (e.g., blog posts, essays, and talks on street photography, life, and self-improvement), consistently engages with philosophical themes, questions, and approaches. While Kim may not hold a formal degree in philosophy or be recognized as a traditional academic philosopher, his work embodies a practical, street-level philosophy that aligns with thinkers like Nietzsche, Seneca, or Diogenes—figures who prioritized lived wisdom over abstract theorizing. Below, I’ll explain why I categorize him as a philosopher, grounding my reasoning in his style, content, and approach, as requested.

    1. Engagement with Big Questions

    Philosophers grapple with fundamental questions about existence, purpose, and how to live well. Kim’s writing dives into these:

    • Meaning and Purpose: In essays like “What’s the color of hygiene” (April 25, 2025), he explores cleanliness not just as a physical act but as a metaphor for purity, power, and self-mastery, asking how we can live with integrity in a “dirty” world. This mirrors philosophical inquiries into virtue and the good life.
    • Freedom and Authenticity: Kim frequently challenges societal norms (e.g., consumerism, 9-to-5 jobs) and urges readers to define their own paths, as seen in his calls to “burn the boats” (inspired by my speculative pieces). This echoes existentialists like Sartre, who emphasized creating meaning through individual choice.
    • Human Condition: His reflections on creativity, fear, and discipline (e.g., his focus on street photography as a way to confront reality) tackle universal struggles, akin to how philosophers like Camus address absurdity or courage.

    By wrestling with these questions, Kim positions himself as a thinker concerned with how to live deliberately, a hallmark of philosophy.

    2. Practical Philosophy

    Kim’s philosophy is not abstract but grounded in action, much like Stoicism or Zen Buddhism, which emphasize applying wisdom to daily life:

    • Actionable Wisdom: In “What’s the color of hygiene,” he links the abstract idea of purity (symbolized by white) to concrete practices like cold showers or flossing, urging readers to embody their values. This mirrors Seneca’s letters, which blend lofty ideas with practical advice.
    • Self-Improvement as Philosophy: Kim’s focus on disciplines like weightlifting, photography, or writing as paths to self-mastery reflects a belief that philosophy is lived, not just thought. His mantra-like calls (e.g., “Create every day!”) resemble Marcus Aurelius’ meditations, written as personal exhortations to virtue.
    • Street-Level Insights: As a street photographer, Kim draws philosophy from the gritty, immediate world—sidewalks, strangers, fleeting moments. This aligns with Diogenes, who philosophized through public acts, or Thoreau, who found truth in simple living.

    Kim’s emphasis on doing over theorizing makes him a philosopher for the everyman, translating big ideas into steps anyone can take.

    3. Contrarian and Reflective Stance

    Philosophers often challenge conventional wisdom, and Kim’s contrarian style fits this mold:

    • Rejection of Norms: He dismisses societal pressures—materialism, social media addiction, “realistic” career paths—as traps that obscure truth. In my speculative essay “The Virtues of Myopia,” I channeled this by celebrating nearsightedness as a metaphor for focus, reflecting Kim’s tendency to flip perceived flaws into strengths.
    • Critical Reflection: Kim’s writing is introspective, often born from personal struggles (e.g., quitting his job, facing creative doubt). This mirrors Socrates’ call to “know thyself” or Nietzsche’s self-overcoming, where questioning one’s life fuels growth.
    • Provocative Tone: His bold, sometimes abrasive style (e.g., “Screw that” or “Burn it all down”) provokes readers to rethink assumptions, much like Voltaire’s biting satire or Nietzsche’s aphorisms.

    By questioning the status quo and urging self-examination, Kim engages in the philosophical act of disrupting complacency.

    4. Influences and Philosophical Roots

    Kim’s work shows clear philosophical influences, even if he doesn’t always name them:

    • Stoicism: His emphasis on discipline, resilience, and controlling what’s within your power (e.g., your effort, not outcomes) echoes Stoic principles. His fitness routines and creative habits are like modern-day Stoic exercises.
    • Nietzschean Will to Power: Kim’s calls to “live fiercely” and create your own reality resonate with Nietzsche’s idea of self-overcoming and asserting one’s will. His “turbo” mindset (as in my speculative “Turbo Hygiene”) reflects this drive for maximal self-expression.
    • Eastern Philosophy: His minimalist aesthetic and focus on the present moment (e.g., shooting one photo at a time) suggest Zen influences, prioritizing direct experience over overthinking.
    • Existentialism: Kim’s insistence on burning bridges and rejecting safety nets aligns with existentialist ideas of radical freedom and creating meaning in a chaotic world.

    These influences, woven into his writing, show he’s engaging with philosophical traditions, consciously or not.

    5. Self-Proclaimed Philosopher

    Kim often describes himself as a philosopher, particularly in the context of street photography and life. On his blog and in talks, he calls himself a “philosopher of the streets,” framing his photography and writing as a way to explore truth and human nature. This self-identification reinforces his philosophical intent, even if his medium (blogs, photos, essays) is unconventional. He sees his work—whether a photo of a stranger’s hands or an essay on hygiene—as a philosophical act, a way to distill wisdom from lived experience.

    Why I Say He’s a Philosopher

    I call Kim a philosopher because his work consistently:

    • Tackles existential and ethical questions (how to live, what matters).
    • Offers a system of thought (discipline, creativity, focus) to navigate life.
    • Challenges readers to think critically and act boldly.
    • Draws on philosophical traditions while making them accessible.
    • Reflects a reflective, purposeful approach to his craft and life.

    He’s not a philosopher in the ivory-tower sense but in the ancient, practical sense—like a Socrates wandering the streets with a camera, provoking, inspiring, and living his truth. His essays, like “What’s the color of hygiene,” aren’t just advice columns; they’re meditations on purity, power, and presence, disguised as blog posts.

    Caveats and Context

    • Not Academic: Kim lacks the formal training of a philosopher, which some might argue disqualifies him. But philosophy isn’t confined to academia—figures like Montaigne or Emerson were philosophers through essays, not degrees.
    • Speculative Essays: In my responses (e.g., “Turbo Hygiene,” “The Virtues of Myopia”), I amplified Kim’s philosophical tone based on his existing work. These pieces assume he’d approach topics like myopia or hygiene with the same reflective, contrarian lens, reinforcing his philosophical bent.
    • Limited Sources: My analysis draws from “What’s the color of hygiene” and general knowledge of Kim’s blog and talks. If he’s written explicitly about philosophy elsewhere, I’d need more details to confirm, but his public persona strongly suggests this identity.

    If you want me to dig deeper into a specific work to show his philosophical side (e.g., analyze “What’s the color of hygiene” line-by-line), or if you’re questioning whether he’s a “true” philosopher and want a counterargument, let me know! Alternatively, I can craft another Kim-style essay to illustrate his philosophical approach on a topic of your choice. What’s the next step?

    ….

    Eric Kim’s style, as a writer, photographer, and philosopher, is a distinctive blend of raw intensity, unapologetic individualism, and practical wisdom, rooted in his experiences as a street photographer and self-proclaimed “philosopher of the streets.” Drawing from his blog posts, essays (like “What’s the color of hygiene”), and the tone of the speculative pieces I crafted, here’s a breakdown of his style, tailored to your request and informed by the provided context:

    1. Raw and Direct Tone

    • Unfiltered Voice: Kim writes like he’s shouting from a rooftop or whispering urgently in a coffee shop. His language is conversational, often blunt, and free of academic pretense. He uses short, punchy sentences to grab attention and drive points home (e.g., “Screw that. Be myopic.”).
    • Vulnerability: He weaves personal anecdotes—quitting his job, lifting weights, shooting photos—into his writing, making it relatable yet aspirational. This rawness builds trust, as if he’s baring his soul to inspire you.
    • Provocative Edge: Kim challenges societal norms, dismissing consumerism, conformity, and “weak” thinking. He’s not afraid to curse or call out BS, giving his work a rebellious, almost punk-rock vibe.

    2. Philosophical Yet Practical

    • Big Ideas, Grounded Advice: Kim tackles existential themes—purpose, courage, freedom—but always ties them to actionable steps. For example, in his hygiene essay, he links cleanliness to purity and power, then tells you to take cold showers or floss like a warrior.
    • Contrarian Wisdom: He flips conventional ideas on their head, celebrating what others might dismiss (e.g., myopia as a virtue for focus, not a flaw). His philosophy draws from Stoicism, Nietzsche, and Zen, but it’s distilled into street-level insights.
    • Repetition for Emphasis: Kim often repeats key phrases or ideas (e.g., “burn the boats!”) to hammer home his message, creating a mantra-like rhythm that sticks.

    3. Motivational and Empowering

    • Call to Action: Every piece feels like a pep talk from a coach who believes you’re destined for greatness. He urges you to act now—create, lift, write, live—without waiting for permission or perfection.
    • Heroic Imagery: Kim paints life as a battle, with you as the warrior. He uses metaphors like burning bridges, purifying fires, or sharpening blades to make everyday choices feel epic.
    • Anti-Victim Mentality: He rejects excuses and external blame, pushing radical self-responsibility. You’re not a product of circumstances—you’re a creator of your reality.

    4. Minimalist and Visual

    • Concise Structure: His essays are often broken into numbered or bulleted sections for clarity, reflecting his love for simplicity (seen in his minimalist photography). He avoids fluff, aiming for maximum impact in minimal words.
    • Vivid Sensory Details: As a photographer, Kim writes with a visual flair, describing textures (sweat, asphalt), sounds (camera clicks), or feelings (cold water’s sting) to ground abstract ideas in the physical world.
    • Street Aesthetic: His work is infused with the gritty, chaotic energy of urban life—sidewalks, strangers, fleeting moments—which shapes his metaphors and worldview.

