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From YouTube: W8 Gravity WG: Deep intro question!
Description
Timecodes:
00:00 - What brought you here? And little background
42:11 - Use technology for good
49:40 - Gravity training
55:29 - POAPS
57:20 - Index
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A
I
would
like
to
start
with
today
is:
I
am
thinking
that
we
are
going
to
start
a
course
and
every
time
that
I
start
a
course
in
the
university
or
in
something
I
always
like
to
start
hearing
about
what
brought
the
people
to
this
course.
A
So
I
am
going
to
start
presenting
myself,
and
why
am
I
here
so
my
name
is
juan
carlos
bell.
I'm
from
colombia,
I'm
the
younger
brother
of
five
brothers
after
I
graduated
from
from
college,
I
started
studying
philosophy.
A
A
I
have
worked
in
two
universities.
In
my
life,
one
was
public
and
the
other
one
was
private
and
I
always
worked
like
in
the
administrative
side
of
planning
courses
and
like
planning
the
the
the
yes,
the
courses
of
the
faculties.
So
for
me,
it's
like
very
exciting
to
to
be
like
be
doing.
My
first
course
on
my
own
and
like
not
being
a
university
but
like
here
in
the
dec.
A
That,
for
me,
is
very
amazing,
and
I
I
feel
that
I
am
working
also
for
for
for
something
that
can
be
of
social
good,
and
that
also
motivates
me
a
lot.
So
I
am
really
happy
to
be
here,
and
I
think
that
all
the
turnouts
of
my
life
has
just
like
brought
me
to
these
calls
and
to
to
see
what
we
can
build
from
from
here,
and
I
will
pass
it
and
I
want
to
pass
it
to
jess.
B
Here,
wow,
okay,
well,
it
all
started.
I
grew
up
in
florida
and
I
have
a
journalism
background.
So
I've
done
a
lot
of
different
jobs
and
yeah
and
played
a
lot
of
different
character.
I
was
a
waitress
I
washed
dishes.
I
worked
as
a
teller
in
a
bank.
I
did
taught
at
kindergarten,
yoga,
teacher
and
marketing
for
a
software
company,
then
crypto
and
blockchain,
but
most
of
my
time
I
did
10
years
in
broadcast
news
in
the
us.
B
That
was
very
interesting.
I
also
have
like
you.
I
studied
political
science
as
well
as
my
journalism,
so
yeah
and
I
left
the
us
and
lived
abroad
for
the
last
10
years.
So
I
lived
in
germany,
japan,
thailand,
norway,
ecuador
and
just
have
been
very
nomadic,
and
I
joined
the
common
stack
last
year
because
I
felt
like
out
of
all
the
projects
I've
seen.
It
was
for
me
like
one
of
the
most
high
highest
level.
B
Things
that
we
could
be
doing
is
building
this
library
of
knowledge
and
sharing
all
these
resources
so
that
we
can
coordinate
better
and
build
economies
around
solving
its
biggest
challenges
and
from
what
I've
seen
a
lot
of
failings
is
the
lack
of
diversity
in
these
communities
and
the
lack
of
acknowledging
the
culture.
So
when
I
saw
that
livia
was
going
to
be
developing
this
tc,
she
and
griff
pulled
me
in
and
wanted
me
to
help
and
support
with
communications.
B
So
yeah,
I
guess
for
me,
I
didn't
really
realize
until
the
last
week
or
two
some
of
the
huge
value
you
know
that's
being
created
within
this
community
and
it's
being
reflected
in
many
ways
and
I'm
happy
one
to
see
you
like
coming
like
that.
This
is
emerging,
it's
all
very
emergent
and
it's
all
very
complimentary,
and
I
see
people
like
finding
their
niche
almost
and
for
me
this
suits
so
well
and
it
seems
you're.
You
know
the
perfect
person
to
carry
this
along
with
libby.
B
C
Wow
that
feels
like
such
a
hard
question
to
bring
to
describe
myself
and
what
I've
been
doing.
It's
really
interesting
actually
to
hear
I'm
curious
to
hear
from
all
of
you.
So
thanks
for
asking
that
so
yeah
I
am.
C
C
I
always
liked
a
lot
to
work
with
behavior,
to
like
kind
of
propose
things
and
see
what
would
be
people's
behaviors
and
to
understand
yeah
this
relationship
and
what
what
people's
reaction
would
change
into
my
intention
and
have
this
like
constant
feedback
loop
into
it,
and-
and
I
also
did
a
little
bit
of
fashion,
design
and
gastronomy.
