There's an overwhelming amount of information available online, and some of it offers more than just knowledge — it offers a lifestyle. That's not inherently a problem. I'm here to do the same thing. The real issue is when that lifestyle drifts into performance.
Performativity works like this: it gives you a feeling designed to pull you in, a sense that you're moving forward. Wake up at 5am. Apply hard discipline. No excuses. These patterns are appealing because they're concrete and clear. But over time, your own voice weakens. You start living according to someone else's rhythm.
I was influenced by this kind of content early on. When I finally noticed, I cleaned up what I was sharing and had to re-evaluate myself.
The people who use these patterns to draw you in are using bait. Their own psychological foundation isn't stable — and what they're building can damage yours. What I'm sharing here is the life and financial architecture I'm actually working toward. The important thing is this: even if I occasionally fall into this trap without realizing it, avoiding it remains the goal.
My advice: step outside the resonance of the content you consume and look at it from a distance. Is it actually building you — or just making you feel like it is? The moment you understand the difference, you begin to draw your own path.
Build in silence.
Stay informed.
No noise. No shortcuts. Just the writing — delivered to you.