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🌓 The Only True Holiday

Have you ever watched the sun rise at Stonehenge? It doesn’t just rise—it arrives, like an honored guest. And those ancient stones, weathered by millennia, stand not to worship, but to witness. You see, the builders of Stonehenge weren’t trying to control the cosmos. They were aligning with it. They knew something we’ve mostly forgotten—that time is not a straight line, but a spiral. And the solstice? It’s a turning point on that spiral. A breath between the in-breath and out-breath. And as I reflect, it strikes me—this may be the only true holiday. Not one invented by humans, but one the Earth has always kept. A sacred pause in the dance between the Earth and the Sun. Not for gods or governments—but for gravity and light. No moon governs it. No myth defines it. It is a cosmic ceremony written into the fabric of the universe—a moment of pure alignment between two partners in an ancient romance. For what is the sun without the Earth to receive it? A brilliant emptiness. And what ...

Lucky People

One of the greatest gifts my father gave me was the core belief that I was lucky. I believed it—because he believed it. “I’d rather be lucky than good” was a phrase I heard often, especially when things just seemed to fall into place. As someone who struggled to learn in the way school was structured, I began to see luck not just as chance, but as a kind of talent—something I could lean into, trust, and even develop. In a world where I didn’t always feel traditionally capable, believing I was lucky became my superpower. But my father didn’t leave success up to luck alone. When I asked him questions about life or work, he’d often respond in his best imitation of his old Jewish boss: “You vaunt nice things? You have to vork hard.” And he knew no one succeeds alone. He constantly preached the importance of building a “Bud Network”—a trusted group of people you can rely on and grow with. Put those three together—believing you're lucky, working hard, and surrounding yourself with good p...

How Eminem Freestyled His Way to Enlightenment

You see, in this curious game of life, most people spend their energy trying to hide their flaws. Patch them up. Tuck them in. Deny them. But the truly awakened ones—those rare few—broadcast their imperfections with rhythmic precision and razor-sharp wit. I realized this as I watched the rise of Eminem. and one particular song has always given me the chills, so I wanted to dig into the significance. Now, why on Earth would a man air out his deepest insecurities on a public stage? Why would he, in the midst of battle rap—a verbal warzone—hand his opponent the ammunition? Ah… precisely because it disarms them. When Eminem raps, “I am white, I am a f***in’ bum, I do live in a trailer with my mom,” he’s not inviting ridicule. He’s transcending it. He’s pulled the rug out from under the entire illusion of attack. For if I’ve already accepted—and even weaponized—my flaws, what could you possibly say to hurt me? You’re left shadowboxing. Swinging at phantoms. This, you see, is the spiritual a...

Using Magic On Your Mind

There once was a husband and wife who had, from the outside, everything. A garden of abundance, a roof of security, the laughter of children, even the echo of their younger selves still clinging to memories of love. But over time, something crept in—not a monster, not a curse, but the most ordinary of things: familiarity.  And as familiarity took root, so did blindness. Not literal blindness, but the kind that no longer sees. You know, the way you stop hearing the hum of a refrigerator after a while. Or how the flowers you planted lose their magic simply because they’ve bloomed too long in your field of view.  And so, each of them—this husband and this wife—began to feel unseen, unheard, and unheld. He would speak with frustration, not because he was angry, but because he felt invisible. She would reply with sharpness, not because she was cruel, but because she felt unworthy. They had begun to poison their Garden of Eden—not with malice, but with misunderstanding. And here is ...

Drop The Fools Gold

Before you arrived in this world—before breath, before bone—you agreed to something. Not to a job, or a title, or a bank account. You agreed to a curriculum. A peculiar kind of education not made of facts and figures, but of lessons. Lessons in love, in humility, in letting go. You laid them out like breadcrumbs on the forest floor of time. Some in order. Some scattered, just to keep things interesting. Now, imagine you’re walking through your day and—oh!—a conflict arises. Most people recoil. “What a shame,” they say. “The day was going so well until that happened.” But what if that tension, that friction, wasn’t a mistake, but an invitation? A reminder that one of your hidden lessons has just stepped into the light. When two people disagree, it is as if life has placed two piles of treasure on the table between them. One is pure gold—the lesson you came here to learn. The other is fool’s gold—shiny, self-righteous, and utterly hollow. Now, if you see the disagreement not as an attack...

