Finding alignment through investment principles - Why I quit my job at Facebook, what an energy economy looks like, the spiritual significance of blockchain, and how to be free from salary enslavement

“If you don’t know what you want, the universe can’t give it to you.” 

- Angela Gu

In April 2019, I started working at Facebook in New York City. I decided to join a big company after having worked at a startup for 3 years because life is meant to have contrast. Going from an environment where I knew the names of everyone who worked there to seeing strangers all day was a big cultural shock. Even though I was welcomed by the company, it was very clear that my individuality was not viewed as an asset. There was a system already set in place, and I was hired to be a replacement cog in a machine that runs on its own. 

To many, a job is just a way to earn income. We’ve been conditioned to believe that work, something we do for a third of our lives, involves sacrificing our individual freedom for the well-being of the group. It’s completely normal in our society to put on a mask to come to work. Many first-generation Asian immigrant kids have first-hand experience with being raised by a culture that uses shame, guilt, and punishment to get its people to conform. Trauma is embedded in cellular memory, so if our ancestors were forced to suppress their individuality to avoid facing death, we may feel inclined to blend in even if we were made to stand out. 

Before signing my Facebook offer, I had already wanted to move out of New York, and the only way I knew how to back then was to work at Facebook for a year and switch to a team in California. I could’ve changed my starting location to California, but imposter syndrome told me that I should just be quiet and be grateful that a big, prestigious company decided to hire me. In previous companies I’ve worked at, whenever I expressed my desires for wanting work to be meaningful, the conversation would always converge to the same endpoint: “you know you’re here to do a job, right?” 

Some of you may be checking my LinkedIn history right now to see where I’ve worked in hopes of avoiding them; however, I think that if you’re looking for a place to work where you can be authentically yourself, you should not work at any companies. You should turn your talent into a business. If we look at the salary bands for software engineers, for example, we can see that there is roughly a 50% increase in total compensation for every 2-3 years of working in the industry (not taking into account tax implications). That’s an annualized return of 14-22%, which is less than what the S&P 500 reported for the past year. This is because salaries tend to grow linearly in proportion to time whereas the market operates on an exponential growth scale. Getting paid a salary is not only tax-disadvantageous, it also means that your growth is constrained to the areas that make your company money as opposed to areas you have a natural fascination and curiosity in, which is where you have the highest earning potential.

Reason for quitting

“The only thing we have are moments in time. Everything else will go. Even your body will go. This is a shell. But what’s inside, I hope to God, lives on forever.” 

- Tyson Fury

Throughout my whole life, I have been searching for something real - something that will stay even after everything returns to dust. This is precisely the problem I had while working at Facebook. Nothing felt real. Everyone was aware that this was a game that had to be played. Everyone was afraid of speaking negatively about the company or the work they were doing. Teams don’t get to choose what their mandates are, so people are forced to pretend that whatever they’re working on is important even if they don’t think it is. Due to the way that performance reviews worked, I couldn’t tell if people were nice to me because they liked me or because they wanted a good performance review. There was a system where if someone did something nice, you could thank them by using the hashtag #thanks, and that would get tracked by a system and seen by their manager for performance purposes. I always felt weird on both the giving and receiving end of the #thanks spectrum because having an economic incentive for human kindness took the humanness out of the people I worked with. I’m sure that there are plenty of people who can turn off their empathy and just “play the game”, but I became extremely drained emotionally. I threw money at all kinds of therapy, but nothing helped. 

This kind of contrived social atmosphere isn’t exclusive to Facebook. It’s the entire bedrock of Silicon Valley. LinkedIn, through manipulating dopamine levels, has created a breed of humans who wake up every day and forage for clout by modifying their speech patterns to fit the conventions of the platform. The tech recruiting process is a social game where recruiters throw out pointless credentials in hopes of attracting a candidate who is impressed by credentials and candidates ask a bunch of questions they don’t actually care about and avoid the one they’re afraid of finding the answer to: whether or not this is a place where they will truly feel safe. People hate the raw, naked truth, so we dress it up with inefficient language. 

Despite experiencing emotional burnout, I pushed through for a whole year because I wanted to go to California and I felt like Facebook could bring me there. As soon as my one year anniversary hit, I started looking for teams in California. This was right after the beginning of the pandemic, so everyone was working remotely. I spent about a month talking to teams, but for some reason, I just couldn’t find one that was a good fit. I was crushed. I thought that my California dream was over. Then, suddenly, it dawned on me: I can just move by myself. It would cost more money, but it would be worth it. When I made that decision, one by one, the pieces started to come in.