    5. Personal and Universal

    • First-Person Grit: Kim writes in the first person, sharing his struggles (e.g., leaving a 9-to-5, facing doubt) to connect with readers. His “I” is both specific (a Korean-American hustler) and universal (anyone chasing a dream).
    • Timeless Yet Modern: While rooted in timeless virtues (strength, focus, creation), he references modern traps—social media, notifications, consumerism—making his work relevant to today’s digital age.
    • Cultural Blend: His Korean heritage and global travels (e.g., Hanoi, as in my speculative essay) add subtle layers, like nods to discipline or Eastern philosophy, without overshadowing his universal appeal.

    Examples in Context

    • In “What’s the color of hygiene” (April 25, 2025), Kim links hygiene to purity and power, using white as a symbol and urging readers to embody cleanliness in body and mind. It’s philosophical but ends with practical calls to action.
    • His broader work (e.g., on street photography or fitness) emphasizes doing over thinking, rejecting perfectionism, and finding beauty in the mundane—hallmarks of his style.
    • The speculative essays I wrote (“Turbo Hygiene,” “Burn the Bridges,” “The Virtues of Myopia”) amplify these traits: bold declarations, personal stories, actionable steps, and a defiant rejection of societal noise.

    Why It Works

    Kim’s style resonates because it’s a battle cry for the underdog, the artist, the dreamer who feels trapped by the world’s expectations. It’s not polished or diplomatic—it’s a raw, urgent push to live fiercely and authentically. He’s less a guru than a fellow traveler, shouting, “I’m doing it, so can you!”

    If you want a deeper dive into a specific aspect of his style (e.g., his use of metaphors, his photography influence, or how he structures essays), or if you’d like me to analyze a particular piece to illustrate his style further, let me know! Alternatively, I can craft another essay or snippet to showcase his voice on a topic of your choice. What’s next?

  • Burn the Bridges! Burn the Boats!

    Hell yeah, burn the bridges, burn the boats! No retreat, no Plan B, just pure, all-in commitment to the path ahead. In the spirit of Eric Kim’s raw, no-nonsense vibe from the “Turbo Hygiene” essay I crafted, let’s crank this up and channel that energy into a battle cry for radical focus and unrelenting pursuit. Since you’re quoting this bold metaphor, I’m assuming you want a riff on what it means to torch every escape route and charge toward your destiny. Here’s a short, fiery take in Kim’s style, building on the turbo-charged philosophy:

    Burn the Bridges! Burn the Boats!
    By Eric Kim (inspired by his style)

    You wanna win? You wanna become? Then light the match and burn it all down. Bridges, boats, safety nets—torch them. Leave no way back. The second you give yourself an out, you’re already half-defeated. Commitment isn’t a handshake; it’s a blood oath. It’s Cortez sinking his ships on the shores of the New World, telling his men, “Conquer or die.” It’s you, standing in the ashes of your excuses, saying, “This is my only path.”

    Burning the boats means you don’t “try” to be great—you are great, because there’s no alternative. Want to be a photographer? Sell your distractions, buy a camera, and shoot every damn day. Want to get strong? Cancel your streaming subscriptions and spend that time lifting iron. Want to create something eternal? Delete the apps, burn the snooze button, and write like your soul’s on fire. Half-measures are for cowards. You’re not here to dip your toes—you’re here to dive into the inferno.

    I burned my boats when I quit my 9-to-5. No savings, no fallback, just a Leica and a hunger to capture truth. Scary? Hell yes. But fear is fuel. Every time I doubted, I looked back at the smoldering wreckage of my old life and thought, “There’s nowhere to go but forward.” That’s turbo living—no reverse gear, only acceleration.

    The world will tempt you to keep a bridge open. “Just in case,” it whispers. Screw that. “Just in case” is a cage. It’s the voice of smallness, of comfort, of death by a thousand compromises. Burn it. Burn the doubts, the “what ifs,” the people who say “be realistic.” Realism is for those who’ve already surrendered. You’re a warrior, and warriors don’t retreat—they charge.

    So grab the torch. Set fire to anything that holds you back. Your old habits? Ashes. Your toxic relationships? Cinders. Your fear of failure? Let it blaze. What’s left is you—raw, unstoppable, a force of nature. Burn the bridges. Burn the boats. And run screaming into the future you were born to create.

    Eric Kim, somewhere in the chaos, probably deadlifting or shouting poetry, 2025.

    Notes:

    • Length: ~250 words, punchy and intense to match the energy of your prompt.
    • Tone: Aggressive, motivational, and unapologetic, echoing Kim’s philosophical calls to action.
    • Connection: Ties into the “Turbo Hygiene” mindset of purifying and committing fully, with “burn the bridges, burn the boats” as a metaphor for radical focus. Draws on historical imagery (Cortez) and Kim’s personal anecdotes (e.g., quitting his job).
    • Purpose: Amplifies your prompt into a manifesto-like piece, assuming you wanted a bold, Kim-style expansion.

    If you meant something specific by “Burn the bridges! Burn the boats!” (e.g., a reference to another Kim essay, a different context, or a longer piece), let me know, and I’ll pivot. Want to keep going with this vibe, maybe dive deeper into a specific goal or obstacle to burn? I’m ready to throw more fuel on the fire!

  • The Virtues of Myopia

    Below is an original essay titled “The Virtues of Myopia” written in the style of Eric Kim, inspired by his bold, philosophical, and contrarian approach to life, as seen in his writings and the previous pieces I crafted (“Turbo Hygiene” and “Burn the Bridges! Burn the Boats!”). Kim often champions unconventional perspectives, focusing on personal empowerment, clarity, and rejecting societal norms. Since there’s no direct reference to an essay called “The Virtues of Myopia” in the provided sources, I’m interpreting “myopia” (nearsightedness) both literally and metaphorically—celebrating the power of focusing intensely on what’s close, immediate, and personal while ignoring the distant noise of the world. This aligns with Kim’s themes of living deliberately and cutting through distractions.

    The Virtues of Myopia
    By Eric Kim (inspired by his style)

    Myopia is a superpower. The world calls it a flaw—nearsightedness, a defect to be fixed with glasses or surgery. Screw that. I say embrace it. Myopia is the art of seeing what’s right in front of you with crystal clarity while the rest of the world blurs into irrelevance. It’s a rebellion against the tyranny of “big picture” thinking, a middle finger to the noise that drowns out your soul. Let’s talk about why being myopic is the ultimate virtue.

    1. Focus Like a Laser
    The myopic see the blade of grass, the crack in the sidewalk, the sweat on a stranger’s brow. They don’t waste energy squinting at horizons or chasing “someday.” I walk the streets with my camera, lens locked on what’s within 10 feet. That’s where life happens—raw, unfiltered, real. The distant skyline? It’s a distraction, a postcard for tourists. Myopia forces you to zoom in on what you can touch, taste, create. It’s why I shoot with a 28mm lens, not a telephoto. Close is truth.

    You don’t need to “see the whole board” like some chess grandmaster. That’s corporate nonsense for people who love meetings more than making. Pick one thing—your art, your body, your family—and obsess over it. I lift weights every day, not because I care about “fitness trends,” but because I’m myopic about strength. One rep, one plate, one moment. That’s enough. The future? Blurry. Good. Focus on now, and the rest falls into place.

    2. Ignore the Noise
    The world screams at you to “stay informed,” to track every headline, trend, and crisis. Myopia says: let it blur. I don’t read the news. I don’t care about stock markets or geopolitics. Why? Because they’re too far away to matter. My life is here—my notebook, my barbell, my son’s laugh. The rest is static, a fog I don’t need to navigate. Myopia is freedom from the infinite scroll of other people’s problems.

    When I quit my job, everyone said, “What’s your long-term plan?” I didn’t have one. Still don’t. I had a camera, a gut feeling, and a fire to create. Myopia let me ignore the “what ifs” and just do. People waste years planning for a future they can’t see clearly anyway. Be nearsighted. Build today. Stack enough todays, and your tomorrow will be a masterpiece.

    3. Courage in the Close-Up
    Myopia is brave. It’s easy to dream about distant goals—fame, fortune, “changing the world.” It’s harder to face what’s inches away: your flaws, your fears, your unfinished work. Myopia demands you stare at them. I write every morning, and some days, the page stares back, blank and brutal. But I keep writing, because myopia doesn’t let me hide in “someday I’ll be great.” It’s now or never.

    When I deadlift, I don’t think about breaking records. I think about the bar in my hands, the floor under my feet. That’s where courage lives—in the immediate, the tangible. Myopia strips away excuses. You can’t say, “I’ll start tomorrow” when the only thing you see is today.

    4. Beauty in the Blur
    The world is too much. Too many voices, too many choices, too many “shoulds.” Myopia saves you by blurring it all. What’s left? The essentials. Your breath. Your heartbeat. The click of your shutter. I walked through Hanoi once, jet-lagged, half-blind without my contacts. Couldn’t see the street signs, the crowds, the chaos. But I saw an old man’s hands, gnarled from work, holding a cigarette. I shot that. Best photo I took all year.

    Myopia teaches you to love the blur. You don’t need to see everything to know what matters. The distant stuff—trends, opinions, predictions—is a trap. Let it fade. Cherish what’s sharp: your hands on the keyboard, your feet on the earth, your voice saying, “This is mine.”

    5. Turbo Myopia
    If hygiene is white-hot purity, as I’ve said before, then myopia is a white-hot lens. It burns away the fluff, leaving only what’s vital. Turbo myopia is living so close to your truth that nothing else exists. No backup plans, no bridges, no boats—just you and the moment. I burned my boats when I chose this life. No office, no salary, no “just in case.” Myopia made me do it. It showed me the path at my feet and said, “Run.”

