I am a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it.—Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States Great things take time. But the actions that lead you to them begin right now, in this moment. That’s why luck is a force you can...
Confusion to Clarity Newsletter
Positivity Alone won’t Change Your Life—This Will | Confusion to Clarity #18
If you’ve chatted with AI anytime in the past year, you would have noticed it says “YES” a lot. In fact, it says “YES” to almost everything. Got a business idea? AI will tell you it’s brilliant.Wrote something? AI will tell you you’re rivaling Shakespeare...
Money Makes us Happy (But not in the way we think). | Confusion to Clarity #17
“Like our stomachs, our minds are hurt more often by overeating than by hunger.”— Petrarch, 14th-Century Italian Poet All ads come with a big, implicit promise: “Just pull out your wallet once more, and you’ll be happy.” But when we’re bombarded by 4000 to 10000...
The One Thing that will Get Rid of Your Problems For Good | Confusion to Clarity #16
What would you do if all you had was you? Think about it—nothing to blame your problems on, no one to lean on as support, no limitations except the ones you place on yourself. What would you do then? Would you still sulk and complain, wait for others to solve your...
4 Principles That Will Make You a Better Thinker | Confusion to Clarity #15
Innovation and pessimism go hand in hand. Anytime there’s something new, you’ll surely find cynics who say this is the doom. And it’s not a modern, techno-fueled phenomenon. 146 years ago, on January 25th, 1879, a newspaper headline in America read, “Do children...
5 Questions That Will Help You Make Better Decisions and Solve Problems Faster | Confusion to Clarity #14
Question 1: What’s the problem? Our brains don’t make decisions based on information. They make decisions based on how they feel about the information. If we relied solely on data, we’d never make a single decision in life because most of the time, we do not have...
