 So I want to talk about being a generalist. See, the old way of doing things was you follow a very straight path. And being a specialist is not bad. It's not good. But the advantage of a specialist is when everything is perfect, when there is no variability. This is the advantage of a specialist. But in reality, if you look at civilization, and if you look at migration, you look at history as a whole, specialists fail because they lack the ability to adapt. They lack the ability to be versatile. And due to this lack of variability and versatility, they can adapt to the times, they can adapt to the economy, they can adapt psychologically. And so where we are heading right now, we're heading into chaos. Trillions of dollars being printed into the economy. There's two economies, there's the stocks and the real economy. You have all these new rules being implemented, maybe Cold War with China through taxation, tariffs, etc. Supply chains being skewed around the world, eliminated, disrupted, localization being more focused as opposed to globalization. And so we have all these different elements happening at once. And people think right now is difficult. Just wait and see. But in times of chaos like this, and we can substitute the word chaos for the unknown, there's a lot of variables out there. Specialists suck. They do horrible jobs at this because there's no blueprint for them. They're like, oh my god, I don't know what's going on. I don't have the blueprint. I don't have the map. I don't have the legend. And we see it happening with every industry, with every niche. And we can't really blame the people on this. Like people have been scammed into college, university, right? Everybody is thinking, well, if I follow this path, my life will be easy for me. If I follow this other path, I can do this and that. Get the fuck out of here, man. Listen, the most important thing for you to survive anywhere in the world is this. Physicality is really important, but more or less is this, is the grit. And grit plus adaptability equals success, pretty much. And so we are heading into a massive disruptive period where there's many unknowns. Anybody who tells you they think they know what's going to happen is full of shit. They have no idea what they're talking about. They may have assumptions of what's going to happen. They may have theories of what's going to happen, but they don't know exactly what's going to happen. It's not a science. But what I do know is, do not rely on the old status quo for your success. I mean, if you think you're going to rely on college, university to succeed or your diploma to succeed or so called, I got a fucking certification, please hire me. I'm going to hear a little tiny violin for you. No one cares. People care about results. People care about how fast can you adapt and learn a new skill. I made a video about this meta learning. In fact, one of my predictions, and I said this a while ago, I thought LinkedIn was going to do this when they bought Linda. I really thought they didn't. I don't know what the fuck they're doing with linda.com. There's a big acquisition too is a billion dollar acquisition. I'm like, Oh, cool. They're fucking finally going to do it. I thought when LinkedIn bought Linda and merged it into LinkedIn learning, they're like, okay, but they're going to do meta learning, micro learning, because let's say if I give example, I want to hire somebody that does growth hacking, but just growth hacking for let's say, conversion rate optimization, I don't need them to know anything about else. And then I can go into LinkedIn learning, find conversion rate optimization, the latest course, I mean, as of yesterday, and get my new employee to learn that right away and implement it right away. Right. So it's like micro task learning. And you cross pollinate your skills this way, but they didn't do that. I don't know what the fuck they're doing anyways, but meta learning is the most important thing. I've always said it, the most successful people are generalists, but they have a very small specialty in one thing. We call them like T shaped people, right? And so they know, they like a polymath, right? They know a little bit about every single thing and they understand one thing very well. But the great thing about this is the generalization on top creates a polarization, right? You go from, I know a little bit about coding, to marketing, to sales, to HR, through human relationships, through scaling, through technology, et cetera. And these things cross pollinate together. And listen, man, I never went to high school. I did want high school. I got kicked out. I never went to college. I've been to many different industries. Hell, I might be going into the farming industry now. Like what the fuck do I know about farming? I learned the first principles, I find the best people in the industry, find the best investors. Luckily for me, I knew a bunch of farmers back in the day as well. And I put these things together. I met a learn as fucking fast as possible as I can. And most people have this paralysis by analysis, they get fearful, they're like, Oh, shit. Oh, shit. There's not a plan for me. There's unknowns out there. Motherfucker, what the fuck? We human beings have been going through unknowns our whole life, our whole life, like hunting and gathering. There's no known there. For the most part, you'll come back with no food. And so we've been pampered, babied helicopter to think their safety. It's a, it's an illusion. It's Maya. There's no safety. Right. Safety makes weakness. It's really true. Like if you believe that your life will be a okay, with no bumps or hurdles or challenges, you're delusional. And if you think going to college university is going to solve your problem, well, you're part of the sheeple, definitely part of the sheeple. And we see the whole system eroding underneath us right now, because there's no answer out there. The answer for you, my friend, anybody watching this is do you have what it takes right now to start anew? That's it. And this is why most people are fearful, right? Like, Oh, I'm going to start a new, be humble, man. Starting a new is fun. It's new challenge. Remember what I said before, fail, first attempt at learning the analogy, right? The first attempt at learning is like riding a new bike, or I always give the analogy to people like, imagine if you just try to ride a motorcycle by just reading manuals, get the fuck out of here, never going to, you're not going to learn. You got to get on the goddamn motorcycle, wobble around a little bit, and you're going to eventually fall down, get back up and you're good to go, right? You learn from your fucking mistakes. And this is where we're heading to the world is changing fast, extremely fast. Economies are shifting. Political entities are emerging, new and old. The old way of doing business, the old way of so-called being safe, where you're going to go to high school and college, university, you're going to get a little stupid fucking framed diploma, and you're going to get your guaranteed job of 70k a year in your fucking pension. Poof, forget about it. That's not going to happen. And you should be happy that's not going to happen. What the hell? What kind of living is that? Can you imagine like 30 years, the same office, and same people? Oh my God, maybe it's maybe I'm biased, but I'll fucking shoot myself in the head. But yeah, guys, like, listen, being a generalist is where it's at. Figure it out, man, like, don't be afraid, get into fucking ditches, start learning, start taking risk. And remember, the greatest freedom in life is realizing there's a lot of things that you can do and control. But as Draco Wilken states, you have to take extreme ownership and fucking just do the work. Peace out.