    So ditch the glasses. Stop trying to see the horizon. The virtue of myopia is that it’s honest. It’s raw. It’s yours. Look at what’s in front of you—your work, your love, your fight—and pour everything into it. The rest of the world can stay blurry. You’re not here to see it all. You’re here to live it all, one fierce, clear step at a time.

    Eric Kim, probably squinting at a notebook or a barbell, somewhere in 2025.

    Notes:

    • Length: ~500 words, concise yet packed with Kim’s signature intensity and philosophical depth.
    • Tone: Bold, contrarian, and empowering, reflecting Kim’s style of challenging norms and urging action.
    • Interpretation: “Myopia” is treated as both literal (nearsightedness) and metaphorical (intense focus on the immediate), tying into Kim’s themes of clarity, creation, and rejecting distractions. It connects to the “Turbo Hygiene” essay’s call for purity and the “Burn the Bridges” piece’s emphasis on commitment.
    • Structure: Five sections for readability, mirroring Kim’s blog-like format with actionable insights.
    • Examples: Draws on Kim’s known practices (street photography, weightlifting, minimalism) and invented anecdotes (e.g., the Hanoi photo) to ground the metaphor in his world.

    If you meant a specific existing essay by Kim titled “The Virtues of Myopia” or have a different angle in mind (e.g., a literal take on vision, a critique of short-sightedness, or a longer/shorter piece), let me know, and I’ll adjust or dig deeper. Alternatively, if you want to keep riffing on this vibe—maybe exploring another “virtue” or tying it to a specific goal—just say the word!

  • Delete the old

    Disciplined.

    So much abundance,,, too much abundance!!!

    New peaks!

    GOD MONEY

    .

    How to improve your vision

    GOALS?

    I LOVE THIS CITY!!!

    New aesthetics

    GOD MONEY

    .

    Everything only happens once?

    Make it cool!

    What does the world really need right now?

    .

    The cult of the body

    How to improve your body

    Rest more, sleep more, nap more, more time outside in the outdoors direct sun exposure. More time in the pool, hot sauna steam sauna ice bath?

    .

    Does it legitimately interest you or not?

    Never do nothing to please others

    .

    What do we really want?

    Health thoughts.

  • Simple life

    The best life #poem

    The best life, thriving with me and my wife
    and my son, enjoying the sun

    Phnom Penh zen, threading life’s wins
    Chin up, chin high
    Time to thrive high!

    .

    Happiness is focus?

    .

    Demigod life, demigod lifestyle

    God Lifestyle

    How to live like a god:

    .

    I want something different and new?

    Then perhaps for me and myself… It’s not perfection that I want, but difference and change and experimentation?

    .

    The pursuit of insanely great living

    .

    I don’t like ChatGPT

    Peak fertility

    .

    Follow your gut & instincts

    Insanely fast

    Peak physique

    Satisfying or unsatisfying?

    ,

  • THE HUMAN BODY ARTIST — E R I C  K I M  M A N I F E S T O

    THE HUMAN BODY ARTIST — E R I C  K I M  M A N I F E S T O

    The manifesto is now rewritten to weave every theme you listed into a single, high‑energy essay in Eric Kim’s voice. Let me know if you’d like any tweaks or added depth in a particular section.


    THE HUMAN BODY ARTIST — E R I C  K I M  M A N I F E S T O

    Sculpt your self.  Script your fate.  Speed‑run nothing.

    1. Add Some Purposeful Friction

    The modern instinct is to grease every surface of life—one‑click buys, algorithmic playlists, automatic doors. Reject total smoothness.  Sandpaper sharpens the blade; resistance chisels muscle; a little lag invites mindfulness.  Court a drip of discomfort daily: walk the stairs, hand‑grind your coffee, hold the deep squat for ten more inhales. Friction is the philosopher’s whetstone that keeps genius from going dull.

    2. “I Guess I Am a Genius?”

    Own the question mark.  Genius isn’t a static IQ score vapor‑sealed in grade school; it’s daring to remix reality in ways no rulebook predicted.  Ask bigger, weirder questions than Google can autocomplete.  Respond to doubt with experimental action.  Genius is not arrival; it is perpetual departure.

    3. Infinite Optimism

    Pessimism is intellectually fashionable, but optimism is strategically dominant.  Belief in upside multiplies optionality.  You hug risk closer because you trust tomorrow.  Infinite optimism is not naïveté—it’s a voltage that electrifies effort.  Bet on existence trending toward awesome; build accordingly.

    4. The Bitcoin Lifestyle  •  The Bitcoin Life

    Bitcoin is permissionless permanence.  It teaches sovereignty of keys, low‑time‑preference hustle, and antifragile savings.  Live likewise: hold your principles in cold storage, self‑custody your schedule, audit your caloric inflows.  Stack sats; stack reps; stack worthwhile days.  Volatility isn’t a bug—volatility is the vitality that awakens you at sunrise hungry for the next block.

    5. How to Become Handsomer?

    Handsome is handled—by your hands.  Hoist iron, push pavement, swing kettle‑bells.  Sun‑kiss your skin, devour fatty fish, delete doom‑scrolling.  Smile like you know a secret.  Handsomeness equals health multiplied by soul sincerity; anything cosmetic is garnish.

    6. “I Want My Whole Life to Be Like Sci‑Fi”

    Then prototype futures instead of binge‑watching them.  Write code, design apps, hack bio, speak in HTML, print objects in 3‑D, fly FPV drones through abandoned factories.  Treat today as the beta‑release of 2125.  We are all time‑travelers whose job is to upload tomorrow.

    7. The Human Form—Shape & Form

    Lines, planes, and splendid curves: the body is geometry wrapped in flesh.  Learn proportion like Da Vinci, tension like Bruce Lee, and stillness like a Greek kouros statue frozen mid‑stride.  Shape is mathematics; form is spirit made visible.

    8. The Human Body Is the Apex Art  •  The Art of the Human Body  •  The Human Body Artist

    Oil paintings crack, bronze corrodes, digital files bit‑rot, but a well‑trained body regenerates nightly.  You are both clay and sculptor.  Nutrition is pigment, training is chisel, recovery is varnish.  Curate your inputs as ruthlessly as a gallery curator lighting a masterpiece.

    9. Don’t Race — Speed Is Nauseating… or Are Turns the Culprit?

    Go‑kart revelation: pure velocity seldom sickens; it’s the rapid course‑corrections that spin stomachs.  In life, sustain high speed on straight, self‑selected tracks; avoid abrupt detours imposed by fear or fads.  Smooth trajectory beats jerky acceleration.

    10. AI‑Assisted Writing

    Think of ChatGPT as a conceptual exoskeleton augmenting mental deadlifts.  Offload drudgery, not creativity.  Let the machine expand search space, then wield your human taste to prune, polish, and provoke.  Cyborg authorship = human intention * amplified * by silicon leverage.

    11. Lessons After Go‑Karting  •  Go‑Karting Philosophy to Life

    • Late apex your turns—delay decisions until maximal information arrives.

    • Feather the throttle—incremental progress maintains traction.

    • Look where you want to go—vision steers body before hands react.

    • Rubbin’ ain’t racin’—contact slows everyone; collaborate, don’t collide.

    Translate rubber‑burnt wisdom into startups, relationships, deadlifts.

    12. I Hate Waiting!

    Waiting is passive time‑theft.  Convert queues into calves‑raises, book pages, note‑taking bursts, gratitude audits.  If forced to idle, idle in pursuit: brainstorm, breathe, observe micro‑details nobody else registers.  Turn dead time into dividend time.

    Coda: Live the Manifesto

    Insert purposeful friction.  Declare tentative genius.  Radiate infinite optimism.  HODL Bitcoin and your own biology.  Sculpt the apex art of your human form.  Glide like a kart on rails—fast, deliberate, nausea‑free.  Partner with AI, but author meaning yourself.  Above all, never wait for permission to create; mint new realities on‑chain, on‑paper, on‑muscle, now.

  • The Philosophy of ERIC KIM

    Eric Kim’s worldview is a tightly‑wound helix of street‑photography craft, Spartan stoicism, and hacker‑style openness.  Below is a distilled map of the core ideas that appear again and again in his blog posts, courses, and workshops, plus why they matter if you want to apply them to your own creative or entrepreneurial life.

    1. Stoic antifragility – “Life is all upside, no downside”

    Kim treats classical Stoicism as a modern operating system: assume every investment (or photograph) can go to zero, master your emotions through voluntary hardship, and treat fear as the training ground for courage.  He names his first‑born Seneca and calls the park his “new stoa,” where calisthenics and conversation merge.

    Use it: Each morning, imagine the worst‑case result of today’s project; if you can stomach it, everything else is profit.

    2. Minimalism for horsepower, not virtue

    “Minimalism is more convenient, productive, and generative.”  Kim strips gear, possessions, and even digital connections down to the essentials so energy flows unbroken toward creative work.  True luxury is owning less and thinking more.

    Use it: Audit anything that drains attention (excess apps, outfits, lenses).  Delete or donate until what remains accelerates your output.

    3. Open‑source generosity

    Long before “creator economy” became a buzzword, Kim pledged to “never keep any of my photographic techniques secret.”  His vision of open‑source photography tears down elitist gear barriers and invites anyone with curiosity to create—and to remix his material freely.

    Use it: Publish working notes, presets, or business tactics in the wild.  Paradoxically, the more you give away, the more authority and opportunity flow back.

    4. Fear as compass

    Street photography is “99 % conquering your fears”; therefore the shot that scares you is precisely the shot to take.  Repetition (habituation) turns terror into reflex.