C
And
I
don't
know
I
got
involved
into
many
like
wanting
to
express
myself
type
of
of
of
things
and
then
at
some
point.
I
had
a
cinema
project
that
we
lived
in
an
event
me
and
my
partner,
and
we
showed
independent
brazilian
movies
and
cities
that
didn't
have
movie
theaters,
and
we
did
that
for
a
while
and
then
and
then,
when
I
was
living
in
in
cairo.
C
Now
I
started
a
circle
for
authentic
communication
because
it's
not
so
easy,
especially
in
places
that
have
like
a
lot
of
topics
that
are
taboo
to
talk
about
them.
So
we
would
have
the
circles
and
and
talk
a
lot
about
a
lot
of
things,
and
we
used
a
lot
of
nonviolent
communication
and
some
facilitation
tools
to
guide
these
conversations.
That
was
very
interesting.
C
I
started
in
crypto,
maybe
like
four
years
ago
and
building
communities,
I
managed
like
eight
communities
and
then
I
moved
to
dao
stack
with
the
genesis,
dao
community
and
and
then
now,
I'm
with
commonstack
really
happy
about
that
and
with
the
tc
seeing
all
of
this
development,
and
it
is
like
very,
very
fulfilling
to
be
in
this
community
and
see
so
much
value
being
created
like
like
said
sorry,
if
I
was
too
long
and
I'll
pass,
two
zaptimus.
D
Thank
you,
libby
wow,
that's
really
tough
question.
I
I
think
I
started
the
life
like
following
like
my
parents
or
somehow,
like
I
grow
up
or
study.
I
study
business
management
like
even,
if
I
don't
enjoy
it
like
I
didn't
I
wanted
to
do.
D
I
don't
know
who's
in
english,
but
when
you
teach
kids
to
yeah
teaching
kids
like
to
grow
in
the
school
in
the
garden
but
yeah
I
did
business
management
and
and
yeah,
and
then
I
started
to
work.
I
was
working
on
a
bank,
but
then
I
I
decided
well,
that's
not
for
me.
After
two
years
I
was
like
okay,
that's
not
for
me,
and
I
was
I
was
involving
like
actually
into
the
crypto
space.
Even
if
I
was
not
in
there.
D
I
was
almost
since
the
beginning,
I'm
not
beginning
the
beginning,
but
here
in
my
village
sam
and
his
friends
were
building
and
they
were
working
on
a
project
called
their
wallet
and
yeah.
There
was
a
lot
of
people
in
here
and
I
I
remember
one
guy
who
was
telling
me
about
like
the
the
the
stuff
that
people
in
the
bank
is
doing
like.
For
example,
you
don't
have
money
to
pay
your
house,
then
you
get
kick
and
stuff
like
that.
D
That
I
was
like
that's
bad
and
yeah
I
mean
I
was
keep
working,
but
at
that
moment
but
yeah
then
I
I
really
changed
and
I
don't
know,
and
then
I
started
to
work
as
a
account
management
account
manager
for
a
small
company
in
iwata
yeah.
I
was
I
was
doing
something,
but
I
also
did
a
lot
of
gaming
competitive.
I
also
reached
like
I
was
captain
of
spain
heroes
of
the
store
team
that
was
really
fun
and
what
I
really
liked
about
games.
D
E
I
kind
of
wonder
like
like
I
should
probably
have
a
disclaimer
wow.
I
grew
up
on
a
cattle
ranch
in
southwest
montana.
It
was
actually
one
of
the
largest
ranches
in
all
of
montana.
In
fact,
the
black
angus
beef
that
charlie
yonkin
raised
actually
was
the
best
in
the
country.
People
would
come
from
all
over.
I
mean
western
canada
to
texas
to
try
and
buy
bolts.
It
was
quite
an
experience
because
the
place
was
just
gorgeous
there
in
southwest
montana.
E
Nestled
in
the
county
was
only
about
an
hour
north
east
of
west
yellowstone,
and
it
was
pretty
epic.
It
was
a
you
know.
It
really
was
an
incredible
place
to
be
a
kid:
hey,
zayden,
hey,
be
nice
to
darth
vader,
okay,
yeah
anyways.
