1.
Dreams connect you…
For the first time, two people have successfully communicated in their dreams. Researchers at REMspace achieved this historic milestone. Two individuals successfully induced lucid dreams and exchanged a simple message with specially designed equipment.
A lucid dream is a phenomenon when a person knows he’s dreaming while still being in the dream state.
In a recent experiment on September 24, participants were sleeping at their homes when their brain waves and other polysomnographic data were tracked remotely by a specially developed apparatus. When the server detected that the first participant entered a lucid dream, it generated a random Remmyo word and sent it to him via earbuds. The participant repeated the word in his dream, with his response captured and stored on the server.
The next participant entered a lucid dream eight minutes later and received the stored message from the first participant. She confirmed it after awakening, marking the first-ever “chat” exchanged in dreams.
2.
Focus on the flow of action to understand markets better
Verbs, not nouns, hold the key to understanding the true nature of complex adaptive systems. In these systems, nothing is ever still. Life, like markets, is in constant motion, shaped not by isolated things but by the ongoing interactions between them. To focus on nouns is to miss the story entirely. A noun—a price, a stock, a company—on its own is lifeless, devoid of context or meaning. But when we shift our focus to verbs, we begin to see how one action leads to another, how relationships evolve, and how systems change over time.
In financial markets, it’s not the prices themselves that tell us what’s happening, but the actions behind them. Markets are made not of static data points, but of processes—of buying and selling, of capital moving in and out, of decisions made in response to shifting tides of sentiment. These actions send ripples through the market, creating feedback loops that amplify or dampen movements. It’s this flow of action, not the static objects within the system, that gives markets their dynamic nature.
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Thought of the Week
Bill Gates once had the radio removed from his car. When asked why, he said he didn't want any distractions from thinking about Microsoft. This level of single-minded focus is what builds empires.
Distractions are the assassins of great work. You don't need more time; you need more focus.
Time expands when we eliminate interruptions—our attention, not the clock, ultimately limits what we can achieve.
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