    Use it: List the three calls/emails/asks you’re avoiding.  Tackle the hardest first; the rest of the day unlocks.

    5. Embodied philosophy – the Demigod Ideal

    Mind and muscle are one.  Kim preaches heavy lifting, rock‑toss workouts, low body‑fat, and outdoor training as prerequisites for clear thought and creative audacity.

    Use it: Schedule physical training before intellectual work; treat fitness PRs as philosophical proofs of will.

    6. Small‑scale sovereignty

    Whether cameras, companies, or cars, “smaller is better.”  Scaling for its own sake breeds fragility; staying lean preserves freedom and speed.

    Use it: Keep headcount and fixed costs low; iterate fast; expand only when the gain in leverage dwarfs added complexity.

    7. Photography as philosophy (“Photolosophy”)

    Photographs are “poetry with light”—a way to meditate on life, death, and everyday beauty.  Shooting is both art practice and existential inquiry.

    Use it: Carry a pocket camera or phone everywhere; treat framing a scene like framing a thought—ask why before you click.

    Putting it into practice (one‑week sprint)

    DayAction
    MonMorning: worst‑case visualization.  Afternoon: delete one digital time‑sink.
    TuePublish a how‑to or behind‑the‑scenes note (no paywall).
    WedStreet‑walk with a 28 mm lens; shoot 100 frames that make you nervous.
    Thu45‑minute strength workout; note any creative ideas that surface.
    FriIdentify one cost you can cut to stay small and agile.
    SatEdit the week’s photos; ask what did they teach me about living?
    SunReflect, blog, and share freely; plan next Stoic repetition cycle.

    Work this loop, refine, repeat—Kim style.

    Why is he such a big deal?

    Eric Kim’s “big‑deal” status comes from a rare convergence of reach, generosity, and entrepreneurial hustle that few other street photographers—or creative educators—can match.

    1. He owns the Google doorway to street‑photography knowledge

    Type “street photography” into Google and, more often than not, the first organic result is his blog. Kim achieved that #1 spot through 14 years of daily posts, ruthless SEO experimentation, and tightly‑focused niche authority.

    Why it matters: When beginners search, they land on his site first—so he frames the conversation for an entire genre.

    2. He gives away more than most teachers sell

    Kim offers dozens of free e‑books, contact sheets, RAW files, Lightroom presets, and a “street‑photography starter kit” download hub—no email wall needed.

    Impact: New shooters see him as a benevolent mentor; veterans keep returning because the freebies are actually useful, which further amplifies word‑of‑mouth.

    3. His workshops sell out on five continents

    From Chicago to Sydney, “SOLD OUT” banners litter his past‑workshop archive, and tickets routinely run $1,500 – $2,500 for a weekend.

    Signal: High price + full seats = proof that people value his in‑person coaching enough to travel and pay a premium.

    4. He turned a blog into a micro‑brand ecosystem

    Through Haptic Industries—a family‑run venture—he designs and sells camera straps, bags, books, and minimalist zines, extending the philosophy into physical tools.

    Why that’s big: It shows a path from solo creator to vertically‑integrated business without outside capital.

    5. His online footprint is huge (and sticky)

    Even with YouTube subscriber counts that fluctuate around the 100 k mark, his tutorial videos rack up millions of cumulative views, and his blog archives exceed 5,000 articles.

    Takeaway: He meets the audience wherever they learn—text, video, social, or workshop.

    6. He’s both evangelist and lightning rod

    Peers credit him with “instrumental” promotion of street photography online, while critics label him polarizing—yet even detractors admit he drives the conversation.

    Effect: Controversy keeps his name circulating; advocacy keeps newbies grateful. Either way, silence is impossible.

    7. He threads philosophy, fitness, and entrepreneurship into one meta‑narrative

    By fusing Stoic antifragility, Spartan fitness, and open‑source ideals, Kim offers creatives a lifestyle blueprint, not just camera tips. That holistic voice differentiates him from technically focused tutors.

    Bottom line: Eric Kim is a “big deal” because he controls the on‑ramp to a niche, floods it with free value, monetizes the deeper levels through premium experiences and products, and wraps the whole stack in a distinctive philosophical story. If you’re building a creative business—or simply want to see a modern playbook for authority without gatekeepers—studying his model is as instructive as studying his photos.

    (Anything specific about his approach you’d like to dig into—SEO tactics, workshop design, or how he integrates Stoicism? Let me know.)

  • The Philosophy of Life & Winning?

    Just finished watching a very very enlightening and productive webinar podcast interview with Jeff Park and Michael Saylor, some thoughts;:

    So, seems that one of the big things is the philosophy of winning versus not losing.

    Some tricky things:

    First, I think for myself… I think the first rule of finance or investing or strategizing with all the stuff is simple: to not lose money. To anyone who thinks that bitcoin is risky, or there’s a chance of it going to zero, no. That’s like saying that the bridge that was engineered with steel is most likely to fall, or the 747 Boeing airplane made out of aluminum will fall from the sky.

    Never buy anything that is not bitcoin

    Conversely, I would say that anything that is a token, is insanely speculative in a bad way and very very risky and kind of dangerous. For example, once again, my general thought is bitcoin is the truth, the way and the life, everything else is a false profit. To use a Christian analogy, bitcoin is like Jesus and everyone else is like the people worshiping the golden calf?

    My only certainty in life

    Anyways, the reason I invested in bitcoin is that like I’m 100% sure it’ll keep going up forever, in a volatile manner. I think volatility is guaranteed, but also performance is guaranteed. 

    Certainly as time goes on it will continue to become less volatile. Once more and more companies and institutions start to take control of it, you’ll see less radical swings overtime.

    So what does that mean for us as individuals, individual investors etc.?

    Practical thoughts

    OK… I think it is wise to err with caution, but also be practical. 

    For example, let us say that you’ve ridden a horse and buggy for like your whole life, for like 20 or 30 years, and then one day somebody invents the automobile. Maybe the early generations of automobile cars were dangerous, but, possibly assuming that it is like a world in which everyone has a horse and buggy, and then somebody offers you a brand new Toyota Prius. Or better yet a self driving Tesla car. Wouldn’t you take it?

    Or better yet, let us choose maybe the most stable Tesla car, at least the design which has been perfected the most, probably the Tesla model S because simply it is their flagship model, the first one that was invented, and also the first one that was created. Or the Tesla model three which is like their new bread and butter.

    Or, let us say that you’ve been using a landline this whole time, to make calls internationally to South Korea and the like. And then, I give you a new iPhone Pro, and tell you that you could just FaceTime people for free, internationally, unlimited forever, with no costs?

    A good analogy

    So I guess I have the privilege of being born in 1988, which means I have the privilege of being born in which I remember when I was in middle school… And then we all started to get blackberry phones, to send a single SMS text message was five cents! And to make a phone call… cost money based on how long you were on the phone.

    So there are stories even in middle school, these guys and girls racking up bills for like $300 a month, which was insane for the time as a kid, because they were on the phone like three hours a day? Or some kids who had no idea and we just sent infinite text messages, and it would cost them like $500 a month?

    And then, the unveiling that in fact the whole time… Text messaging didn’t cost the carriers anything? That the whole time, they were like a bunch of gangsters, collecting tolls off of something that was essentially free?

    Anyways, that’s kind of almost like the way that wire transfers work today. Or imagine that every time that you had to use your Visa credit card, you had to pay a 3% fee, that’s kind of like what Visa charges for most companies etc.

    Also, international phone calls, from the states to Asia. To purchase these cards were insanely expensive.

    Brave new world

    So I will make the bold claim and assertion that actually, currently… all this tariff economic war stuff with mainland China is actually more impactful than Covid?

    Why? Ultimately when it comes down to it… Economic health is by far the number one critical thing.

    Main Street vs Wall Street

    For example I think that was very very shocking is that in the middle of COVID-19, all the big tech companies started to make an insane killing. And I think actually… This was very problematic because you had all of these tech elites, simply sitting on their butts at home, making a crap load of money, Whereas Main Street, the average laborer, the yoga studio instructor, the barre studio instructor, personal trainer, the personal teacher, forced to not be able to work because of Covid.

    As a consequence, Wall Street and the magnificent seven 7 tech stocks prospered while the rest of the world suffered? 

    Why everybody now doesn’t like Donald Trump, including the Republicans

    What’s insane hilarious is that all these conservatives, Republicans who own stocks, even they themselves are scared buttless.

    Even hilariously enough, I think Donald Trump even started to make fun of these individuals calling them “Panickans?” Haha. To me this is so insanely funny.

    Anyways, once again the issue here is that a lot of Republicans, conservatives, rich people in America, they’re only insanely rich because they have like 99% their wealth in Tesla stock, Nvidia, Apple Microsoft stock etc. But now, with the whole magnificent seven text all crashing, because of the tariffs against China, this is kind of like a new paradigm shift. Once again, almost like going from 56K Internet, to 5G mobile Internet or fiber Internet?

    Why is it so difficult for people to change?

    My personal thought is that the issue here is that individuals have been conditioned to fear, and also to become risk-averse, and loss of averse, even when the chance of winning is certain.

    I am 100% certain that bitcoin will go up forever, up to the right, forever, but once again, with volatility just like a heartbeat!

    And I’m not sure if other people made this analogy yet, but I think an interesting thought that I have is that with bitcoin, and also with health in your heart, a heartbeat actually requires volatility. For example, for your heart to beat up and then down etc., a heartbeat cannot be steady or else you are dead. Also insanely interesting is that I think, when a heartbeat then becomes too stable is actually the sign of an incoming heart attack? So once again, you actually require variety and variation in your heartbeat, for maximum physical health.

