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Owned by Adam

Doubtless Male

29 members • $499/month

For (recently single) founders and executives. Fix your SELF-DOUBT in 90 days & reclaim your worth - no hard work required.

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4 contributions to THE SKOOL HUB
I WOULD MOST SINCERELY APPRECIATE FEEDBACK
In my Skool community I teach how to write about food. Here's the question: please have a look at my 'about' page. Then let me know whether it sells effectively. Thanks so much in anticipation! https://www.skool.com/how-to-write-about-food-8335/about
I WOULD MOST SINCERELY APPRECIATE FEEDBACK
1 like • May 14
@Henry Hunter I think of plenty when it comes to food. Would you mind sharing yours?
How are you spending sunday
I am chilling in thqe garden The is Bear the dog and Mrs Jones the tortoise If you want to learn about human behaviour beacsue at the end of the day we are all animals Hit the link 👇 https://www.skool.com/behaviouralintelligencelab/about?ref=11c295e837044b22849fac5da808cedb
How are you spending sunday
1 like • May 10
@Tim Atyeo slow and steady wins the race
1 like • May 10
@Tim Atyeo
What else are you missing
8 cues. One date. Most people miss every single one. The image on the left? Engaged. Open. Connected. The image on the right? Same couple. Same table. Same drinks. Eight subtle behavioural shifts later and the date is already over. He just doesn't know it yet. Here's what changed: ① Eye contact broke. From sustained and engaged → gaze aversion. ② Lips went from a relaxed smile → pressed and tense. ③ Posture shifted from leaning in → arms crossed, leaning back. ④ Gaze turned from him → away from him entirely. ⑤ The wine glass went from resting on the table → raised as a chest barrier. ⑥ Shoulders rose and closed. ⑦ A phone appeared between them on the table. ⑧ Her hand tightened around the stem of her glass. One of these on its own? Means nothing. Could be the room temperature. Could be a bad day. But all eight together? That's a cluster. And a cluster tells the truth. This is the difference between leaving a date thinking "I'm not sure how that went" and leaving knowing exactly what just happened, while there's still time to do something about it. It's also the difference between matching with someone, exchanging texts for two weeks, and getting ghosted with no idea why… and reading the shift in their messages on day three, before you've invested anything more. Inside the Date Decoder, this is what we train. Not theory. Not vibes. Real cues, real clusters, real-time reads...applied to dating, texts, bios, voice notes, and live interactions. ⚡ Live decode sessions weekly ⚡ Private AI Date Decoder — paste any text, bio, or voice note for an instant read ⚡ Direct feedback on your own conversations and profile ⚡ Full classroom of drills, scripts, and case studies — new content every week ⚡ Step-by-step modules you can work through at your own pace
What else are you missing
1 like • May 4
@Tim Atyeo @Tim Atyeo that is pretty neat, how does that apply to a wife's world? Just yesterday I was talking to a friend who is a psychologist and psychotherapist and his new client, a young woman is facing her father suicide. Everyone though he is ok. Could that assessment be a good practice to spot behaviours suggesting a bit more than a check-in?
0 likes • May 4
@Tim Atyeo well, in Poland a man statistically commits suicide every two hours. The application of your skill set could be ground breaking in that area especially as men are unwilling to talk about their problems.
WHAT YOU CAN LEARN INSIDE THE COMMUNITY
MONDAY MORNING CUE Everyday a new Behaviour cue: Object Barrier This is when someone covers part of their body with an object during a date or interaction. Holding their wine glass up against their chest at the bar. Keeping their phone face-down but firmly between you on the table. Hugging a handbag on their lap. Sliding the menu, candle, or salt shaker into the space between you. Crossing their arms over a jacket folded in front of them. It signals insecurity, self-protection, or sometimes someone whose default is to keep new people at arm's length until they decide it's safe. But context matters. On a first date, an object barrier early on is often nerves, not rejection. The job isn't to call it out. The job is to read it, then make the environment safe enough that they put the object down on their own. Watch for the moment the glass goes back on the table. The phone gets pocketed. The bag slides to the floor. That's the read not the barrier itself, but when and why it drops. Remember: context and clusters of cues. One barrier alone tells you nothing. A barrier plus leaning back, plus short answers, plus checking the time —that's a cluster. That's data. Drop a comment what's the most obvious object barrier you've seen on a date, and did it ever come down? https://www.skool.com/datedecoder/about
WHAT YOU CAN LEARN INSIDE THE COMMUNITY
1 like • May 4
@Tim Atyeo amazing insight, thank you!
1-4 of 4
Adam Karpenter
2
15points to level up
@skooligan
stand up fella

Active 19m ago
Joined Oct 26, 2025
Warsaw, Poland
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