Ufot [he/him]
Loans are given out for 1 reason, to receive interest payments.
If he’s making the interest payments, then they’re going to keep loaning him money.
Lenders often make stupid decisions and risky loans but at its core, a loan is determined by two(three) things.
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Does the lender believe the borrower has enough income to pay the minimum monthly payments?
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Does the lender believe the borrower has enough assets, which if liquidated could pay off the remaining debt?
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Is it worth the risk?
I’m no finance expert and there’s a lot of specifics between different types of loans that have different reasons. Like a personal loan, mortgage, car loan, business loan. Way more than that idk.
There’s also reasons banks will or will not loan money that are a little more vibe based, ie racism, classism.
But the lenders, either correctly or incorrectly, have determined he has the income streams and the assets(sounds like he owns lots of property), that risking 1.2 bil made financial sense. A lot of thst probably is tied to real estate.
Having said all that holy shit that’s a lot of money. Assuming he’s paying only the interest at 3% apr that’s $36,000,000 a year. Fuck.
I’d say whether I’ve done it part of a group or just randomly when I had extra food and offered it to someone theyve accepted way more than not.
I’ve been asked if I could buy some chips multiple times. I’ve bought and ate meals with people.
Maybe it’s different in the places I’ve lived.
Eh having said all that, I’ve also talked with some people who were able to get food okay but needed money for other basic necessities. You can find food in a dumpster but not a shower or a safe place to sleep.
Some people also need to be mobile and it’s a lot easier to haul cash than food.
You can absolutely use positive reinforcement to bribe yourself into doing something.
If something feels abstract, it’s because you haven’t broken it down into small enough steps, and/or you haven’t identified properly what that concept actually means in practice.
Practice the Major System weekly/monthly until memorized. Ok what does that look like? What does that entail?
I’m not sure what that is but you have three memorization tasks. You don’t have to think about them all separately. You can think about it like this.
Ok I want to be a memorizer. I’ll do that by practicing weekly. Practicing weekly means practicing twice a week. Practicing twice a week means once on Monday and once on Thursday. I will practice those days after dinner After dinner means, as soon as I eat dinner, I will put away my dishes, and immediately start practicing. I will practice for 20 minutes each day.
Things to consider to set yourself up for success. Have a space where you always practice. Set up the things you need to practice before you eat dinner, or while it’s cooking. So that could look like: If I am cooking dinner, before its cooking I will identify a time before I start where I’ll have a few minutes to set up my space. Examples: While the water is boiling Right after the food goes in the oven Or whatever. If you can’t think of a time, do it between the prep work and before anything hot happens.
If youre just reheating something. While I wait for this to heat up, I will set up my practice space. If youre ordering food. Right after I order food I’ll set up my practice space.
You get the picture right? What does setting up the practice space entail? Idk. Clear it. Set out your book. Or go to the website idk, but you do.
Then once you memorize one thing you just adjust that routine to the next memorization task as needed.
TIL the word malapropism. Thanks!
Reminds me of when I was like 21 and one of my friends would get super worked up and annoyed when our friend would mess up an idiom. I had to take him aside a couple times and tell him “look my guy, you need to relax. You obviously understood what she was trying to say, it literally does not matter, and this person is your friend stop being a jerk.”
I can’t remember if he eventually chilled or I just moved away and forgot about it lol
Good post. I think there’s several different reasons. It’s a shortcut to identity, community. It gives people something to believe in. It can just simplify things. They have good feelings attached to X, so when X is thought of or spoke of or whatever it brings up good feelings.
For me I’d consider myself a fan of 3 different sports teams. I don’t watch the other teams playing, except if it’s something especially intriguing. Any info or news about other teams is always processed with a varying amount ok how does this relate to my team. Or how does this provide more context about what my team is doing. I like it. It’s fun. How much and how frequently I care is related to how good the team is, but I’ll always check in eventually even if they’re garbage lol.
I’d just call it a heuristic. Fandom is a heuristic that can simplify and/or strengthen someone’s ability to gaf about something.
No thank you for writing it all out.
There’s lots of info out there ofc, but the two places I get most of my info now are the stronger by science guys and Jeff Nippard. I really like their approaches. Strength training and technique mostly but general understanding of theory and approach. Big and strong. Mobility and calisthenics I like the saturno movement group. They have an impressive mix of strength, mobility and skill.
So when I say you should or it is, I’m not saying I’m correct or it’s facts but it’s what I’ve learned taking info from people who work really hard in understanding their craft and work hard on sharing it. Of course it’s also what I’ve been able to “confirm” in my own experiences. Ymmv though.
Don’t think of beginner, intermediate or advanced as how strong you are, or how much you’ve done it in the past. This is how I understand it.
Beginners: make quick and consistent progress
Intermediate: once you reach a plateau on your progress you’re approaching intermediate. Here you have to readjust. Maybe you’ll spend 2-4 weeks at a weight before you can progress.
Advanced: I’ve never reached this level so I’m not familiar with it from my own experience but my understanding its takes a lot of very targeted work and honing in on technique to raise their weight by even 5lbs/ 1 rep.
So unless you’ve ever been at the Advanced stage if you take too long off you’re going to start back at Beginner. It’s not a bad thing it just means you will be able to make progress quickly.
The stronger you already are, and the more experience you have, the higher your baseline, and the shorter your Beginner period usually is.
For me after an injury from doing something stupid outside the gym, lol, I start with a beginner routine. Each time I’m at the stage for less and less before I get back up to my working weight. Like last time it took me about 3 months, to get to a weight that took me 8 months before the injury.
Beginner routines to me are defined by their simplicity and their focus on progressive overload. If you’re at a place where you can do daily or weekly increases to weight or volume than you’re a beginner. It doesn’t mean your weak, it means you can improve faster than someone who’s been consistently at it for months/years.
So don’t think of it as a bad thing, its not.
You also need to pick a routine and stick with it. You’re motivated right now so its easy to do whatever, but having to think about what you’re going to do each time will not only take more discipline and energy, but it’ll be just way less effective because you’re doing random stuff. Not to mention you give yourself space to make compromises and excuses in the moment.
It’s just really chaotic. Good job in going, it’s better than paralysis analysis, but if you want to succeed from a results standpoint, any sort of beginner routine will be better than what you’re doing now. If you want to succeed from a still doing in a few months standpoint you need a build in a routine around the gym that removes as much ambiguity and choice as possible. One day, “maybe I’ll just go tomorrow” will eventually turn into “eh I’m not really feeling it this week” and the next thing you know you haven’t gone in weeks.
This is something ive experienced and had to work through, this is something most people go through. The people who don’t, have very good routines and/or have been going consistently for so long they can’t imagine actually not going to the gym.
Try to think about why you stopped going the last time. If it was an injury or something then think about why you didn’t start again when healed.
I’d be happy to help you brainstorm and choose a routine for in the gym and around it if you’d like. We can address your goals and what it might/would take to reach them.
I of course encourage you to do your own research. I’d point you to the people I mentioned above, but there’s lots of good stuff out there.
You’re always welcome to come back and ask me whatever questions you have. You don’t need to censure yourself with me, if I don’t want to read something or answer something I won’t.
Edit: the Jim thing was funny. If you do want to go more in depth I don’t mind doing it here, but if you’d rather do it somewhere else just dm me.
Well I wrote a bunch of stuff to try and answer your questions, which I’m still happy to post as a followup, but I think I’ll start with this instead.
Before I tell you what I think of those things, can you tell me more about what your current routine or plan is and if you have any specific or general goals?
I honestly have no idea from what you shared so far.