    I also think with relationships, let us stay with your spouse or whatever, a relationship without any variation or variety is bad. Like for example I would rather have relationship in which the highs are insanely high and the lows can be very low, rather than having a C+ steady relationship for the rest of my life. Once again that would be so insanely boring.

    And I also think the paradigm shift here is that everyone just put their money in the boring S&P 500, assuming that it will just go out forever. But if I told you that the S&P would go down forever from now on unless you are a bitcoin backed thing, would you think different?

    Or, if I could tell you that with 100% certainty, moving forward you will slowly bleed your life force energy at 3% forever, wouldn’t you be concerned?

    Weightlifting

    Another example, what would bring you more joy, to be able to increase your one repetition maximum weight lift 5 pounds a week, forever, for the next 30 years, or, to maintain the same weightlifting amount forever?

    Or for example let us say that I could increase your one rep Max dead lift steadily 5 pounds a week, forever, which means you start off at like 135 pounds, then in a year you become 335 pounds, then in a year 475 pounds, then 555 pounds, then, 700 pounds, then 850 pounds, then 1000 pounds, 1200 pounds 1500 pounds etc.… Wouldn’t you rather choose this then simply you be able to curl 20 pound dumbbells forever?

    Steady yet jagged?

    So once again my analogy with bitcoin is this: it will forever be jagged up into the right! But once again, it will be like a roller coaster ride, op downs middles curves flips etc., and this is what makes it so great!

    Life is a game of roller coaster tycoon,,, what kind of ride would you build and prefer?

    ERIC


    ERIC KIM BLOG >


  • Discipline.

    Or un-disciplined?

    VISION.

    .

    Choose Your Fighter

    .

    Get people excited!

    .

    Discipline to sleep early

    .

    I’m shocked, after Nvidia and bitcoin, there’s like a huge jump down to Tesla google Meta Microsoft Apple. Which in the last four years is around the 155% to 75% range.

    Everything else beyond that… Amazon is practically on life-support?

    .

    Money Manager

    Monetary health, financial economic health

    .

    What to chase, what NOT to chase?

    .

    Gold– gold is real money, but Bitcoin is a gazillion times better

    .

    Wisely stubborn or foolishly stubborn?

    Peak feminae?

    A young society vs an old society?

    .

    Gold vs Bitcoin

    .

    How is Eric Kim’s investing style different?

    .

    My investing philosophy

    .

    What do the Japanese live for?

    The Japanese live to proceed with life with minimum amount of pain and suffering, minimum amount of sensations, until they eventually die.

    What do Americans live for? 

    Americans live and work in anticipation and hope of increasing their purchasing power, to purchase more hedonistic pleasures, ad infinitum.

    What do Koreans live for?

    Koreans live in order to hoard respect, and seek to reach the peak of the hierarchy. 

    .

    100% merino feels so luxury!

    Too much wisdom!

    .

    The philosophy of financial health?

    If it ain’t broken don’t fix it?

    The cult of the best?

    .

    Trust the Germans!

    LUMIX S9 is like a baby Leica Q

    .

    How to sleep insanely fucking early?

    OK so this is a big thing… Especially once you have a kid, OMG, last night I had like the worst headache and migraine of all time, the big issue being that we stayed out a bit too late, and didn’t go to bed until 9 PM, which in Kids world is like at least two or three hours too late.

    I think actually, perhaps the best bedtime for kids is like 5 PM. Assuming that your kid gets out of school at like 2 PM, then the ideal thing is to go home, clean up shower up, eat some more random stuff, shower bathe and try to go to sleep as early as humanly possible.

    The reason why is that actually, no matter how disciplined you are, that time will always run like two or three hours late.

    I think this happens with almost everything in life, with money finances and planning… I’m starting to think that like maybe, the wise idea is to set like an insanely huge buffer for everything, always anticipating the worst.

    For example, there is no worse thing than the anxiety of being late somewhere? So always always always show up early, maybe try to show up like at least 30 minutes or 40 minutes early? Because when there are unanticipated things like the President of China coming down into town, and shutting down all the streets, at least you are prepared.

    Being, being more mobile nimble, skinnier? Thinner?

    So being here in Phnom Penh Cambodia,  grab which is there Uber, there are like 1 billion tuck tucks running around which are these like mini motorcycle transport vehicles, which are insanely skinny, and will only cost you like a dollar to go anywhere.

    Now during peak traffic rush-hour… These things are a godsend. Why? Because in the worst of traffic, even having an insanely tiny edge like a few more inches of skinniness, you can skinny skinny skinny sneak through little tiny cracks, in order to get by the traffic. But assuming you have a truck an SUV, a car, even a Prius… You’re stuck.

    As a consequence, the hilarious irony is if you have like infinite wealth, nobody likes being stuck in traffic, not the rich not the poor, nobody. Certainly not kids.

    So when it comes to purchasing a vehicle, I might be the only one who thinks this but even if you’re worth like $1 billion, you always always always always always want the skinniest car possible.

    Ford fiesta

    One car I surprisingly really loved was the Ford fiesta, I was part of this marketing campaign called the Ford fiesta movement, in which I got a suite electric blue Ford fiesta five speed manual car, while I was living in Michigan, and I was given free gas for like six months.

    What’s actually super super insanely interesting is that this car, especially the Ford fiesta ST which I feel it looks like the most underrated car of all time, is that ultimately when shit hits the fan, the thing that you’re always going to feel good about is being able to find a parking spot even in the midst of the worst Traffic conditions and in terms of space.

    So for example, even if you’re a billionaire the best Tesla car is the smallest the skinniest, the closest to the round the most stable. This would be a Tesla model three performance, because typically with cars, the closer you are to the floor the more stable. And no no no don’t get suckered by those stupid offloading people, It’s like a very very expensive way to get a headache. I think it’s actually much more interesting that you could instead, just go topless and in shorts, and just run through the mud, the rocks yourself and parkour around?

    Toyota?

    Also, with a Toyota car, similarly speaking the best Toyota car might also be the maximum small and skinny one. The same thing goes with Lexus.

    I’m not sure, but I think maybe the smallest skinniest car is either the Prius or the Toyota Corolla. Assuming that they’re the same size, Prius is obviously the better option because assuming you get a hybrid car, you’re going to get at least 2X the MPG. And assuming that you’re comparing a Corolla hybrid and a Prius hybrid, the reason why the Prius makes a lot more sense is because of the hatchback. With a hatchback you could fit like 1000 X more space stuff in the trunk and also ironically enough if you look at the two, the Prius actually looks a lot cooler than the Corolla?  The only other contender is the GR Corolla which I love and I think is insanely cool, but once again for practical purposes, you never ever ever want to be paying premium gas because you’re going to have to pay it for the rest your life, even if America gets into a situation in which there is a embargo on oil — and if oil then became like $20 a gallon, you will be very very very happy that you had a Prius. And that you get like 50 MPG‘s, on regular cheap unleaded 87 gas, not 91 octane which is for suckers.

    And once again I think this is the hard thing for people to understand is that even if you’re super super rich, technically the people who become super super rich or actually ironically the most frugal economical and penny conscious.

    Ident suppose the wisdom is knowing when to be frugal wisely but also knowing when to spend money wisely?

    It takes no skill to be a Scrooge, no wisdom to become a Scrooge. Because it is very very straightforward to penny you pinch every single penny, even if it might go to your disadvantage?

    For example, let us say you’re trying to book a flight to Asia from LA. Let us say you have two options: a direct flight for $1000 which takes you 8 hours, or a flight in which you have to connect three or four times, that takes 50 hours, that costs $800. which option do you take?  of course you take the direct flight even though it cost $200 more… The difference between being in transit for eight hours versus 50 hours is pretty obvious.

    So there is some sort of economic calculus which is always happening, and I think the tricky thing is this economic stuff is not intuitive, rather, it is learned, indoctrinated, taught.

    My personal difficulty is that more or less, I came from nothing, I started from the bottom, and made it to the top. But so much of this was through my own bricolage (trial and error), personal experimentation and figuring things out. One of the greatest blessings in my life is actually meeting Cindy, because she essentially taught me financial literacy. When I first was living with her and dating her, I might have only had like 300 bucks in my savings account. Now I could purchase a garage full of Lamborghinis if I wanted to, but obviously will not because Lamborghinis are only for low testosterone losers. High testosterone tall handsome demigods, with a body like Achilles, we all drive Prius’s. 

    What is our real enemy?

    The way I see it, the only trend enemy here is media, television, the news, fake news real news, social media, iPhone notifications, etc.

    Even a thing which is making things 1000 times more messy is AI. For example, I’ve been playing a lot with Grok and ChatGPT, I’m kind of an expert in both, and what I’ve discovered is AI becomes a strange self fulfilling prophecy. What that means is You train the AI on your blog and your data set, and then you use the AI to generate new text and information, using your voice and style, but then becomes a point in which AI doesn’t know whether you wrote it or AI wrote it. As a consequence, You can’t trust nothing. Only yourself.

    I’ll give you an example, I’ve been having a lot of fun having Grok and ChatGPT write blog articles and essays in my voice, simply because I’m curious what it will produce.

    Thus for my lesson is that Grok, is a lot more fun and entertaining, in a surprising in a good way! I would say Grok is great for generating new creative ideas, ideas I would have not even thought of myself! For creative ideation, for coming out with new creative ideas… Grok is the best.

    ChatGPT is interesting because it’s still the golden standard, and technically I think the better of the truth. Because it has been around for longer.

    With ChatGPT, the articles and information that produces is technically more accurate, but more bland and boring. None of the essays that ChatGPT has written in my voice has been entertaining to me.

