Riiiiiing riiiiiing.....
https://video.nostr.build/8352c0a56084f7c43fb8bc57fc49179fdceb2652d2fc75382bcacb836101b9cc.mp4
#PleaseHoldTheLine
Ring riiing Good Morning 😁🤙🏾
Gm! #nostr 👋☕️
Touché d’avoir été contacté par @MITBitcoinclub 🙏🧡
pour exposer mes œuvres au MIT Bitcoin Expo 2025. Je n'exposerai malheureusement pas cette fois-ci par manque de temps, mais leur équipe est vraiment génialissime !
Comme je marche à l'humain je partage donc avec vous leur événement qui se déroulera le 5-6 avril, au MIT, 32 Vassar St, Cambridge, MA.
Infos :
https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/mit-bitcoin-expo-2025-tickets-1149358866309
N'hésitez pas à jetter un œil ou à partager l'info.
Bonne journée à tous 🙂
#MITBitcoinExpo #bitcoin

🔥🔥🔥🍾
You can just cook your food 😁
Garlicccccccccccc Easy clean and delicious
#garlicstr #pastastr #foodstr #zapcooking #boulishbounty 😅
Yepp… my fridge is always stuffed with sardines or canned food also Sardine always always good🤓 do you?
#pastastr #foodst #asknostr #zapcooking
GM ☕️ NOSTR
ITS Sunny day 🌅
Lets see how many in bonus of #introduction on my primal search
It Will #grownostr or #suckstr or #deadstr
I mean, why #asknostr I’m not there
The unabridged version of Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey (originally published as Daily Rituals: How Great Minds Make Time, Find Inspiration, and Get to Work) offers an even deeper dive into the routines, quirks, and obsessions of history’s most brilliant creators.
Unlike the abridged edition, the unabridged version includes more profiles (161 in total) and often longer, more detailed entries on each figure.
1. The Book’s Structure & Approach
- Organized chronologically, from early-rising Benjamin Franklin (1700s) to night-owl David Lynch (modern era).
- Covers writers, composers, painters, scientists, and philosophers, showing how different fields approach creativity.
- Focuses on mundane details, sleep, meals, work hours, walks, stimulants, to reveal how genius operates in daily life.
2. Major Themes in the Unabridged Edition
A. The Power of Routine
Most creators didn’t wait for inspiration, they forced it through habit:
- Anthony Trollope wrote 3,000 words/day before his day job, timing himself with a watch.
- Haruki Murakami wakes at 4 AM, writes for 5-6 hours, then runs or swims.
- Georgia O’Keeffe worked from dawn to dusk in her desert studio, breaking only for walks.
B. The Role of Solitude vs. Sociability
- Marcel Proust wrote In Search of Lost Time in cork-lined isolation, drugged on caffeine and asthma meds.
- Frida Kahlo painted in bed, 👁️surrounded by pets and lovers, turning pain into art.
- Benjamin Franklin scheduled "conversation parties" to debate ideas with friends.
C. Extreme Work Ethics (and Eccentricities)
- Honoré de Balzacworked 15-hour days, fueled by 50+ ☕️cups of coffee (his method: chew beans on an empty stomach).
- Nikola Tesla survived on 2 hours of sleep, claiming he once worked 84 hours straight.👁️
- Beethoven poured ice water over his head to "stimulate his brain." 🤤
D. Stimulants & Self-Medication
- Kant took opium for focus (but never missed his daily 3:30 PM walk).
- Audrey Hepburn smoked 3 packs/day to stay thin. 😀
- Francis Bacon painted hungover, saying chaos "loosened his imagination."
3. Hidden Gems from the Unabridged Edition
- Jane Austen hid her writing under embroidery when guests visited.
- W.B. Yeats practiced automatic writing (channeling spirits for poetic inspiration).
- Thomas Wolfe wrote standing up, using his fridge as a desk.
- Agatha Christie plotted mysteries while eating apples in the bathtub.
4. Contrasts Between Disciplines
- Writers (e.g., Hemingway, Kafka) often worked in short, intense bursts.
- Painters (e.g., Picasso, Dalí) followed erratic, sensual schedules.
- Scientists (e.g., Darwin, Freud) kept rigid, almost bureaucratic hours.
5. The Dark Side of Creativity
- Virginia Woolf’s mania-driven productivity (before her suicide).
