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Why Your Solo Hustle is a Trap (And What to Do Instead)

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Why Your Solo Hustle is a Trap (And What to Do Instead) https://www.spreaker.com/episode/the-currency-of-connection-stripping-away-the-hustle--70588381 We’ve all been sold a lie about what it takes to be successful, and honestly, it’s wearing us out. Every time we talk about Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics), the immediate reaction is to start talking about building businesses, investing more, and hustling harder. But what if the secret to our economic power isn’t about doing more ? What if the real barrier to our shared wealth is the heavy, exhausting, individualistic mindset we carry around every single day? We are drowning in the noise of consumerism, trying to out-buy and out-stunt each other, completely missing the actual definition of wealth. If you're tired of the solo grind, it’s time to rethink the whole game. Tune in to the latest episode to find out why your side hustle might be distracting you from real power. Call to Inaction: Proverb: "Do not carry the world on you...

I Learn by Doing: A Personal Meditation on the Batak Proverb

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I Learn by Doing: A Personal Meditation on the Batak Proverb "You learn how to cut down trees by cutting them down." — Batak (Batiki) Proverb That line hits different when you’ve lived it. I chose this proverb for Day 3 of Tribal Quotes because it calls out something deep that many of us are missing: the wisdom of experience. Too often, we get stuck in thought, tangled in theory, or lost in the illusion of needing to be fully ready before we act. But this proverb cuts straight through the noise. You want to learn how to cut down trees? Then cut them down. That’s it. No Flight School for Birds Flying is complicated. Aerodynamics, balance, wing structure—it’s not easy. But birds don’t have academies. They learn to fly by flying. We learn to walk by walking. We learn to talk by talking. And we learn to live by living. But somehow, we’ve been convinced that real learning happens only in classrooms, through lectures, in books. Don’t get me wrong—I value study. But too many of...

The Art of Doing Less: Mastery Through Subtraction

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The Art of Doing Less: Mastery Through Subtraction “The myth is… you gotta do more to be more. But what if that’s backward?” Out here in the hustle of modern life, we’ve been sold a story. That success, peace, and SelfMastery demand more systems, more strategies, more stacking of steps on top of already stressed lives. It’s a seductive myth. But it’s still a myth. Because real mastery—the kind that resonates deep, the kind that’s about being , not just doing —is often about less, not more. It’s time we talk about Subtractive SelfMastery . Cut to the Core We live in an age of overcomplication. Layers on layers. Routines for routines. Everyone out here trying to “optimize” while barely breathing. It’s like trying to clear your path by building around the boulders instead of moving them. Eventually, you’re not on a path—you’re in a maze of your own making. At Gye-Nyame Journey, we’re taking a different road. Mastery through subtraction means clearing what clutters, removing what no longer...

Walking the Barbell: Tradition on One Side, Revolution on the Other

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Walking the Barbell: Tradition on One Side, Revolution on the Other I’ve been re-listening to Antifragile by Nassim Taleb—and something caught my spirit this time around: the Barbell Strategy . Taleb breaks it down as a life design where you operate on two extremes . On one side, you’ve got extreme safety . On the other, calculated risk . And in between? Nothing. That middle space is where comfort hides and where fragility is born. This idea got me thinking deeply about how well it aligns with the life we’re building through Gye-Nyame Journey —and how it could shape a political campaign if I—or one of y’all—ever decided to run for office. The Safe Side: Cultural Roots, Community Wisdom Let’s start with the grounded side of the barbell —the side that holds our traditions, values, and cultural wisdom. This is where we store our principles: Umoja, Kujichagulia, Nia . It’s the bedrock. It’s not glamorous, but it’s what keeps us whole. This side includes our: Rites of passage Community cir...