-
You Are Right Where You Are Meant to Be
Life is chemistry long before it is philosophy. We react, we adapt, we combine, we separate. Sometimes we burn too hot. Sometimes we refuse to ignite at all. But at every stage, whether we admit it or not, we are built for change. Even when we resist it. Even when we pretend we want stability…
-
Wealth, Optionality, and the Deliciousness of “No”
The Economic Times features a quote each day. Today’s quote is from Nassim Nicholas Taleb – Lebanese-American New York Polytech Professor, essayist, mathematical statistician, former option trader, risk analyst, and aphorist; whose work concerns problems of randomness, probability, complexity, and uncertainty. You are rich if money you refuse tastes better than money you accept. There’s…
Alignment, alignment-adjacent, antifragility, clarity, complexity, freedom, giving vs. receiving, inauthenticity, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, no is a complete sentence, on being rich, pretending, probability, Quote of the Day, The Economic Times, uncertainty, volatile environments, wealth building, wealth measurement -
Present Moment Avoidance Ensures the Absence of Miracles
The word miracle carries a lot of weight. Miracles are those extraordinary events that defy natural laws, usually attributed to a supernatural power (like God) or divine intervention, causing wonder and amazement We usually pray for miracles: So generally miracles manifest as healings, deliverances, resurrections, or provision, exceeding our control and expectations. What if we could experience…
-
Write to Figure Out what You Think
Daniel Pink recently had a conversation with David Perell, where he talked about a college professor who stopped him mid-analysis, with regard to his writing, and said, in essence: You’re trying to “fix” this essay like an engineer rearranging parts. The real issue is simpler and more confronting. You don’t know what you think yet.Sometimes…
-
The Space Between Knowing and Doing
In every team, every family, every country… a silence shows up…one that lives right in that narrow passage between what people say they understand and what they actually do. It’s a strange little corridor. You can’t always see it, but you can feel the drag of it. Plans begin with clarity, but the execution lags…
-
The Architecture of Mastery
She was born Zaila Avant-garde in Harvey, Louisiana, the daughter of Alma Heard and Jawara Spacetime — parents who weren’t just caretakers but architects of possibility. Her father, Jawara, chose the surname Avant-garde in homage to his favorite John Coltrane album, infusing her identity with intention, exploration, and a nod to creative boldness before she…
-
What Have You Dismissed Prematurely?
Have you ever heard about ambergris? I only recently discovered it… this odd, ocean-drifting substance that begins its life deep inside a sperm whale’s digestive system. Not exactly the origin story you’d expect for something perfumers covet. It forms as the whale protects itself from what it can’t digest, then eventually releases it back into…
-
Succession Planning is not just Skills Transfer…and should NEVER be an Afterthought
I’ve long admired Warren Buffett. He’s been a bit of a mentor to me… not in the literal sense, but in the way someone can shape how you think simply by how they move through the world. I’ve read The Snowball, that long, patient biography that traces not just Buffett’s wealth, but his temperament, his…