Meeting the universe halfway

“You can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future.” 

- Steve Jobs

Throughout this entire journey, there was never a single point at which I knew what each event in my life was adding up to. One of my friends had an apartment in San Jose he wasn’t living in, and he agreed to let me live there. I booked movers, bought boxes, and informed the doorman of my building about the date of my move because I needed to make a reservation for the elevator. To my surprise, my doorman told me that the elevator was not available for that day as another tenant had already booked it. Due to restrictions I had with my lease, I could not move any other day. As I was standing outside my building thinking how I could possibly fit this move in, the doorman ran up to me and exclaimed that he had mixed up the dates and that the date I wanted was, in fact, available. “I could’ve sworn [the other tenant] told me Friday,” the doorman said, perplexed by the Mandela effect that he had just experienced. I said thanks to whichever higher power it was that assisted me and completed my move. 

There’s an episode in Futurama, a TV show about interplanetary beings set in the turn of the 31st-century, called “Leela’s Parents” that captures how I think about the presence and involvement of a higher power in my life. Leela, a character on the show, is an alien who has been abandoned since birth, and as far as the audience was concerned, her parents were no longer alive, and Leela was the last of her species. In this heart-tugging episode, we find out that Leela’s parents are not only alive, but instead of being aliens as we were previously led to believe, they are mutants - second-class citizens forced to spend their entire life living underground. When Leela was born, she looked different enough from other mutants, so her parents made the gut-wrenching decision to abandon her at birth so she could live her life as an alien as opposed to a mutant. But what Leela didn’t know was that her parents had never left her side. Throughout her whole life, her parents have been watching over her from the gutters and keeping her out of harm’s way without her knowing anything about it. I feel like that is the role of the invisible force that governs all of this. 

After landing in California, I was probably the happiest I had ever been, despite still being tied to a job that I had mentally checked out of. The next thing on my to-do list was figuring out what to do about work. I was already on a slippery downward slope with my team in New York because I was not outputting enough code because I only worked about an hour a week. I didn’t have a whole lot of disposable income, and I didn’t want to quit just to have to start looking for another job again. 

Just like the incident with the elevator, it would appear that when you have a deep, yearning desire for something, the universe rearranges itself to meet you halfway. I wanted a 6-month break from work. One day, out of the blue, I decided to go through my investments. I made a spreadsheet of how much money I would get if I sold my Facebook shares according to their vesting schedule, and I found that if I lived within my means, I could afford to not work for 8 months. I figured that if after 6 months, I didn’t have any other plans, I could just go get another job. With my exit plan ready, I handed in my two weeks notice two weeks before the next vesting date where I would receive another $30,000 worth of shares. Had I stayed for another 3 months, I would’ve received another $30,000. I didn’t feel like $30,000 was worth 3 months of suffering. 

Doubling down on freedom

“Life’s simple. You make choices and don’t look back.” 

- Tokyo Drift

After experiencing the freedom of not having a job, I quickly realized that a 6-month break was not enough, so I went back to the drawing board. I made a list of publicly-traded technology companies and started researching. This was a full-time job, but it was the most enjoyable job I’ve ever had. 

I recommend, if possible, using analog tools such as pen and paper for analysis. There is something magical about the power of handwriting. The first thing I did was I envisioned the world I wanted to live in. Next, I split that vision up into five categories - electricity, communication, transportation, e-commerce, and housing - and wrote them down on a blank piece of paper. Next, I wrote down the names of the companies I was considering investing in. I pictured the types of products that would be necessary for each category, and for the companies making those types of products, I drew a line connecting the company to the category. I went through several iterations of this and eventually came up with a list of companies that I was comfortable with. After that, I sold all my Facebook shares, emptied out my Betterment portfolio, and put all the money I had into technology stocks. 

As anyone who has put money into the market in the past year will know, that worked out well. A criticism I can already hear is “you just got lucky”, and I would agree with that. I got lucky by being born, and I’ve been lucky ever since. I don’t make bets based off of statistics because this universe has never made any decisions using statistics. The most rampant thing in this universe is miracles. We have something I call “alive bias” - we only see people who are alive and not people who are dead, so we don’t realize what a privilege it is to be alive. Being alive is a miracle. I don’t take life for granted because I know how close I am to death at every given moment. 

