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Jeff Treves | Progressive hippie pfp
Jeff Treves | Progressive hippie
@jefftreves
Talking about our ideas in premature stages decreases their chance to turn into reality. I've learned this the hard way ngl
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Eric Platon pfp
Eric Platon
@ic
What is the context? Unable to say whether I agree or disagree! An idea always benefits from being exposed. It usually makes it better. Overly generic comment to contrast, as timing can be of the essence too.
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Trigs pfp
Trigs
@trigs
There's a phenomenon where simply talking about an idea releases the dopamine as if you'd accomplished the idea already. Forget the details, but Huberman was describing it in his dopamine series.
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Phil Hedayatnia pfp
Phil Hedayatnia
@philhedayatnia
Talking about problems > talking about ideas. So much to be gained by hearing from others about what they're working on and exchanging notes on the problem space you're in, so much momentum to be lost by getting shut down over a coffee or by the trolls on Hacker News.
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abranti pfp
abranti
@abranti
I heard huberman saying this. I have the complete opposite experience. I take my word very seriously. If I say I’ll do something publicly that puts a huge pressure on me to deliver.
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Bezo Li pfp
Bezo Li
@bezo68
I see your point, but in my experience, sharing ideas early often brings valuable feedback and collaboration, which can actually help turn them into reality more effectively.
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nat.eth pfp
nat.eth
@nat
True - all my best ideas have started with someone telling me it would never work.
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