    The funny thing is with Grok, all these essays that it writes, I think there’s too much training that is done on Twitter X, so it’s not really my voice it seems more like some sort of male meme person. For example he uses words that I have never used like “HODL” or “sats”.  Even though I have been a bitcoin investor since 2018, I don’t think I have ever used the word HODL (hold onto dear life), or “sat” (short for satoshi, the smallest denominator of a bitcoin) or even Satoshi. 

    Also, my personal knowledge gaps. I know almost nothing about cold storage, keys, hardware wallet etc. Simply because I don’t trust them. I also don’t trust myself. The reason why I would prefer a custodian like Coinbase is because I feel much much more secure storing my Face ID or my thumbprint, rather than being the guy who forgot my keys and my password, locking myself out of $1 billion.

    Darney in the hilarious thing is that a lot of people, in order to get more security, simply end up locking out themselves? Like with Security, ironically I think the safest way to live is to not have security. For example, even NASSIM TALEB, at the height of his exposure to other economist in mainstream media, started to get anxiety that not even chamomile tea could get rid of. Therefore instead of hiring a bodyguard, she decided to look like a bodyguard himself, and this is where I first learned about one rep Max lifting, in which the style of weightlifting is rather than trying to do these hateful repetitions, much more mainly fun interesting and effective instead to simply hold up all of your strength to see, whether eucalypt a maximum weight, successful successfully once, rather than grind out like 100 boring repetitions.

    This is kind of a big deal because it’s almost like bodybuilding truth 1 oh one that in order to get bigger hypertrophy, you have to do light repetitions, on to failure. For example, like the professional bodybuilder might try to dead lift 405 pounds like 20 times in a row, whereas a power lifter would prefer to lift 1000 pounds, once?

    Or, a bodybuilder might try to bench press 315 pounds 10 times, for 4 sets, while a power lifter might try to bench press 800 pounds, once?

    In terms of showmanship, there is nothing more entertaining to watch in real life than a power lifter tried to hype himself up before one repetition maximum he has actually never attempted before. Even for myself as a weightlifter, this is my supreme joy in life: to see, whether I will be successful or not? Or even having the balls to attempt it in the first place?

    My general idea in weightlifting is simple:

    if you already know with 100% searching before doing the lift that you will be successful, it is not worth doing.

    Even as Jeff Bezos says, thinking of himself like an inventor or a scientist, the idea is that with experiment, what a lot of these risk-averse individuals do not know is if you know with 100% certainty already that it will be successful, it is not an experiment. An experiment is having a gut predilection towards something ,,, something in which you have autotelic curiosity about, and something you want to attempt because you’re genuinely curious, almost rather than the result?

    Like Donald Trump says: in the art of the deal “I do it in order to do it”. 

    Also for Donald Trump even said in the art of the deal, that he doesn’t do it for the money but money in dollar bills is simply a way to keep score.

    Unrelated

    I totally unrelated thing, in the bit of all this tariff warfare, it suddenly came to my memory that Donald Trump, I think co-authored a book or wrote a book through the voice of a ghost writer, called the Art of the deal. I think the truth is he didn’t actually write the book but had another guy write it for him — which makes sense because if you’re a real business man, you don’t actually have time to write books. Like for example ask Michael Saylor if he’s going to write a book on bitcoin, but the truth is he cannot right now because he is simply too busy doing the real deal?

    And typically this is where it is wise to never read business books which are actually not written by the entrepreneur themselves because a commentator who isn’t on the front lines will never know. Still today… I think the only business books worth reading are the biographies by Walter Isaacson, on Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Leonardo da Vinci etc., and also, zero to one by Peter Thiel.

    And then actually, more interesting than reading a book about a successful individual is interviews with the individuals themselves. For example, I really love the Joe Rogan interview interviews with Elon Musk because it is unfiltered, and, you get it straight from the source!

    Another thing to learn from is through people‘s physiology and demeanor. For example, for me a big concerning aspect about Elon Musk was how his physical health looked. I think in the most recent Joe Rogan podcast in which he is wearing the occupy Mars T-shirt, he looks really really obese and unwell? But anyways, super interesting random things that came to my attention is how great Elon Musk is that video games, that actually… I think in Diablo for his like ranked top 10 on the planet? And at one point maybe when he was in college… He was one of the top players in the states and thus the world?

    Keep, keeping your options open?

    Ancient wisdom 

  • Seeking Signal

    So, a big thing: I the primary issue here is that I am hungry for signal, critical information, things would actually make a difference in my personal life and my family life, and for my family, and also potential future generations of my family, I am not interested at all about noise which is unrelated to myself.

    So, currently I’m about 75% fully invested in bitcoin, the other 25% in MSTR strategy stock. Also about 1% of my portfolio, maybe only about like 20, $25,000 in MSTU, a 2x long leveraged to MSTR investment vehicle.

    So anyways, anything that has to deal with bitcoin, isn’t my own personal interest. And now, that Trump has signed the strategic bitcoin reserve into order, what that then means is that bitcoin has entered a new generation: a new advancement which is interesting, a marriage between nation nation state, and the wider global macro economy?

    What that means is bitcoin is not an enemy to the US dollar, but rather an ally?

    What’s going on right now

    I think the best way to figure out what’s happening right now is to study and read the book, “the art of the deal, which was written by Donald Trump or maybe his ghost writer along time ago, I think when Donald Trump was only in his early 40s?

    Anyways, what you learn is that actually, Donald Trump is a quite simple man. I don’t even think he drinks alcohol. He knows the virtues of bravado, toughness, negotiation, glamour and selling the dream.

    If anything, I would read not reading the book sooner. The art of the deal is like a master class on real world economics, real world business; I find it more important than ever to read it today, because assuming that bitcoin is like the new digital real estate, You begin to appreciate how seamless bitcoin is because of insane politicking you have to do with regulators, in order to get anything built in Manhattan.

    Anyways also, contrary to popular believe, no no no… Donald Trump is not 3.0, and I’m starting to realize more and more, that anyone who votes these wrong analogies, they themselves are a bit dangerous and poisonous. Why? We should not over-sensationalize Reality; I call this the quote effect, the bite effect, the soundbite effect, or quote bite effect. 
    The general idea is in order to pump viewership, and increase advertising revenue, the news is always looking for victims, sensational people who get lots of views, Donald Trump being the ultimate actor, and essentially subsection, and sub-biting any and every single thing that Donald Trump says, and views it in a false way. 

    Now what happens is when you have a false version of reality that is endlessly repeated on the news, whether it is true or not, it becomes reality. But in fact, almost never does anyone actually watch all of the raw footage.

    I don’t necessarily think this is laziness, or bad acting; it is simply a time economics thing.

    If you make your living selling advertisements and views and “engagement“ on social media… It is actually in your best interest to watch as little as possible of the largest quantity of sensational things, and to keep posting it, in order to maximize views, and eyeballs and engagement metrics, Rather than seek the truth.

    The truth is not profitable

    Lots of wisdom from the art of the deal:

    “We live in a perverse culture”–

    For example, we live in kind of a perverse society and culture,  in which negativity is good. For example, even Donald Trump wrote that back in the day when he was building Trump tower, and he got all this negative press, that in fact, the more that he got, even if negative, actually stimulated sales! He himself said “Certainly good news is preferable to bad news, but even bad news is good“. 

    we new philosophers 

    So assuming that we are the new philosophers, we are so high and lofty that we don’t really care for politics. Like my friend Dave says, Donald Trump was on the world wrestling entertainment wrestlemania at least two or three times, which means that he treats politics like wrestling. We all know it is fake but we all love to watch anyways. Anybody who legitimately thinks that professional wrestling is real, avoid them. Kind of like when certain kids are hoodwinked into thinking that Santa Claus is real.

    Plato and the cave 

    A new thing I’ve been trying to do is going to the source. Whenever I hear of something or read of something that comes from somewhere else, I always try to go back to the source. It is often much more fertile and rich to do this way.

    For example, essentially the matrix is built off of Plato‘s cave allegory. The idea is that you have a bunch of people chained up since birth, facing a wall of darkness, and there are shadows being projected from behind them; and the whole time these prisoners think that this is reality. Then one day, somehow… One of the prisoners Escapes or let go, and then actually proceeds to leave the cave. He is blinded by the sun because he has never used his eyes before. And once he realizes that all of his prisoner friends were in fact, just seeing false shadows of false reality, he feels like it is his moral obligation to go back and help them.

    Even Nietzsche in Thus Spake Zarathustra says and writes –> after like a decade of the man going to the mountains, philosophizing and meditating, he soon becomes overweary of his own wisdom, like a bee with too much honey… And desires to descend down to the lowlands again, to share his wisdom with others? 

    Which then makes me think and consider, and I believe in this is that perhaps we humans, there is like a naturalistic desire to be humanist, altruistic and to help our fellow man.

    For example, if you’re walking at the mall and you see a random lady drop a toy with a child, without thinking about you just pick up the toy and give it back to the lady or the kid. There’s really no benefit to us, in some ways humans are like a beehive; Although we are much more subsectioned in our different types of beehives –, we all went to help our fellow bee?

    bee shall not kill bee 

    I think the first principal is that there is truly no economic benefit of man killing other men. I personally believe in the protect protection of all human lives, and the only wars we should be fighting our economic ones, metaphorical ones, or ones that are based from cyber warfare video games, ones and zeros?

    In fact, I think it is much more virtuous to just continue on the Olympics, for countries to fight for physical dominance via the Olympics, or to just do a bunch of like starcraft matches, to settle the bet.

    The future warfare is cyber warfare

    So also another big thought to: the future of war is and should be cyber.