Since my first set of investments, I’ve liquidated my entire portfolio and bought back into the market several times as my views of the world have changed. I’ve learned about the spiritual and sacred meaning behind money through the book “Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition” by Charles Eisenstein. I’ve learned about the energetic properties of money from the book “Happy Money: The Japanese Art of Making Peace with Your Money” by Ken Honda. My degree of involvement with the stock market changes based on where my intuition takes me. At times, I would be guided to liquidate because I just wasn’t comfortable with the assets I owned. Other times, I would be guided to leave my investments alone and focus on personal and spiritual development.

Finding alignment through principles

There are lots of gaps between the spiritual perspectives of money and how money has been taught to us by the archaic and corrupt systems that we are living within. I once made it a personal mission to close all the gaps, but I have since realized that that’s downright impossible. There will always be so much more to learn, and as demonstrated by Gödel, we can never have a complete theory anyways. As a result, I have reduced the scope of my original mission to just sharing what I’ve learned, summarized into four principles:

  1. Everything is energy. 

  2. Money has no intrinsic value. 

  3. The body never lies. 

  4. There is nothing outside of consciousness. 

Some of these principles may seem contradictory, like how can money be an energy but also have no intrinsic value? I’d like to think of truth as something that comes in layers, and these are just different layers of the truth onion. Besides, as tempting as it is to have one unifying theory, how boring would life be without paradoxes? 

#1: Everything is energy

“You don’t get in life what you want. You get in life what you are.” 

- Bob Proctor

I love simple, elegant truths, and that is why I am in love with the Law of Attraction. My own personal interpretation of this law comes from my love for physics. The reason why this law is so powerful is because attraction, sometimes referred to as gravity, is the force that is responsible for formation of all structures in the known universe. If it wasn’t for attraction, nothing we have would exist. In his book “Stalking the Wild Pendulum”, Itzhak Bentov postulated that what we call “love” is an energy that is possibly “the basis of what we know as the phenomenon of gravitation”. 

A quote I read from Kevin O’Leary’s book “Cold Hard Truth: On Business, Money & Life” that stuck with me was “money goes where it feels safe”. That shows how money is an energy. Through my stock trading experience, I have learned that you should never buy an asset out of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) because having the energy of fear when taking an action will only attract more fear. The great thing about Law of Attraction is that you don’t have a choice on when it works and when it doesn’t. It works 100% of the time, and it’s imperative to take responsibility for 100% of your life. 

Most of us don’t actually want money; we want the freedom that comes with money, but if you really think about it, freedom is just a state of mind. To illustrate with an example: it’s possible to be free whilst having no debt and to be free whilst having hundreds of millions of dollars in debt (as in the case of all the millionaires who use debt to avoid taxes). It’s not the debt that keeps people imprisoned; it’s the feelings of shame and guilt centered around debt which have been crafted by those who want free labor. In other words, it’s not the events that happen in our lives but our perception of them that creates our limitations.

We’re not experiencing true reality; we’re experiencing our own sensorial perception of reality through our physical sensations and the meaning we attribute to our physical sensations. The highest form of freedom is the ability to control our own thoughts, which allows us to have total and complete control over our physical experience of life. If you don’t believe that to be possible, consider this: if you’re not in control of your physical experience, then who is? 

Reality is highly malleable, but we have to get a bit creative. The key to changing feelings and therefore changing realities is to write a different but convincing story. For example, when I needed to do my taxes, I created a story about myself being in a video game on a quest to learn about how taxes, a system within this game, worked, and that made taxes fun as opposed to scary. It takes more energy to write a new story as opposed to repeating an old one, but each time you do, you pull in a new reality. 

I’ve never been one to be motivated by money. As an introverted empath, I perceive everything as energy. For me, asset allocation was just energy allocation. I have an inner compulsion with putting things where they belong, just like how a dung beetle has an inner compulsion with rolling its ball from east to west. Having the right asset allocation is like living in a house with the right feng shui. When things are in their proper place, you forget that they’re there. That’s the beautiful thing about having harmony built into the design. It frees up space in the psyche so that we have room for new experiences. 

#2: Money has no intrinsic value

“What would you do if you didn’t have to earn money?” 

