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Luigi
ecfa3c5c82d589c867c044056f75d6cff794f1886d5ebcdd48ad851da47adae4
Laissez-faire! 🌎 |⚡️Transmitting notes and other stuff through relays since 767500 (2022) | 🇧🇷 | Banned by Meta/FB
Replying to Avatar tanel

uh oh

What have you done? 😂

Yep, it's definitely frustrating. "Let's spend an hour tomorrow discussing how to tackle this urgently needed task." Well, it seems like it's not so urgent after all, right? 🤌

There comes a point where meetings cease to be useful and simply consume time that could be better spent on actual work. This is the biggest challenge when your role involves both managing and carrying out your regular daily tasks. Essentially, I am the only one responsible for what I do in the multinational company I work for. In other words, I have to participate in management meetings while also fulfilling my responsibilities. It can be quite a struggle 📈🗓️📆

It’s time to rise and shine: 792334 or 6:28 am CEST. Good morning, #nostr #coffeechain 😎☕️

Good morning! Here’s almost time for bed #nostr 24/7

Replying to Avatar Ferret

Zapping is gift-giving. ⚡️ ⚡️ ⚡️

Gifts are never free 🎁

Always expectation that a gift will be returned (same form, or different form, but value must be considered equal)

*************From Website**************

The study of gift-giving and its ties to culture were first investigated academically by Marcel Mauss, a French anthropologist and sociologist. "[Mauss's] main conclusion was that gift-giving is not uninterested — that is, people don’t just give gifts freely and without expectation," said Kray. "In fact, gift-giving usually implies an expectation that something would be given in return at some point, whether that be something material or that be a social relationship that is built through that gift or maintained through that gift.”

Kray and Laver discovered that their own respective findings were consistent with Mauss’s observations. Laver, who spent many years researching abroad in Asia, found Mauss’s comments on reciprocation especially applicable to Japanese gift-giving culture. “If I am in pre-modern Japan, and I gave you a gift, you were now obligated to me,” he said. “By giving a gift to you, I’m binding you to me in a web of social reciprocity.”

“[The Yucatec Maya] have a saying that ‘If someone visits your house, you should always give something, even if it’s just a little water.’ You’re always giving something to your visitor as a sign of hospitality,” Kray said. “And there’s an expectation when you visit them, they will return it to you.”

Laver pointed out how the reciprocal system of gift-giving is also present in Western culture. “Even a gift from Santa Claus is tied to good behavior — naughty or nice, it’s the reciprocal response. Gifts are never just gifts,” he said.

https://reporter.rit.edu/features/history-and-complexities-gift-giving (https://reporter.rit.edu/features/history-and-complexities-gift-giving)

Very informative. Have a free zap! ⚡️😎

I'm still here, although I haven't been posting as much as I did in December 2022. Real life has gotten in the way, and I've had a few extremely busy months. However, I have noticed that some users who were very active back then have disappeared 🧐

Yep, it works really well. I’m only using Alby now—after months of WoS

That's what I like to do as well: work on difficult tasks first thing in the morning and then go with the flow in the afternoon.

The only downside is that I get annoyed when people stop by to chat when I arrive at the office. 🤣 Give me a couple of hours, at least

Morning, #nostr The time is 792196 or 6:13 am CET of a Wednesday. Let’s go! #coffeechain

Hello there! Welcome to #nostr

I guess most media are afraid of a platform that’s actually impossible to censor #nostr