- Sylvia Plath’s 4 AM writing sessions amid depression.
- Jackson Pollock’s binges of painting and alcoholism.
6. Key Takeaways for Modern Creatives
1. There’s no perfect routine, only what works for you.
2. Constraints breed creativity (e.g., Toni Morrison writing before her kids woke up).
3. Rest is part of the process (e.g., Einstein’s naps, Darwin’s walks).
Final Thought: Why the Unabridged Version Matter.
The expanded edition reinforces Currey’s thesis: Genius is often just persistence disguised as talent. By studying these rituals, we see that:
- Discipline > Inspiration
- Eccentricity is common (but not required).
- Great work happens in the mundane.
“My Inventions" is Nikola Tesla’s autobiography, originally published as a series of articles in Electrical Experimenter magazine in 1919.
In it, Tesla recounts his life, groundbreaking discoveries, and philosophical views.
Below is a detailed recapof the book, including key secrets and the essence of his genius.
1. Early Life & First Inventions
- Tesla describes his childhood in Smiljan (modern-day Croatia)band his extraordinary mental abilities, including photographic memory and visions.
- He recalls seeing mental images** of inventions so vividly that he didn’t need physical prototypes.
- His first inventions included a waterwheel-powered bug motor and a frog-hunting device (showing early engineering talent).
2. Education & First Breakthroughs
- Studied engineering in Graz, Austria, where he became obsessed with improving the Gramme Dynamo (an early electric generator).
- Conceived the idea of Alternating Current (AC) after a sudden vision while reciting Goethe’s Faust.
- Worked briefly for Thomas Edison in the U.S. but left due to disputes over DC vs. AC power.
3. The AC Motor & War of Currents
- Tesla’s induction motor (1887) revolutionized electricity by proving AC was superior to Edison’s Direct Current (DC).
- Partnered with George Westinghouse, leading to the War of Currents, which Tesla/Westinghouse ultimately won.
- Niagara Falls Power Plant (1895) became the first major AC power station, cementing Tesla’s legacy.
4. Wireless Energy & High-Frequency Experiments
- Tesla believed in global wireless energy transmission (via his Wardenclyffe Tower project).
- Discovered resonant frequencies, demonstrating wireless lighting and earthquake-like vibrations (his "Mechanical Oscillator").
- Experimented with X-rays before Röntgen but didn’t publish his findings.
5. Philosophical & Paranormal Beliefs
- Tesla claimed to receive visions and ideas from external sources (possibly extraterrestrial or cosmic intelligence).
- Believed in aether (universal energy field) and that the universe was mechanically structured.
- Had OCD tendencies (obsessed with the number 3, hated round objects, and polished his silverware excessively).
6. Later Years & Lost Inventions
- Wardenclyffe Tower was abandoned due to lack of funding (J.P. Morgan withdrew support fearing free energy would disrupt profits).
- Rumored to have worked on:
- "Death Ray" (Teleforce weapon)
- Wireless electricity for cars and aircraft
- Free energy from Earth’s natural frequencies
- Died penniless (1943) in New York, with many papers seized by the U.S. government.
Key Secrets & Hidden Details:
1. "3-6-9" Mystery – Tesla believed these numbers held cosmic significance (possibly linked to vortex mathematics).
2. Scalar Waves – Some claim Tesla discovered longitudinal (scalar) waves, which could transmit energy without wires.
3. Suppressed Tech – His work on wireless power and energy weapons may have been classified.
Essence of Tesla’s Message:
- "The present is theirs; the future, for which I really worked, is mine."
- He saw himself as a humanitarian inventor, not a businessman, which led to his financial struggles.
- His ultimate dream was free, wireless energy for all humanity.
After watching “twitter the first employee’ in the name of social PROTOCOL bla bla bla 🤮
Not happy when you mention BS at the beginning. So pathetic
GM GN NOSTR
Nostur sending from 21 relays, whatever.

Caught Flu, feel rotten all over🤒
💙Congrats on your baby boy.
Wishing him health and joy.
They always claim this that, that bitch goes on about this n that, everything somehow circles back to them to her, every damn coincidence bla bla bla Bullshit! They act like they’re the best at the most this n that, it’s all just recycled. Not a single shred of real, original work, original comes out of them..just a cheap knockoff pretending to be cutt.
Really #scandinavian u r so beautiful 👀
Yeah Candice 😀😆