- Angela Gu

I used to work at a FinTech company that built reporting tools for financial advisors, and there was one category of bugs that was always taken seriously: numbers bugs. The rationale behind that was that if the numbers were wrong, our clients could possibly lose money as they were basing their trades off of the numbers we were reporting. But these bugs were never noticeable by our clients because people never know when the numbers are wrong because they have no idea what the right value of the numbers are. Understanding this one aspect is the key to understanding the truth about finance: numbers do not represent value, and the significance we assign to numbers on a screen is the significance they have. The Mayans, the Aztecs, and the Egyptians all worked closely with numbers in their communication with divine sources as a means to capture and transmit higher frequencies. We were never meant to be enslaved by numbers. Numbers were meant as a tool for us to expand our understanding of the universe and ask difficult questions about our own existence.

Prior to my spiritual awakening, I questioned the value proposition of financial advisors as we had machines that could do everything. After learning about entanglement, I now believe that there is tremendous value in receiving empathy from another human being. It’s the job of financial advisors to create feelings of psychological safety. There’s no truth in finance just as there is no objectivity in science. The role of a financial advisor is to tell a good story using numbers. We need the numbers to be consistent because that creates coherency in the story. We’re all natural-born storytellers, and those who can tell the most compelling stories are rewarded by the universe with energy. 

In many cultures around the world, especially East Asian culture, money is a status symbol. Children often get compared based on how successful they are. There are many stories like this on the subreddit r/AsianParentStories because in addition to purchasing power, money comes with respect, something that a fragile ego is unwilling to let go of. Having made more than enough money, I can definitively say that if all you’re focused on in this life is your own consumption, you will never feel like you have enough. Despite making a lot of money, I was never free from it. I eventually became tired of trying to fill a bottomless pit with money, so I started experimenting with other ways of living. I went from being a wealth hoarder to a wealth distributor because I realized that this is a borrowed life. The most precious commodity we have is time, and that’s not even guaranteed. A great quote by Don Draper from the TV show Mad Men is “I’m living like there’s no tomorrow because there isn’t one.” We are given moments of time to be who we want to be and to create things that are meaningful to us, and nothing else matters because nothing else exists.

I met this guy while getting an IV vitamin cocktail (which, by the way, is how the universe introduces you to people when you’re an introvert who refuses to go out). He told me about how he went broke three times in his life and is now retiring off of his latest business. I asked him how he managed to survive after going broke, and responded, “I just went out and got a job”. It was then I learned that life becomes real simple when you don’t involve your ego. Have money? Invest. Have no money? Get a job. All you can do in life is to play the best game you can with whatever cards you were dealt. When we approach life with a playful attitude, we realize that it’s our own ego that creates all of our suffering. 

Because of the power of perception, when we give the money to someone who values the money more than us, we actually increase the energy of said money. By distributing our wealth in intelligent ways, we help raise the frequency of the universe. 

#3: The body never lies

“Much of what I stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on.” 

- Steve Jobs

There are only two things in this universe that I trust fully: 

  1. Math

  2. My body

And I’m less confident about math. I tried to learn about Modern Portfolio Theory, but I found it to be lackluster and boring, so I took the famous Joseph Campbell mantra, “follow your bliss”, and ran with it. I let my excitement lead the way, and I found myself in a deep obsession with user experience. I loved getting my hands on new products, I loved reading patents, and I loved speaking to people about their experiences with using a product. When I saw that my 42-year-old acupuncturist was using Square as his payment system, I asked him what he liked about it, and he told me that he liked how he could set the price based on quantity of weight because he had herbs that came in either bottles or grams. I asked a local person here why there are not more Teslas in Mexico despite the amount of car pollution, and he told me that because of the humidity, the battery doesn’t last as long and that insurance companies here are generally pretty shady, so car problems become very expensive.

People who work in sales and marketing grossly underestimate the power of word of mouth. When I wanted to buy a drone, I didn’t bother with reading a bunch of specifications. I just asked my friend who shoots dope drone videos which drone he uses. The earnest opinions of another human being, especially someone we trust, carry tremendous weight. Word of mouth worked out well for Tesla because they put energy into building a great product. 