Gratitude: The Currency of Favor

A statement of profound truth that revealed itself during a meditation:  “Gratitude is the currency of favor.”  —Discover how the power behind this simple quote has been shaping your experience as a human.  Let us begin not by dissecting the words, but by feeling them. You see, the moment we try to define life too precisely, it slips through our fingers. But gratitude—That is something we can feel deeply. And so, too, is favor. Now, I believe that the universe is not a collection of things, but a process. An undivided dance of energy—waves rising and falling, forms appearing and dissolving. And within this dance, there is a law older than language: exchange . The breath you take in, you must give out. The water you drink today will fall again as rain. All things are in movement. All things are in relationship. So when you say “Gratitude is the currency of favor,” you are pointing to one of the most profound truths of the human experience: That gratitude initiates a fl...

Creating Your Primary Aim

Now, let us speak for a moment about this word: goal . You see, in modern times, it’s become rather dull, hasn’t it? Sterile. Lifeless. A checkbox on some corporate form. But life—real life—is not lived in checkboxes. That’s why I much prefer the word quest . Because a quest is not a task to be completed. It is a transformation to be undergone. When you embark on a quest, you do not know what you will encounter. You may think you’re searching for treasure, but you may very well find yourself. You will face resistance, yes. Confusion, no doubt. But you will move forward anyway, because that is the nature of a quest.  And so, when you take pen to paper and write your primary aim, understand this:  you are not merely making plans. You are invoking something. That pen in your hand is no ordinary tool— it is a wand. A wand that draws unseen thoughts and emotions into the fabric of reality. And yes, it may take time. In stories, the magic is instant. But here, in the world of trees ...

Your Transformation Workbook

What You Hold Is Not Just a Document — It Is a Map You see, most people are trying to navigate life with a broken compass and someone else’s map. They chase success as if it were somewhere out there—on the horizon, always just beyond reach. But what if the treasure you seek is not ahead of you... but within you ? This document—this Transformation Guide —is not a mere collection of strategies. It is a distillation of centuries of wisdom , synthesized through the lived experience of someone who has walked both the humble path of hardship and the rarefied air of exceptional success. Our guide, Ross Hamilton, began his journey not with wealth or pedigree, but with a disadvantage—at least, that’s how it appeared. A C– student. Dyslexic. No silver spoon. And yet, by applying principles not taught in schools—but known intimately by the wise—he became a millionaire in his youth, a real estate pioneer, a published author, a founder with the largest tech exit in his industry , and now, a man...

My Secret Weapon - Is Now Yours.

What is a secret weapon ? It is not a sword, nor a strategy. It is something far more elegant. It is the quiet confidence you carry—not because of what the world has given you, but because of what you have cultivated within yourself . It is the subtle smile you wear at the negotiating table with life, the grin that says, “Throw what you will—I will alchemize it all.” It is knowing—not hoping—that whatever stands before you will fall behind you. Eventually. Naturally. Even joyfully. You see, most people misunderstand self-improvement. They believe it is about acquiring more: more habits, more tricks, more checklists. But true self-improvement is not an addition—but a subtraction . You are not building something atop your identity. You are shedding what was never yours to begin with. The toxic beliefs. The inherited fears. The unexamined assumptions. The thought viruses passed down like family recipes. Self-improvement is the stripping away of these things. A return to clarity. T...

We are gods by ancient standards

You see, the great tragedy of the modern world is not that we lack miracles… but that we’ve stopped recognizing them. We are, quite literally, soaring through the air in great mechanical birds—jetting across the sky at hundreds of miles per hour—sipping hot coffee, browsing memes, and being served. However we complain if the Wi-Fi isn’t working. Think of that. We are gods by ancient standards, and yet, we mutter like peasants with stubbed toes. There was a time—not long ago—when a journey across the continent would cost you years, perhaps your life, or at the very least, your innocence. You’d arrive a different person entirely. Now? You can leave New York after breakfast and dine in San Francisco before sunset. But we normalize it. We forget. We fall asleep at the wheel of wonder.   This normalization is not contained to technological advancements, we also normalize relationships, mother nature and life itself. Gratitude, dear friend, is the great revealer. It is the spiri...