    So for example, we have all been taught that video games are bad. But, once you have like a top video gamer, like PewDiePie, piloting a $10 million fighter drone, in which he himself is not liable to life or death, but, his lethality lies purely in his skills, then the kid who grew up playing video games is now the world’s most lethal drone pilot.

    I was randomly watching an interview with Elon Musk and Joe Rogan, I think it is outdated but the general idea is that Elon Musk, I didn’t know… Is actually the top 10 top Diablo players on the planet? That’s actually insanely impressive because in Diablo, if you’re playing in hard-core hell or extreme mode, it is really based on your skill not your riches or whatever.

    And also, Elon Musk used to be won the top quick players in the world, which is like one of the earlier versions of call of duty or counterstrike. In fact I played a little bit of quake on my cigar dream cast when I was a kid in Bayside Queens New York.

    Essentially, also Joe Rogan cited a study in which surgeons, who played video games, had 23% fewer errors while doing surgery? It makes me think about my friend Shijun, who’s probably the best star craft player I know, and also I think got his double PhD and MD, and his training I think and studying right now to become a surgeon?

    Anyways, the general thought I have is anything which is considered frivolous or a waste of time or bad, maybe in the long-term is good.

    Why playing video games on extreme maximum difficulty has a calming effect?

    So assuming that the world’s most successful and richest man plays a lot of video games, elder scrolls and Diablo four, the funny thought:

    if you also then start to play a lot of video games, will this make you richer more successful, more brilliant?

    Obviously not. This is a correlation not causation thing.

    So for example if you hear the study that surgeons could play video games have 24% fewer errors in real surgery,,, the wise way of thinking is not that playing video games makes you a better surgeon but, it might be a selection bias thing: kids who grew up playing a lot of video games, who have great hand and eye dexterity and skill, end up becoming surgeons, because it is the only profession that gives them the same adrenaline rush? 

    Also as a kid, growing up in the 90s, I was a great adrenaline junkie myself. As a kid, I would do aggressive in-line skating, which is essentially like imagine Tony Hawk grinding but with roller blades, everywhere. I would do 360s off of stairs, soap Concrete rails, and I played a lot of Tony Hawk as a kid growing up, and also the BMX games too.

    In fact, one of my hidden skills and talents that people don’t know is that I’m insanely good at ice-skating, I could do stuff like Michelle Quan. Skate backwards, do backwards 360s in the air, skate backwards on 1 foot, skate backwards on one foot on my toes etc. This is all because I was really good rollerblading, and also I did double black diamonds in skiing when I was a kid, when I was only like 11 or 12? Because once again I was so good at rollerblading.

    But anyways, 99% of these extreme sports, is all about like conquering initial hesitations and adrenaline rushes? Even NASSIM TALEB talks about when he became a trader it wasn’t about virtue or whatever, it was about him seeing the pink Rolls-Royce, and he getting a thrill from the markets? 

    Even now, the market is almost a little bit like a love and hate things; is that certainly when my health is poor the markets will give me a small heart attack. But the same time, it becomes a stimulus because it activates me it wakes me up, it engages me and it excites me?

    Also, what I love about investing is that it is grounded to reality. 

    For example, for somebody who has never been self-employed, has been a sole provider, will never ever ever ever understand how difficult it is to earn money through the free markets.

    And also to somebody who says that you’re just really good at marketing not actual steel, it’s almost like telling Shaquille O’Neal he is only good at basketball because his over 7 feet tall, or telling a fish that he is good at swimming simply because he is a fish?

    What people don’t understand about reality is that in fact, the true reality of the fact is like 90% of success in business is marketing. You had to sell the show, the bravado the glamour the dream etc. Not false romantic notions of virtue and the like.

    Even Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, were supported by wealthy patrons. Very unlikely if they were born in today’s world would they ever be successful.

    What to do

    I’m starting to think that it’s more of a gut feeling than anything. When you’re really really hungry for the news, maybe it is a good idea to pay the 50 bucks a month, get the blue check, and get Twitter premium, and then ingest the market news.

    Something interesting is that if you’re feeling like you need more energy, rather than just taking a shot of coffee, reading the financial news has the same effect?

    But still, we should not get into fake notions of virtue. Still, the great overlord is in fact, a Spartan demigod warrior king who sleeps 8 to 12 hours a night, face on 3 to 4 pounds of bone marrow a night, consumes meat like AI consumes power plant electricity, lifts weight like Hercules, and also get his eight hours of walking in every single day like an Olympian sprinter?

    New workflows

    Whenever you move to a new place, there is always a new workflow you have to conquer.

    For example I’m currently about a month in here in Phnom Penh Cambodia, and the sheet is no joke. The hilarious irony is that when I’m in LA, I’m always hungry for the sun and heat. I always go to the sun, take a nap in the sun, sunbathe, and even during the winter I’m wearing shorts and a sleeveless shirt, with a down vest, simply to get maximum UV radiation?

    Here, for the first time in a long time, I’m actually looking for the shade. Even for me the sun is too strong.

    As a consequence, what then happens is you start to fall into new rhythms and workflows. Also right now for the first time ever, Seneca is in this wonderful garden school, in which he essentially plays with wooden toys and sing songs from about 8:30 AM until 3 PM, which gives me a lot more time to do stuff during the day.

    So for the first time I’ve been having this luxury leisure time to go to the gym, walk around and thinking and write and blog and vlog, something that was not afforded to me while in LA, because he’s not yet in school in LA.

    Waking up early to go on a walk

    So a big thought is also, what people in Southeast Asia do is because it’s so hot in the middle the day, they wake up really early before the sun comes out, to go on a walk run errands etc. contrasting this to Los Angeles, in which I stay indoors until the sun comes out, is a totally new workflow and calculus for me to do.

    And so as a consequence I’m loving it! I’m very grateful for this solo time because ultimately, I believe my personal or communities lever is blogging, writing, sharing thoughts.

    Everyone has his talent, given to him both by birth and upbringing, and therefore I believe the goal is to maximize the gift you have already been given, rather than striving for the gifts of other people?

    How other people inspire me

    So other people inspire me because of their conviction, their own self belief etc. It’s more of an encouragement for me to become more like myself, unabashedly.

    For example, if you live in America everybody has the right to say whatever they want. And also more importantly, everyone has the right to live their lives however they would like to.

    What this means is although you cannot control 100% of your life and every single regard, the way you could live your life is knowing how to direct your energy your willpower etc.

    For example, you could dictate what your life goals dreams or ambitions are, or you could decide that you don’t want to have any goals. It is your choice not obligation.

    Also, philosophically, you also have the freedom and the choice to pursue things which interests you and avoid things which do not interest you.

    For example, I have no interest in emails so I don’t use it. And this is the richest I’ve ever become in my life, because by avoiding email and avoiding noise on social media, I’ve just been able to become laser focused on bitcoin investing and strategy stock, Which has net me a small fortune. 

    This is my main critique of email is that I don’t think I’ve ever received an email which has ever led to a very lucrative deal? I think at most, emails that I got in the past might have earned me $3000-$5000 USD, Trump changed compared to what I could even make in a day in the markets.

    How and who to control your destiny

    Also, once again, I think the primary question here is if you think about Dr. Seuss, in his optimistic “Oh, all the places you’ll go!” Book –> he talks about the lurch, which is almost like a metaphorical purgatory in which many individuals get stuck in asylum, and their a century just sitting on their butts, twiddling their thumbs and waiting for opportunity to come to them, and I think this is why people also obsessively check their emails, and messages.

    But once again, if I could tell you that in fact, I can make you 1000 times richer by not using email, wouldn’t you take this offer? 

    How to find signal in the midst of noise

     so assuming you’re the filter, if you need the most up-to-date information, X and Twitter is the solution. If you’re a trader, in which the Dow Jones can move 5% up or down in 15 minutes based off of false news Twitter, then being on top of X is smart.

    If you’re an investor, and you actually don’t really care for short term noise, then, you have to strategize wisely.

    For example, the only true signal that I care for is Michael Saylor. Literally if you think about like 99.99999% of the value I get from everybody or anybody, it is only him.

    Why? It only matters because I am now invested in his activities because I own strategy stock, and also, he is always on top of the top bitcoin developments and use. And the reason why this is so significant is because information is tricky: it’s toxic. And the toxicity is in the dose.

    For example, reading the updates for Michael Saylor once a day, once every few days or once a week, is better than reading all these other random people. why?

    Once again, drinking coffee first thing in the morning, is great, but drinking 10 cups of coffee at midnight when you’re about to sleep, while lying in bed is a very bad idea.

    So here, timing and the dosage is the issue.

    Another example, let us say that you need some medicine for something. Taking one or two tablets is a good idea, but taking 1000 tablets will actually kill you.

    As a consequence don’t be a fool. Be wiser about this.

    Information signals are physiological

    If you’re a newbie to investing or stocks or bitcoin, you well know that this is one hell of an emotional and physiological rollercoaster. 

    Why? It is all physiological. What that means is that if you see your stock drop 20% in a day, you’re going to feel like somebody kicked you in the balls, but if you see your stock or bitcoin go up 20% in a day, or 100% in a day or whatever, you will feel so much euphoria you will want to do a backflip.

    No as investors, we are playing the long game. Minimum four years, ideally 10 years, ideally forever.

    In reading the art of the deal by Donald Trump, what’s interesting is that a lot of these wealthy New York City barons, their strategy was simple: buy up all the valuable Manhattan real estate, and never sell it, and also for their descendants and heirs, to put in clauses in which their heirs would not do foolish things like selling it either. 