Great products always win over the long-term. We judge good and bad designs at a cellular level. Every cell in our body is a primordial soup of consciousness capable of discernment. No mathematical model beats the powers of intuition. Here’s a great way to ask your body whether a stock is a good investment. If a stock going down by 50% makes you nervous, you probably shouldn’t own the stock. In classic Marie Kondo style, I only pick stocks that bring me joy. When I was down 30% in Opendoor, that actually made me happy, and that was a big clue for me to hold onto the stock. In an energy economy, our feelings are currency; hence, I made sure to design my portfolio in a way that I always feel good whenever I look at it. That means having the discipline to say no to a lot of stocks that have made other people money. The most important thing to realize with gambling is that not every win is meant for everyone. The more you stick to your own strengths, the more fun you can have with the process.

#4: There is nothing outside of consciousness

If we could draw a boundary around a stock (which we cannot really), we might say that the behavior of a stock is just the collective intentions of the people who are trading it. Gamestop skyrocketed because a large group of people wanted to make the stock go up. The one fact that has remained true throughout our entire human history is that if enough people in the world want something, it’s guaranteed to happen. Blockchain is just the 3D manifestation of our deep-rooted desires as a collective - freedom, justice, equal access to capital, and a way to exchange goods and services without interference from a centralized power. 

The stock market operates purely on perception, so if you can predict the directional change of perception, you can arbitrage the price difference. A shared principle between Buddhism cosmology and non-linear dynamic systems is that emergence is predictable, but its exact mechanisms are not. The idea is that it is hard to make accurate predictions about the microcosmic patterns within this universe such as weather patterns and short-term movements of a stock, but one thing we can be sure of is that consciousness is always on the rise. Higher consciousness means lower acceptance of products that exploit human labor and exploit our planetary resources, products that sacrifice our long-term well-being for short-term gain, and products with a bad user experience, the most disrespectful crime of the 21st century. 

Nonetheless, it’s still possible to capitalize on short-term trends. We’re currently in the Gemini Era until 2025, which means that over the next couple of years, we’re going to see more people moving from place to place and more networks that facilitate trade. We’ve already seen this with the pandemic as many people are realizing that they can work from anywhere. The ease of booking travel experiences with Airbnb combined with the timing of borders starting to open up means that they could see an increase in revenue in the next year. 

Playing my own game

After quitting my job at Facebook, I started selling stuff on Facebook Marketplace, and I loved every bit of it. I loved taking photos and writing descriptions, and I felt like Santa Claus driving to people’s houses and delivering gifts to them. I never made money from it because I was selling stuff at 60-80% of price I bought it for, but I loved the idea of taking something that no longer brought me joy and circulating it back into the system where that item can continue to create joy. For that reason, I gave away a lot of things for free. In my cryptocurrency blog post, I talked about the dire need for more efficient ways of transacting. This is why I am very excited about NFTs as it’s like a more turnt up version of Facebook Marketplace. NFTs are a medium that allows for energy to flow from place to place with little friction, and lower friction means higher efficiency. 

One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned thus far is to ignore the opinions of others - parents, peers, and anyone else who has advice on what you should do with your life. Although I don’t think any Asian parent dreams of their kid becoming a hustler, especially one that loses money, I am very happy with all the things that I’ve learned and have tried. Life is extremely short, and I don’t want to leave this life without having explored all aspects of it. I perceive my existence to be an eternal soul having a temporary human experience, and from the perspective of the soul, a human life is less than a millisecond long. The outcomes of this life aren’t actually what matters; what matters is squeezing the juiciness out of every second you’ve got. You should be emptying yourself out each day and leaving nothing for the table. I don’t regret not making money off of Gamestop or crypto because they’re other people’s strategies. I’d much rather lose money on my own strategy than to win money on someone else’s strategy as I would be disrespecting my own life if I didn’t play my own game. 

Future direction of the world

During my first week of orientation at Facebook, I sat in on a talk about infrastructure at the company. The engineer who conducted the talk told us that the biggest bottleneck to technological innovation at Facebook was not machine learning or servers but electricity. The energy crisis poses a real constraint on our technological progression, and it’s not one of those problems that can be easily solved by throwing money at it. I’m long Tesla for the long haul because I think they have a chance of being the company that solves this problem. 

As we transition from Age of Pisces to Age of Aquarius and from 3D to 5D Earth, we enter into a spiritual economy. In order for a business to thrive in 5D, the business model has to match our human values. That means not charging for things that should be free and monetizing in a way that energizes all participating parties in the energy exchange. The sensitivity of our nervous system will increase to create the increase in our consciousness. As a result, we will become much more intolerant to energy exchanges that are messy, inefficient, or worst of all, degrading. 

