Did You Knowđź’ˇ
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If you work for a living, why do you kill yourself working?
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Own great businesses for a very long time (and keep costs near zero).
Compounding needs time + discipline + low fees. Broad index funds or durable moats let earnings snowball.
Example: Warren Buffett compounded ~20%/yr for decades by owning quality businesses and doing very little.

#Finance #Compounding #LongTerm @Quick_Insight
Live below your means, automate investing, never interrupt compounding.
Small, regular buys (SIP/DCA) through crashes beat market timing — the miracle is not selling.
Example: Anne Scheiber, a former auditor, quietly turned a modest nest egg into multi-millions through frugal living, dividend reinvestment, and patience.

#Wealth #Discipline #Strategy @Quick_Insight
The Rosetta Stone unlocked Egypt’s lost language.
One slab, three scripts — and Champollion solved hieroglyphs in 1822.

#History #Language #Breakthrough @Quick_Insight
Great Zimbabwe rose without mortar — massive dry-stone walls up to 11 meters high.
An African trading empire written in granite.

#History #Architecture #Africa @Quick_Insight
A galaxy can act as a gravitational lens — warping space to magnify things behind it.
Sometimes we see perfect “Einstein rings.”

#Science #Space #Wonder @Quick_Insight
The mimic octopus can impersonate lionfish, sea snakes, even flatfish on demand.
Costume changes, underwater.

#Ocean #Biology #Intelligence @Quick_Insight
On Neptune, extreme pressure can form diamond rain deep inside the planet.
Weather, with jewels.

#Space #Planets #Awe @Quick_Insight
The Voynich manuscript is filled with unknown plants and unreadable text.
Six centuries later, it’s still undeciphered.

#Mystery #Books #Curiosity @Quick_Insight
The skeleton of a glass sponge is a natural fiber-optic lattice.
Engineers study it to build lighter, tougher materials.

#Nature #Biomimicry #Design @Quick_Insight
The shipwreck Atocha (1622) yielded one of history’s biggest treasure finds —
gold, silver, emeralds recovered after three centuries.

#Exploration #Treasure #Maritime @Quick_Insight
Lithium-ion batteries put a superpower in your pocket: thousands of charge cycles,
high energy density — the backbone of phones and EVs.

#Inventions #Energy #Tech @Quick_Insight
Wolffia (duckweed) is the world’s smallest flowering plant — some seeds are tinier than a grain of sand.
A whole bloom on the head of a pin.

#Plants #Nature #TinyWonders @Quick_Insight
Be an owner–allocator; repurchase shares when undervalued.
Great CEOs compound by smart capital allocation—reinvesting only where returns stay high, and buying back stock when it’s cheap.
Example: Henry Singleton (Teledyne) shrank share count massively with opportunistic buybacks, driving decades of ~20%+ annualized returns.

#Finance #Compounding #CapitalAllocation @Quick_Insight
Buy at “maximum pessimism,” then sit tight.
Crises create mispriced assets; the edge is courage + patience while fundamentals recover.
Example: Sir John Templeton bought distressed stocks when fear peaked (e.g., WWII era bargains) and compounded as sentiment normalized.

#Finance #Strategy #ValueInvesting @Quick_Insight
Sailors and scholars once navigated the sky with the astrolabe —
a bronze analog computer that solved time, latitude, and star positions by hand.

#History #Navigation #Inventions @Quick_Insight
Tyrian purple came from murex sea snails; thousands were needed for a few grams.
A dye so costly it signaled emperors before logos existed.

#History #Materials #Status @Quick_Insight
In labs, scientists teleport quantum states — not objects — across fiber links.
Information hops via entanglement, proving physics is stranger than fiction.

#Science #Quantum #Information @Quick_Insight
Barcelona’s Sagrada Família has been rising since 1882 —
stone poetry built by donations, geometry, and generations.

#Architecture #Art #LongGame @Quick_Insight
Maya Blue — a pigment of indigo fused with clay — resists time, sun, and acids.
Ancient chemistry that modern labs still admire.

#History #Chemistry #Craft @Quick_Insight
Concert “holograms” often use Pepper’s Ghost (1860s stage magic):
a hidden glass and careful lighting make spirits step on stage.

#Illusion #Design #Theatre @Quick_Insight
The sea slug Glaucus atlanticus steals stings from jellyfish it eats —
then stores and fires them from its own body.

#Ocean #Biology #StrangeNature @Quick_Insight