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Ryan Reynolds
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Yes, this is my real name. BTC Class of 2020 Mansuetus mane et sats accumula
Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

A lot of people look down on blue collar work, which I think is misguided. Especially for skilled blue collar work (and most type of work does benefit from skill/experience).

Basically, there’s a popular notion that it’s objectively better to be a CEO than a plumber, or an engineer than a barber, and that’s pretty off base. So it’s not that they criticize blue collar work in any overt way; it’s that they assume that that people in ā€œlowerā€ jobs would all want to be in ā€œhigherā€ roles if they had the choice. A technician would want to be an engineer. A janitor would want to be a CEO.

There are a lot of studies on job happiness and one of the most consistent correlations is that people are happier when they get more immediate feedback. Like if you cut people’s hair or fix mechanical issues or wire up electronic boxes, you often resolve things in minutes, hours, days, or weeks depending the specific task, and with progress along the way, so you get that quick feedback loop where you see the positive results of your work quickly and tangibly. Nothing lingers, unclear and vague.

And for those jobs, often when you’re outside of work hours, you’re truly out. You don’t have to think about it. You can fully devote your focus elsewhere. There’s not some major thing hanging over your head, other than sometimes financial stress or indirect things.

Now, obviously jobs with more complexity and compensation and scale give people other benefits. More material comfort and safety, more power to impact the world at scale, more public prestige, etc. and for some people that’s important for happiness, and for others it is not. And the cost is that it’s generally highly competitive, rarely if ever turns off, and usually comes with much slower and more vague feedback loops in terms of seeing or feeling whether your work is making things better or not.

There was a time in my life where wiring up electronic boxes was really satisfying. Each project had a practical purpose but then also was kind of an artform since I wanted it to look neat for aesthetic and maintainability purposes. I would work on these things like a bonsai enthusiast would sculpt bonsai. And then eventually I would design larger systems and have technicians wire them instead, but for some of the foundational starting points I’d still set up the initial core pieces to get it started right. I wasn’t thrilled when I realistically had to give that up when I moved into management for a while.

I have a housekeeper clean my house every couple weeks. She’s a true pro; she used to clean high-end hotels for years and now works for herself cleaning houses. When we travel, she can let herself in and clean our place, since we trust her.

She doesn’t speak much English, but her daughter does, and that daughter recently graduated college.

Notably, she consistently sings while she cleans. She could listen to music or podcasts but doesn’t. She just sings every time she cleans. I can tell she’s generally in a state of flow while cleaning. She’s good at what she does, and it’s kind of a meditative experience involving repetition but also experience to do it properly and efficiently and then a satisfying conclusion of leaving things better than how they were found. Turning chaos to order.

Last year she was hit by a truck while driving, and had to be out of work for a few months to recover. When she came back, we just back-paid her the normal rate for those few months as though she cleaned on schedule, so she wouldn’t have any income gap from us. Full pay despite a work gap. She was shocked when we did that. We weren’t sure her financial situation (I assume it’s pretty good actually based on her rate), but basically we just treated the situation as though she were salaried with benefits even though she works on a per-job basis. Because skilled, trustworthy, and happy people are hard to come by and worth helping and maintaining connections with.

If I were to guess, I honestly think she is a happier person than I am on a day to day basis. It’s not that I’m unhappy; it’s that I think whatever percentage I might be on the subjective mood scale, she is visibly higher. I experience a state of flow in my work, and my type of work gives me a more frequent state of flow than other work I could do, but I think her work gives her an even higher ratio of flow.

Anyway, my point is that optionality is important. While it’s true that some jobs suck and some jobs are awesome, and financial security matters a lot, for the most part it’s more about how suited you are for a particular type of work at a particular phase in your life. And you’re not defined by your work; it’s just one facet of who you are among several facets.

Find what gives you a good state of flow, pays your bills, lets you save a surplus, and lets you express yourself in one way or another.

I’m a VP of Sales. I’d much rather do nothing but sales - management is not something I get enjoyment from.

Ideally, my ā€˜retirement’ will be a small farm, with maybe some contract work I really enjoy. Aiming for that transition in the next 5-10 years. I’m 44 now.

I like Primal. I first got onto nostr about 2 years ago, via Damus. It was clunky.

About 1 year ago, I rebooted, on Primal. It was easy. I liked it.

I’m a class of 2020 bitcoiner.

Why are we figting each other, when 99.9% of the world doesn’t know what a Nostich is?

The only way šŸ˜Ž

nostr:note1cn87y3ash0cynu9zp5plkmq2v0vkggppnd5phljdp0hmcvjasydsygy98j

Math checks out. Stack harder, stay humbler.

nostr:note14cn49u596ytakghps8d097xst5cutw4qy8t9jarck2mkjnhywevqstzam7

GM, fellow ā˜•ļø plebs

Replying to Darin

Mastercard is using #XRP now.

https://x.com/mastercard/status/1871254448875454673?s=46&t=P4G-SvTkZOT1uya1AZT72g

Yes, Mastercard is working with Ripple to use XRP for transactions:

Partnership: Mastercard and Ripple are collaborating to use XRP's blockchain technology to improve the efficiency of payments, especially for cross-border transactions.

Potential: This collaboration could revolutionize how businesses and consumers interact with digital assets.

Adoption: With Mastercard's global reach, XRP could be widely adopted.

XRP is the native cryptocurrency of Ripple, a digital payment network and protocol that allows for low-cost and fast international money transfers and currency exchanges. Ripple's technology is used by over a hundred banks for cross-border payments through RippleNet and On-Demand Liquidity (ODL).

Lovely. I had enjoyed not hearing from my XRP maxi friends for a few weeks…….that’ll end soon šŸ™„

Happy Boxing Day!!

Trying my hand at Texas Red Chili (Meat Church recipe), while listening to nostr:npub1s5yq6wadwrxde4lhfs56gn64hwzuhnfa6r9mj476r5s4hkunzgzqrs6q7z with Sam Callahan & nostr:npub1k7vkcxp7qdkly7qzj3dcpw7u3v9lt9cmvcs6s6ln26wrxggh7p7su3c04l on nostr:npub1mrmu3s5889zcaqcqwxejx8gtkp9rwna7fq0vqezk4x22rnpr2gmsmfeyr9

Hope the kids like it 😬😬

#foodstr

#grownostr

North-Central Illinois.

We were graced to receive one of your native sons who started a restaurant just down the road, 20 years ago. All it took was a taste to get me hooked!

He retired about a year ago, so I’ve had to do my best at home

DCA. Then figure out how to keep making it a higher amount, sustainably.

Better if you started 4 or 8 years ago, but far better today than 4 or 8 years from now.