Blockchain plays an important role for the transition. Currently, in our society, every organization at every magnitude of scale puts a small group of individuals in charge of all decisions regarding how wealth controlled by that organization gets rationed and distributed. These decisions are always made over whiskey nights, and wealth, an euphemism for power, is always kept within the group. As we move towards blockchain, everyone, not just exclusive members of boys clubs, will be able to participate in funding through the use of smart contracts. Everyone will have access to capital and access to good investment opportunities, which was the whole point behind the American dream. The dream was that if someone has an idea, they should get the opportunity to prove that idea against the market, and if they fail, they should get the chance to try again and again because our universe actually has enough resources to support unlimited attempts at innovation. Just to illustrate how significant this technology is: imagine that you’re renting a house and the landlord doesn’t abide by the terms of the lease; if this was done via blockchain, you would own the house. We have never, in our entire human history, had anything remotely like this. This is the first system that is impossible to cheat. We will no longer need the government for a lot of things that we currently need the government for, such as allocation of capital and holding people accountable for abiding by contracts. We will be able to set our own rules for how we want to work together, borders will become an abstract concept, and everyone will get the chance to participate in a shared global market. We are living in a very special time. I have never felt more blessed to be alive and to have the chance to experience the most important transition in human history.

In general, I am very optimistic about the future. I wrote an Instagram post about how the universe does not make mistakes, and I am a firm believer of that. I remain bullish on the universe as a whole. Right now, it feels like the world is a giant fireball that can implode at any second with hyperinflation and everyone leaving their jobs, but as always, the universe removes the old to make room for the new. Wages have never kept up with oil prices, and the discrepancy is more palpable now than ever. People are finally getting fed up with the injustices of late-stage capitalism. If enough people band together to strike, giant factories will be forced to shut down as people awaken to the fact that risking their personal safety to make Frito Lays potato chips isn’t really worth it. 

As cliché as it sounds, the universe never takes away anything that matters. Everything that happens in our lives is designed to bring us closer to who we are. There were days when I felt like I'd lost everything, and I would start writing and realize that the loss was just writing material in disguise. Losses turned out some of my best writings, so I know that as long as I know how to write, I will be okay. 

The best assets to invest in

“Success isn’t the goal. The goal is, if you have a God-given talent, to live your life out through that.” 

- Jay-Z

I would love to be able to teach people how to invest in the stock market, but I can’t do that because the stock market is not real; it’s just a bunch of numbers on a computer. It’s a fake game that we created for ourselves, just like the simulated reality we live in. I would never rely on the financial system to feel secure because I am not in control of the financial system. I believe in always putting the locus of control back inside yourself because when you blame external circumstances for what goes on in your life, you give away your power. I am not in control of the daily prices of Bitcoin, I am not in control of what the Federal Reserve does with our currency, and I am certain not in control of what Elon posts on Twitter. The only thing I am in control of is how I optimize my time and my energy. Here are the top three recession-proof assets that give me the highest ROI (Rate of Return) that are well within my locus of control: 

  1. Health

  2. Network

  3. Talent

When you’re in good health, you can take on whatever life throws at you. The quality of my writing improves dramatically after I’ve gotten some exercise. Secondly, we live in an interconnected world where there is a compounding effect for every intention we send out, which is why small acts of kindness have enormous impacts. We can multiply the energy we want to create by leveraging our connectivity. When I do things that excite me, that incites excitement in other people, and that subtle shift in energy makes them more likely to bring me things that further fuel my excitement. If you have a vision, convincing other people of your vision through passion and excitement will allow the vision manifest quicker. Finally, the universe has no shortage or money but a severe shortage of talent. Money can’t make talent, and that’s been proven by the absurd amount of money that Silicon Valley companies spend on recruitment. My biggest advice to anyone working in tech is that if you are not feeling pure joy in your role, just leave. Your highest earning potential will always come from the truest and most authentic expression of yourself. There is no such thing as job security. That’s just a pipe dream sold to people who keep them chained to the system. The universe is in constant flux and is constantly being created. If we believe Heaven to be a place of rest, we get there by being at the epicenter of creation. 

Previous
Previous

Assets, currency, and Web 3.0 - Why you should never work for currency, NFT-based revenue structures, the importance of owning your creations, and why I’m comfortable going to zero

Next
Next

Different perspectives of time and how to move beyond it (according to the rules of quantum mechanics)