Ed. 20. 7 out of 10 is bad.
I’ve been doing it for the last year, keeping a small notebook, in my pocket, whenever I go. I like the physicality of the pen and paper. Whenever I want to wait for someone or whenever I have 2 hours in the weekends, I just go into a cafe, sit down, open my small pocket notebook, armed with pilot pen, and I simply sip coffee (or green tea) and I think. Analog. No digital. No distractions. Just myself and I, with a pen and paper.


Its not what you say, it’s what you do.
Another version is:
Don’t listen to what people say. Look at what they do.
This reminds me of Nassim Taleb’s idea of Skin in the Game. Which is a must read. Again, Nassim’s ideas changed me 10 years ago. And they still do.
Why you shouldn’t have a 7 out of 10 rating. For anything.Something I’ve learned in Neurofenix and from my friend Dimitris Athanasiou, is that I shouldn’t set a rating of 7/10. For anything.
7/10 doesn’t tell you anything. It’s misleading. It’s neither too good nor too bad. On the contrary if it’s 6/10, it means OK and you shouldn’t bother. If something is 8/10, it means it’s really good.
What I’m reading.Lately another set of books. These are lengthy, meaty and require man power. All the following are linked in topics in a way. Between economics, policy making and society building (or destructing.)
I read them after the gym when my mind is clear and the blood is flowing. Ratings are WIP since I haven’t finished the books yet.
The Constitution of Liberty, Hayek. Rating: 8/10


