Some stimulants are illegal in Japan.
It's worth mentioning that the effects for stimulants taper over time. I was instructed to take a 3 week tolerance break (which did not reset my tolerance). The first month will be fine but negatives surface after that.
Nonstimulants are pretty much persistent but negative effects can compound or just be easier to notice after a while.
You should try anyway because it's better to know what it is.
When you are on them, there are a lot of changes to how you feel internally.
Pay attention to how you think about something intuitive like your stride on vs off of it. For me, I remember being less aware of where my legs and hands are. Kind of like having less data from all sensors, especially internal ones. This input is good for me because I have learned to watch it and stop before burnout.
Stimulants, if instant release need to be taken multiple times per day. I noticed when they stop working throughout the day and then had to take another (as prescribed.) It was hard to start a task unless it was right after I took a tablet. It was also hard to remember to take them and throwing off the schedule really destroys productivity.
The medications work but do great damage over time. I'm talking about all of them, not just stimulants and nonstimulants. Remember that your psychiatrist just wants to "fix" you and not restructure your life in a way that will work well and stick for the future.
I work with two-way radios. See if there are any regional distributors in your area that are hiring technicians.
You're not wrong. However, not being able to read the room and doing social stuff poorly is the flip side. You can think of it as running on software for tasks many people find intuitive.
I agree.
The benefits of technology cannot be understated. Technology is inherently deflationary and this is good.
However individuals and nation states will continue to leverage technologies to act upon their impulses and desires. For Bitcoin to succeed, it needs to overwrite the human instinct to use power projection. To require emphasis on dominating hashrate instead.
Was recess ever a level playing field? 🙃
Find your own people & do things your way.
People behind important decisions want it this way. We will not be able to vote in a law that changes this. Valuable knowledge has always been kept private.
"It's a big club... and you ain't in it." - George Carlin https://youtu.be/Nyvxt1svxso
is this an advertisement?
nostr:npub1d3hrup0pe8f24c8dysc4gjh2gythrhvasyqh2wd0plvp3v3cnu5qhsfrtn,
I sent you a direct message. Could you please check if it's waiting in requests?
I sent a zap to your account rather than a specific post. I might have confused your client.
I think it makes sense to have provisions to define relays on a private network. There should be a way for a 192.168 address, for example, to seamlessly integrate with this new header.
nostr:npub1s05p3ha7en49dv8429tkk07nnfa9pcwczkf5x5qrdraqshxdje9sq6eyhe
Jeff, I have an honest question.
I understand that it's important to build on the new system as much as possible. This will naturally increase its usefulness.
Many of the people interested in putting in the work to make Bitcoin a success are stuck working dayjobs at the moment. Me included. It will become increasingly difficult for anyone in the future to transition to a bitcoin standard as the existing reality worsens.
As a redditor on r/antiwork puts it: "It's the whole "idle hands are the devil's plaything". You keep everyone working so hard for basic survival they can't demand better conditions."
Do you have any comments on the situation from an individual perspective? Obviously, everybody should do what they can. Is there any way to improve the outlook for those interested in moving in the more optimal direction?

