In fact I have been hostile to what I saw as a hypocritical demonization of paycheck world by gig economy people. After all, we indies wouldn’t be able to do our 4hww slacker mediocre lifestyle shtick if strivers at Stripe, Zoom, Google etc weren’t building infrastructure for it
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Not sure if you can have all those nice things without a mimetic cult of success staffing it with prestige-crazed blue-pill poppers, but I think Paul’s convinced me if it’s possible at all, it would be a good thing to bring about.
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Will add any more thoughts to this thread as I finish
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I’m most interested in how to reprogram people in the cult when it is destroying them without producing any value. It’s a sad waste of life. At least where someone in the cult is killing themselves to do something that benefits the rest of us, it feels selfishly worthwhile.
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Heh fundamental theorem of free agency
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This explains why getting fired or laid off rarely leads to flourishing free agency even when it leads to long-term or permanent unemployment. You need to consciously let go the coping mechanism and adopt wonder.
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People who are forced in to free agency rather than leaving it voluntarily in fact may romanticize the career success cult even more and get more strongly attached to it
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To add a bit of nuance, wonder is the ingredient that turns trial and error into potential serendipity. You kinda surrender to currents of “unreasonably lucky”
People who are still attached to success cult are too bureaucratic-scientific about it. Trying to six-sigma a niche.
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Ok, finished. Kinda did a speedrun of the second half, which is a bit of a smorgasbord of ideas drawn from various places/people (including a couple of cameos by me) with the context of the Life of Paul as the unifying thread.
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If you’re like me, it will be a hit-or-miss stream of stuff, but with enough of a yield rate of interesting points to get through. It’s almost like a sampler pack of zeitgeist ideas, with a slight bias towards the woo end of the spectrum, without much editorializing.
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Interesting thing for me is that being both older than Paul, and with more time logged on what he calls the pathless path, there was still plenty of provocation for me, as well as reminders of stuff I should stay more conscious of.
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Also some sharp differences from being a different person. I kinda dislike about a third of the writers/books he cites (Seth Godin being the big one) that I am familiar with, indifferent to another third, and actually like a third. I suspect I’m just much less liberal in inputs.
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Overall this book should probably be in graduation care packages or something. The first half is especially valuable, including to those who’ve gotten out of the cult but don’t appreciate what they’ve pulled off. Everybody who grows old and logs the miles. Few reflect cogently.
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The second half is probably more useful to younger people who are still evaluating and selecting their influences. Paul serves as a an honest broker presenting selected wares from the idea marketplace circa 2022. Older people have likely already chosen.
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