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🚀 Start here (5 minutes) Welcome.
Welcome. Three steps to get moving — don't do them perfectly, just done: Introduce yourself in the comments below 👇 — where you're at now, and the one thing you want to change in the next 90 days. (You'll earn your first points 🎯) Open the Routine Architecture course in Classroom and finish Lesson 1 today — one small action. Come back and tell us what that action was. That's it. Momentum first, mastery second. Then like 3 intros below yours — that's how this place works. 👊
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Since now everything will be in english so everybody can understand
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We Are back team
Team, we’re back! I’m going to guide you through everything I know to help improve the quality of your daily life as much as possible, from habits all the way to passive income.
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Siddhartha
Here is the breakdown of the core ideas from Hesse’s Siddhartha ​The Journey to the Self: Why Wisdom Cannot Be Taught ​Siddhartha’s story isn't just a historical narrative; it’s a timeless manual for anyone who feels that "borrowed truths" from parents, schools, or religion have stopped making sense. The central theme is a radical rejection of dogma in favor of one's own raw experience. ​1. The Trap of Borrowed Truths ​Most people live in a system of "belief updates." We read a book, listen to a podcast, and think we’ve grown smarter. However, the text warns that this is merely a borrowed path. True enlightenment is not an intellectual accumulation of information, but a "systemic restart of perception." It means stopping to look at the world through the glasses others have put on us and starting to see things exactly as they are. ​2. Wisdom vs. Knowledge ​The text highlights a fundamental difference between knowledge and wisdom: ​Knowledge can be passed on (by a teacher, a book, or a script). ​Wisdom must be lived. ​Siddhartha discovers that mistakes, suffering, and even sins are not obstacles on the path—they are the path itself. Without making a mistake and feeling its consequences firsthand, a person's understanding of the world remains purely theoretical and superficial. ​3. The River and the Illusion of Time ​One of the most powerful symbols in the book is the river. It is by the river that Siddhartha realizes time is nothing but an illusion of our mind. ​The water in the river is everywhere at once—at the source, in the riverbed, and at the sea. ​Human life is exactly the same: we are not just who we are right now; we are simultaneously the child we once were and the old man we will become. ​Understanding this "oneness" frees a person from the fear and anxiety of the future. All the voices of the world—joy, sorrow, anger, love—together form one single sound: a single symphony. ​4. The Art of Listening ​The highest form of wisdom is not speaking or teaching, but listening. It’s not just about hearing sounds; it’s about being fully present. It means listening to life without immediately judging it or trying to change it. True awakening is born within this silence.
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Siddhartha
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