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streetyogi
9f2506778c6fe471f56f1dd83b43b4d3b8e1fadadaf378840b4cdd39ed66e20b
Python | Cyberpunk | Yoga | German | Polish | English

Thank you for your kind words 🙏 I will cherish and share them, selflessness is a powerful thing.

I am at peace with my past. It is the present I struggle with :) But you are right, I don’t ignore them, and it is possible to find that balance. I know I have the discipline, I just need to apply it comprehensively.

I had a small group of people that I trained in the park, there was no money in it, although that was the plan, but I loved it so much that i could not charge for it. That’s what I am missing, motivate people, but mostly my family and friends, to move.

There is no guarantee that a paid relay keeps operating. I think storage costs and electricity for nostr are negligible and you can put everything on a raspberry pi with one SD card.

People are interesting, social media is not. It’s a crutch to feel better cause you falsely judge the people around your real life as uninteresting. I know I do.

If I’m not working out, I get sentimental about my past, So I start to work out, just a little bit, and immediately feel better. Months pass, trainings get longer and I limit myself to not ‘overdo’ it. Now the sentiment hit again after months of 1h+ of daily trainings. That’s just not me and I need more. I’m at a critical phase now, will try to limit myself to 90 minutes of exercise. But sooner or later I know the moment will come were nothing else matters and 3h+ of daily trainings become the norm, and the rest of the day is reserved for discipline, nutrition, meal preparation, education on muscles, strength, flexibility, endurance…

I already have the feeling of reluctance to everything artificial, the same repulsion majority feels towards healthy eating habits and exercise. I need to find that balance point but struggle, it’s an eternal wave from one extreme to the other. How do I stay on that perfectly balanced middle point?

Replying to Avatar jimmysong

Learning Latin

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For the past 2 years, I've been learning Latin. I’m reading, I’m memorizing, and I’m writing down noun declensions like a madman.

I'm 46 years old, way past the age when people normally learn new languages. I’m also not one of those polyglots that learns a new language every couple of years. Nor am I a masochist who enjoys reading slowly, so why am I doing it?

There are three reasons I am learning Latin.

Becoming a Respectable Intellectual

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The first reason is that I have a bit of intellectual snobbery that I’m trying to reclaim. Back in high school, I desperately wanted to learn Latin because it was the language of science. Being the math geek that I am, I wanted to learn something that would help me understand fancy Latin phrases like a priori and Carthago delenda est. Sure, I wouldn’t be any more popular, but at least I could pretend to have some superiority over the actual popular kids.

Sadly, my high school didn't offer Latin, and my dreams of being that annoying geek wielding Latin would have to be set aside. Instead, I had to settle for being that annoying geek wielding a chess board, a keyboard, and Magic the Gathering cards. Lacking the option of learning Latin, I spent 4 years learning Spanish and settled for learning pop culture phrases like gordito and la vida loca.

Frankly, I don’t remember much of it because the motivation to learn Spanish just wasn't there. I was a geek that dreamed of getting into MIT! I wanted to be a math professor or a computer programmer. Spanish just didn’t feel like something I needed as it didn’t give me any advantage in what I wanted to do. Latin, on the other hand, was something I could use! Everyone knows that the winner of any philosophical argument is the one using the cooler Latin phrase.

Absorbing Ancient Wisdom

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The second reason is because Latin is the language of the Romans. These were some badass people who came, saw and conquered (veni, vedi, vici). They were also Stoics, whose motto was memento mori, or remember that you will die. They had courage, enjoyed life and kicked ass. Who wouldn’t want to be like them? Yet learning to be like them is not so easy, especially since so many of their works are ancient and their mentality is so foreign to the modern mind. Learning Latin is a way into that mentality. To understand why, indulge me in a brief digression.

I'm a Korean-American immigrant and that means I know two languages… sort of. I immigrated when I was 8 years old, so my Korean is still that of a second grader. I’m pretty embarrassed to speak it, but I have some familiarity with a language quite different than English.

The weird thing is, I think very differently when I think in Korean. It’s especially true when I interact with older Korean people. I suddenly defer to elders, take care of anyone younger and politely but firmly fight for the restaurant check. None of this is normal when I’m thinking in English. Language shapes mentality.

Latin has been the language of intellectual culture for the better part of the last 2000 years. Some of the greatest thinkers thought in Latin. Translated works are notorious for their awkward phrasing. Historical works are also pretty hard to read because they’re written with unfamiliar words. Trying to understand a historical translated work is like trying to understand that guy on Zoom who’s driving through a tunnel. How am I supposed to be a badass Stoic if their words come through garbled?

An Alternative to Pop Culture

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The third reason that I want to learn Latin is because I’m tired of pop culture. Yea, yea, it’s such a hipster thing to say, but hear me out. Pop culture is getting really preachy. Every time I watch a movie or listen to a song, I feel like a racist, homophobic, misogynist pig.

Pop culture has a lot of assumptions baked into it about what the right thing to think is, and to be quite frank, I don’t agree with all of it. I want art that’s more aligned with my values. I’m a Christian, so you may think that I listen to contemporary Christian music or watch Christian movies. I don’t, because they (mostly) suck. Okay, that’s harsh and not very charitable of me, but I just don’t enjoy them the way someone into electronic dance music enjoys a rave. Trying to find art to consume in today’s culture is mulgere hircum or milking a male goat.

Latin gives me access to classics that have withstood the test of time. Most pop stuff will not be popular in 5 years, let alone 50. With Latin, I can access books, music, and art that are hundreds of years old. There’s timeless wisdom in something that’s managed to last that long. Latin is a gateway to another culture, one whose values more closely align with mine and I can bathe in its ancient riches like Scrooge McDuck.

At least that’s the hope. And that makes memorizing noun declensions worthwhile.

If you are impressed by the Stoics’ memento mori, take a look at the Aghoris, they don’t need to remember as they literally live among it :) I have similar aspirations towards Sanskrit, the Indo-Iranian branch of Indo-European languages. I speak already one of the languages in the Balto-Slavic branch and two in the Germanic branch. And you are right, depending on the situation, my brain automatically thinks in the language best suited to it :)

Same, It was highly theoretical, I would have preferred a more practical approach. First part was nice though, running the different nodes with docker-compose, although the script didn’t finish the transaction and got stuck after the second hop :) But I’m confident I can set up a Lightning Node now.

Just finished reading Mastering the Lightning Network, partly a little too advanced for me but learned a ton nevertheless. Any recommendations what I should read next? Thinking about Real-World Cryptography by David Wong. Anyone have read it, is it accessible?

https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/mastering-the-lightning/9781492054856/?_gl=1*se45k0*_ga*ODk5MTg0OTI5LjE2NzYwNTMzMDk.*_ga_092EL089CH*MTY3NzM3OTk5Ni4yNS4xLjE2NzczODAwNzMuNTUuMC4w

Too complex and there is no standard, anyone can build own chat lapp I guess.

Just flat is sufficient, depending on your core strength it will kick in after a minute or so. Try 5 minutes :) Keep your legs straight and extended, they will start to shake and bend with time though…

You mean least favorite, as those are the most effective :) For me the hardest ones are static ones, just lay on your back and raise your legs. Then wait. After a while the burn gets unbearable :)