The Mirage of civilization

Ah, civilization—this delicate, shimmering veil stretched thinly over the raw and untamed nature of humanity. We take it for granted, assuming it is a solid foundation beneath our feet. But in truth, it is a mirage—one that vanishes the moment the conditions shift. Recently, I found myself in what I can only describe as a rehearsal for apocalypse. One moment, the world hummed along with its predictable rhythms; the next, everything stopped. No power. No water. No way to communicate. No information to explain what had happened or how long it would last. I was alone, surrounded by silence, and cut off from the world as if I had been stranded on an island. The roads—those lifelines of civilization—were gone, blocked, erased from function. And in that void, something fascinating began to unfold. At first, there was a kind of peace, a return to something ancient and pure. The distractions that normally consume us had evaporated, leaving behind only the present moment. There was joy in the s...

The Root Of Emotions

You see, emotions are often mistaken for the thing itself, rather like mistaking the ripples on a pond for the movement of the whole sea. People chase emotions, analyze them, suppress them, or indulge in them—but rarely do they inquire into their source. Where does an emotion arise from? What gives it weight, significance, and the peculiar hold it has on you? If you trace an emotion back—any emotion, whether joy, anger, sorrow, or fear—you will find that it flowers from a belief. It is not the world outside you that dictates your feelings, but rather your interpretation of it. And what is interpretation but a system of beliefs? Imagine, for a moment, that you are feeling anxious about an upcoming conversation. The anxiety does not exist in the mere fact that words will be exchanged. The anxiety arises because you believe something must happen in a particular way—you believe you must be perceived a certain way, or that some consequence must be avoided. And it is that belief, not the con...

The Trojan Horse of the Mind

The modern world—an endless buffet of information, a ceaseless tide of stimulus. The mind, restless as a monkey swinging from branch to branch, clings to every new scrap of data, every fleeting sensation, convinced that to stop would be to die. And so, we do not stop. We press forward, consuming information like a starving man at a feast, never questioning the quality of the meal. And when exhaustion sets in—when the mind begs for rest—what do we do? Do we sit in the silence of our own being, allowing the world to settle around us? No. Instead, we pick up another screen, another drip of dopamine disguised as "rest." A Trojan Horse of relaxation, we say. “This is not distraction; this is education. This is the news. I must stay informed! I must not be an ignorant fool!” And yet, the anxiety lingers. The distrust festers. We wonder, “What is wrong with them ?” But rarely do we turn the lens inward, to ask: What am I feeding my mind? Who is the chef in my kitchen? Who decides ...

Good Or About to Be Good

We are often trapped in the illusion of duality—the notion that life is split into good and bad, light and dark, fortune and misfortune. But this, my friends, is only a trick of the mind. A cosmic sleight of hand. There is no such thing as bad, only "about to be good." Nature has never made a mistake. The tides do not fight the moon, the trees do not resent the winter, and the caterpillar does not despair at the cocoon. They simply are , because they know —not with anxious waiting, but with deep, intrinsic knowing—that the next cycle is already written. To resist what you call bad is to resist the very soil from which good must grow. You are like a gardener cursing the compost, failing to see that decay is not the enemy, but the nourishment for what comes next. A storm is only frightening to one who forgets it brings the rain that fills the rivers. Look to the yin-yang , that ancient symbol not of conflict, but of harmony . The dark swirl does not struggle against the light; ...

The Evil Side Of The Entrepreneurial Spirit

Ah, the entrepreneurial spirit—a force so potent, so magnetic, that it can both create and consume. It is the whisper in the ear, the gleam in the eye, the drive that stirs one to create something from nothing. But like all powerful forces, it is a double-edged sword, a dance with the devil and the divine. You see, the spirit of entrepreneurship is neither good nor bad; it simply is . It is energy, a vibration, a frequency of movement. It is the will to build, to expand, to conquer the unknown. But whether it liberates or enslaves depends entirely on the one who wields it—or, more accurately, the one who is possessed by it. Are you born with it? Ah, now there’s the question. Some come into this world with that unmistakable glint in their eye, a spark that refuses to be dimmed. Others find it along the way, attracted by the promise of power, wealth, and influence. It can be summoned, cultivated, but it is never truly yours. No, it is a spirit—a force that you can dance with but never fu...

From Knight to Wizard

Once upon a time, there was a knight—a fierce warrior adorned in gleaming armor, sword always at the ready. His life was defined by battle, by conquest, by the thrill of victory and the fear of defeat. He knew who he was because the world around him constantly reflected his identity back to him: the clash of swords, the cheers of the crowd, the weight of the armor on his shoulders. But there came a day when his sword grew heavy, not because of the battles fought, but because of the battles no longer to come. His armor, once shining with purpose, now felt like a cage. They called it retirement—that word which implies an end, a finish line. And so, like many knights before him, he hung up his sword, expecting to find peace. But peace did not come. What came instead was a haunting—a ghost that wandered the empty halls of his castle, a whisper of who he once was. He had retired from his role, but he had not retired from himself. There was no funeral for the warrior he used to be, no mourni...

