Someday I have to think of a career outside of medicine. I did undergrad in astrophysics and math and graduate school in biomedical engineering. Bitcoin and manufacturing privately made firearms (ie, exercising my right as an American; AKA ghost guns by communists in the ATF) are my main hobbies.

I can code. Not like a comp sci dude, but good enough to get by.

Should my second act be glorified hobby guns or something in bitcoin? Or both?

I enjoy radiology but as the years pass and my life slowly fades, I feel like I want more than having to be at a certain place at a certain time and doing certain things. But at the same time I don’t yet know how to live. All I know how to do is work.

#firstworldproblems

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Discussion

We have a similar background. It's not important, but it resonated with me.

I found out what life was about accidentally, and via terrible pain. I'll give the short answer: enlightenment is real and can be obtained by anyone. Best place to start (in my view) is to truly see that we are feeling animals before thinking machines. Being truly in touch with your emotions, makes ypy the master of your mind.

You'll know what to do, when you stop thinking.

What “makes your heart sing?”

Do that

(Much easier said than done)

Another idea I’ve heard is some kind of personal development program / startup accelerator / investment fund aimed at bitcoiners which have regained control their time, just like what you describe

Think back to your childhood. What dreams did you have? Fantasy? Work on that

If you’re doing what you love then the chance of success is so much higher

Maybe try to build an FOSS way of interpreting radiological studies but with ‘your’ approach . It’s like coding your intuition. Example a code that would approach a scan just as you would with years of experience