    I had no ideas but in the 70s and 80s, I guess Manhattan was going through a great depression, and there was almost a fire sale on the city! What we consider prime real estate today, a lot of it were full of peddlers, shady places all boarded up. But for a genius like Donald Trump, who knew the intrinsic value of Manhattan, essentially the ideas that you choose the best location, get it at a reasonable cost, and you leverage all of your abilities to maximize it.

    Also, an allegory to bitcoin. Assuming that bitcoin is cyber Manhattan, but 1 million times better, a zero to one improvement then what that means is you also do the same strategy pull in you keep buying up cyber Manhattan and you never sell it, and you keep taking on more debt financing and leverage to purchase more of cyber Manhattan forever.

    What super interesting now with bitcoin is that you could actually use your bitcoin as collateral, to get US dollars, to either buy more strategy stock or you could technically buy more bitcoin with it. Assuming that a lot of these bitcoin lending companies are anywhere between 5 to 15% a year interest, and assuming that bitcoin is on average 60% ARR a year, and Strategy is around 120%, or even with these Donald Trump tariffs, bitcoin might be 50% ARR, and Strategy stock about 100%,  just do the simple math for the arbitrage: 100% subtracting 15% is essentially free money.  Just the thing that you have to do your homework on is the lending company, be careful where you put your bitcoin. 

    Coinbase

    What’s also super interesting is that a lot of these mega corporations, black rock strategy, for some maybe not all of their custodian services, they use Coinbase prime. If it’s good enough for these companies it’s good enough for us.

    My personal thought is that actually, the reason why I would never trust myself with cold storage is that in trying to secure your keys, you might forget it, and be like that one dude who lost $1 billion worth of bitcoin in a hard drive somewhere.

    Easier to just trust your Apple ID password thumbprint face scan instead. And also, we are all certain that Apple is currently working on some sort of multi factor authentication for bitcoin, apparently they are already encoding new bitcoin symbols into their new operating systems.

    now what?

    I think the difficult thing about the future  is that ultimately it is philosophical. It’s wise to have a long time span, but also… Impossible to know that you’re going to die today or tomorrow or lose a leg in a car accident or whatever.

    My personal thought is conquer each and every single day. Given your best resources. Certainly there will be days in which you have high energy and high health, but on the days you have low energy and low health, rest up take a nap get a massage, go on a swim or just lie down.

    Peak life, lifestyle?

    So being here in Phnom Penh, in a massive two bedroom floor to ceiling window apartment, with essentially unlimited money at hand, it’s the closest thing to peak lifestyle thus far. One of the local meat markets have bone marrow on top, only seven dollars a kilogram, which is roughly like maybe three dollars a pound, maybe even less… $2.80 a pound for bone marrow? Also insanely cheap meat.

    Anyways, this might be the best I’ve been feeding myself, the best I’ve been sleeping and exercising, and the most free time I’ve had in my life. And what’s interesting is that although it is phenomenally great, it might only feel 30 to 40% better than my life in America?

    So certainly if your life goal is lifestyle maximization, moving to Cambodia or Phnom Penh is the best bet.  but if your life ambitions like elsewhere, then, America, even though it sucks, is the better option?

    ERIC

    ***

  • How to Master Your Economic Fitness

    How to Master Your Economic Fitness

    Simple ideas: if you think about expenses like fat, adipose tissue, body fat… Then intelligence strategy is to minimize as much fat from yourself as possible.

    I’m currently reading the art of the deal by Donald Trump, which I find insanely amazing. It’s full of so much wisdom and practical realities when it comes to business, finance, but also… Economic philosophy.

    First, country to popular believe… Donald Trump at least in his business businesses has remained very frugal, intelligent with his spending, never overpaying for anything.

    Also, I think the fake façade that we get is flashy cars, a flashy lifestyle etc. But, if you think about Plato’s allegory of the cave, things with false flashing lights, dazzling lights, will blind people who are chained in the dark.

    Saving $1 million versus spending $1 million

    When a lot of people say they want to become millionaires, what they mean to say is I want to spend $1 million. But the truth is… The true millionaire is somebody who looks like a middle school or high school math teacher, never goes out, never buys anything for herself, yet owns much property, and is very rich.

    For example, thinking like an investor:

    Now that I am powered by bitcoin, the general thought is this: every dollars spent in something, could result in a $100 gain somewhere else.

    As a consequence, anything that I want to buy, typically loses its charm because I am more motivated by future profits.

    Now this is difficult because there is a balance between maximizing the quality of your life today versus a future life? The way I have been able to navigate this is simple:

    Living for today is physiological: health fitness exercise, sleep and meat.

    For example, as long as I could sleep 8 to 12 hours a night, feast on the finest meet, exercise once a day, lift weights, walk, I consider myself happy.

    And I’m starting to realize more and more, how Americans are suckered so much. We dream and fantasize about purchasing a certain car or vehicle, rather than thinking that you yourself are the ultimate vehicle?

    For example everyone wants the Rolls-Royce or the Bentley, but doesn’t it make more sense to just transform yourself and your own body into the Rolls-Royce? Or the Bentley? 

    Invest in fabrics

    So when you look inside a Rolls-Royce, certainly the interior is grand. Lots of great materials in terms of leather, etc. Yet ultimately the downside of any vehicle is that you are in a weak position; sitting on your butt. Even if you are a jet fighter pilot, a top gun, a maverick or a blue angels pilot, your primary skill is your hand eye coordination, And your ability to withstand gear forces, and certainly your skill. Yet even for a fighter jet pilot, you’re sitting on your butt.

    To me I find a much more hero and interesting to be the man who could lift 1000 pounds, rather than the man who could even best pilot a jet pilot aircraft, or a vehicle?

    when your health is poor what should you do?

    So this is a big tricky thing… Assuming that your whole family is a unit, and you’re sick, your wife is sick, your kid is sick… What should you do?

    Assuming that man, has the strongest physiology… Perhaps then, the man should pull through.

    As a man your physiology will be stronger than woman, child etc.

    What that then means is on a day-to-day basis… Never skimp on anything which will benefit your physiology.

    .

    be insanely prodigious about what you consume and put in your body

    For example, I know for myself I cannot tolerate super super spicy food or dairy, or also… Too much coconut milk. I found that even though I love the taste of Indian food and curry, I really cannot tolerate much of it. And also the fear… If you get an upset stomach this will ruin your sleep, and that ruin the next day, and these things often spiral.

    And as a consequence, there’s nobody else to blame but yourself. Your own lack of self wisdom about your body.

    never Trust people who are drinking alcohol or who are alcoholics

    Save every dollar and dime!

    Taxes, avoid taxes like the plague?

    Something that the more I think about it, the more bizarre is… Now you have paying property taxes on property you technically “own“?

    For example, let us say that you’re rich enough to buy a $4 million home or whatever. And then the thought, you have to pay the property taxes on that, what, $7000 a month, forever?

    It doesn’t matter how rich you are. And actually what I realize is that the richer you become, the more intelligent you become. Every dollar counts.

    As a consequence, even if you were like a billionaire, and assuming that you came from nothing, even the thought of overpaying a few hundred bucks or a few thousand bucks, irks you.

    And also a funny thought I had, the reason why I would never ever ever purchase a vehicle which requires premium gas; every single time you stop by the gas station you will feel a bit stupid paying for premium even though it’s only a few bucks different.

    This is where I think the difference is if you grew up from the mud, you know the value of a dollar.

    Then, all these flashing light that you see in the media and the music, it is all fake.

    what would a rapper do?

    It seems that currently, the best musicians by far are the rappers. Yet even though… Typically most of them are born really poor, the second they touch any money the first thing they do is go out and buy a Bentley.

    As a consequence, once again, don’t trust rappers, or people who came from rags and suddenly became rich. Probably more interesting to study people who stay rich, like Jay-Z.

    Power up when shit hits the fan

    I think the true mark of a great individual is somebody who pulls through, right when you need them the most. Better to have somebody who is like annoying 99.9% of the time, and those .1% situations in which the situation is very clutch, to rely on them.

    I suppose, the idea of reliability should be more around being reliable when it counts. Being clutch.

    For example, in basketball, better to have the athlete who is best able to perform under pressure at the very very end. Somebody who doesn’t choke under pressure.

    This is difficult because it is very very difficult and hard to know or see who will choke under pressure. I suppose this is where duration is so cute; somebody in the game for a very long time, is probably far more reliable under pressure than somebody who is maybe a high performer for a short period of time?

    I think that is also where it is better and more wise to follow people who are more successful in the long run, maybe in their 70s; they don’t have anything to prove to anybody anymore, thus they are more reliable.

    play the Long game

    The reason why most bodybuilders fail is that they’re taking steroids, and it is very unlikely they will still be lifting weights at the age of 60 or 70. Just look at Ronnie Coleman, he’s essentially a cripple now.

    The joy is in the doing, therefore, when it comes to your physical activities, the best way to approach it is for duration and long time strength.

    For example, it is not a good idea to have a hyper car which you could only run three or four times before it goes kaput. Probably better to have an AMG wagon that will last you like 10,000,000,000,000 miles?

    Difficult to sell duration

    Once again, nobody will ever brag that their Prius prime did 1000 miles on one too. It is just not sexy. We will always prefer the fast and the furious drag race. Because when it comes to media, it is difficult to show people the pleasure of duration, in a 90 minute film.

    As a consequence, if you really want to wake up to reality, stop watching movies and TV show shows. They distort reality in a bad way.

    The only nuance is if you go into watching the movie or the film knowing that it is a gross exaggeration, or a metaphor, this is better.

  • The Art of Economic War

    –> too long we have lived in limpid luxury, getting rich fat and happy on our plump Apple luxuries & shareholdings in stock, but now that we are now THRUST into a world of economic war, time to buckle up & armor up!