The Last Note Of Every Song

We are always in a hurry, aren’t we? Rushing from task to task, from meeting to meeting, forever seeking the next accomplishment, the next checkmark on the list. The businessman, the go-getter, perpetually leaning forward, anxiously awaiting the last note of this symphony called life. But, of course, the last note is silence. The final rest is the end. Why are we in such a hurry to get there? Learning an instrument is a dance with time. It teaches us the art of lingering, of savoring the subtlety between each note. In the spaces between the sounds, in the quiet moments of anticipation, lies the music itself. Have you ever heard a great song played too quickly? The romance evaporates, the beauty collapses, and all that remains is a hurried mess—an anxious rush to the end. But music, like life, is not about the end. It is about the journey through each sound, each moment. Take the song Blackbird by The Beatles. Listen to its gentle melody, the way each note reaches out and touches the ne...

How To Find Your Heaven

Ah, yes, the allure of the altered state, the enchanting echo of ecstasy that seems just out of reach without the aid of a substance. You must understand, it is not wrong to crave this feeling. In fact, it is entirely human. You are drawn to it because it is a whisper of the divine, a glimpse of the infinite joy that resides within you. But, like the scent of a flower carried on the breeze, it is meant to guide you, not to be bottled and inhaled on demand. The experience that drugs provide is but a fleeting window into the boundless freedom that is your true nature. They crack the shell, let in a beam of light, and for a moment, you see beyond the illusion of separation. You feel whole, complete, united with all that is. But do not mistake the key for the treasure, nor the map for the territory. Psychedelics are signposts pointing toward the kingdom of heaven, but they are not the kingdom itself. Imagine a dog being given a scent, the fragrance of something deeply desired. The dog is s...

The Mid-life Starting Line

Life, you see, is much like a walk toward the sun. In the dawn of youth, the light is in front of you, a brilliant, enticing, a promise of warmth and wonder. You stride eagerly toward it, oblivious to the fact that behind you, stretching long and dark, lies your shadow. It is there, whether you choose to see it or not, quietly accompanying you. At this age, the shadow is merely a whisper, an echo of your being. You are too absorbed in chasing the light to notice the darkness that follows. You are busy constructing identities, conjuring futures, and building castles of ambition. The shadow is an idea you’ve heard of, perhaps glimpsed in others, but never acknowledged as your own. Then, inevitably, you reach midday, the symbolic age of 40 the so-called mid-life crisis, but truly, it is a mid-life realization. At noon, the sun is directly above, and there is nowhere for your shadow to hide. There it is, underneath you, intimately connected to your very being. In this moment, you confron...

Visualization is usually a TRAP

When one sets out to visualize their ideal future, it often begins with an enchanting tapestry woven from the threads of desire. We paint pictures in our minds of a sprawling estate, a successful business, a perfect relationship, or the accolades of admiration. These visions are enticing, like glittering baubles that lure our attention. Yet, in our fixation on these images, we often miss the essence of what visualization is truly about. It is not the image itself that holds the power—it is the feeling behind it. The Trap of Symbols Every vision we conjure is, in essence, a symbol. A house is not merely a house; it represents stability, accomplishment, or perhaps security. A luxury car is not about four wheels; it’s about freedom, speed, or recognition. The trouble is that these symbols can become rigid. By clinging to the picture, we confine the vast possibilities of the universe to a narrow corridor of what we think is best. Consider for a moment that your vision may not be the grande...

Chili

 There once was a man who loved his dog more deeply than words could express. She had been his angel, his companion, a source of endless joy and love. A symbol of unconditional love. But as she grew older, the burdens of her care began to weigh on him and his family. The dog, once a boundless source of happiness, now required constant attention. She pooped in the house frequently, leading to frustrations and arguments over who would clean up. Joyful family events were cut short, laughter replaced by logistical debates about her care. One night, in the freezing cold at 3 a.m., like every night, the dog needed to go out. The man, sleep-deprived stomped out into the darkness. Anger swirled within him—not just at the dog but at himself for feeling this way. What kind of man, he wondered, could grow to resent the being that had loved him unconditionally her entire life? The guilt gnawed at him, creating a self-propelling storm of negative thoughts that rippled into his family life, stra...