E
I've
been
working
since
I
was
probably
four
years
old,
because
I
that's
the
just
the
way
it
was.
You
know
when
you're
a
little
kid
out
there,
you're
you're
gonna
go
to
work.
I
was,
I
was
five
out
in
a
field
with
my
sister
up
to
our
chest
and
wet
grass
in
early
spring
moving
irrigation
line
and
conflict
management.
People
have
been
yelling
at
me,
since
I
was
a
little
kid
because
it's
kind
of
funny
you
know
because
in
school
I
didn't
like
school.
E
I
did
well
in
it,
but
I
didn't
like
it.
I
didn't
go
a
lot
I
got
kicked
out.
I
didn't
finish
high
school.
They
gave
me
the
boot
my
senior
year.
It
was
a
bit
of
a
problem.
E
I
did
a
lot
of
bad
things
like
when
you're
young
and
you
don't
have
the
best
family.
You
know
kind
of
normal
stuff.
I
kind
of
got
involved
in
things
you
might
call
illegal,
and
that
was
an
interesting
road.
I've
been
to
jail
once
or
twice.
Okay,
though
I'm
like
I'm
all
right
what
else
happened
and
then
I
ended
up
eventually.
After
all
of
that
died
down.
Unfortunately,
I
didn't
end
up
dead
or
in
prison.
E
I
ended
up
in
the
oil
industry,
which
was
another
great
place
for
a
guy
to
be
and
more
people
just
yelled
at
you
conflict
resolution.
Oh
they
are
our
idea.
Conflict
resolution
was
yelling
louder.
E
Oh
man,
I
did
that
which
was
crazy,
because
once
I
started
down
that
road,
I
never
thought
I'd.
Do
it
as
long
as
I
did
in
15
years
and
it
I
still
sit
here,
shocked
now
that
I'm
in
costa
rica,
talking
to
people
on
my
computer,
like
that,
it
even
happened
like
it's
crazy
and
that's
an
entire
life
of
its
own,
like
that's
kind
of
where
I'm
at
I've,
had
three
lives
so
far
from
the
ranch
and
drugs
and
guns
to
the
oil
field.
E
And
now
I'm
doing
this
in
costa
rica
and
it's
just
mind-blowing
yeah,
I
don't.
I
don't,
have
university
skills.
I
will
say,
though
I
had
an
interesting
life,
because
my
dad
was
a
he
had
a
master's
degree
in
philosophy.
He
wanted
a
phd,
but
at
the
time
berkeley
didn't
give
them.
He
was
a
part
of
the
civil
rights
movement
he
used
to
give
speeches.
He
was
at
berkeley
with
jane
fonda.
E
He
remembers
when
nixon
gave
the
order
as
the
governor
of
california
to
storm
the
university
and
let
out
the
dogs
and
everything
he
he
had
quite
a
life,
and
then
he
ended
up
in
eugene
oregon.
As
a
duck-
and
he
got
a
degree
in
ecology
and
he
spent
30
years
with
the
forest
service
in
montana,
I
mean
he
did
what
he
wanted
to
do.
He
loved
trees,
but
he
was.
That
was
a
weird
dad
because
we
didn't
play
baseball
or
football.
E
He
liked
to
listen
to
miles
davis
and
reed
wickenstein,
and
he
had
really
strange
conversations
with
like
you
know,
I
was
young
learning
about
odd
things,
so
that's
actually
a
good
precursor
to
other
stuff.
What
else
to
say?
I
don't
know,
I
guess
I
could
probably.
I
should
probably
write
a
book
someday
honestly,
but
that's
about
that.
I
could
I'm
not
gonna
talk
too
many
more
stories
there.
They
you
they
involve
whiskey
and
women,
so
I'm
gonna
just
pass
it
off
to
yeah
who
hasn't
when
durga
knox
hasn't,
went.
F
Hi
there
so
wow,
it's
just
turning
into
an
autobiographical
channel.
That's
quite
interesting!
I
didn't
expect
that,
but
yeah,
I
guess
I'm
I'm
in
along
with
people
in
an
autistic
family.
My
family
is
a
group
of
kind
of
really
wealthy
successful
super
people
who
have
a
lot
of
different
talents
and
are
really
good
at
different
things.
My
aunt's
one
of
the
greatest
new
paper
designers
just
ever
lived
and
yeah.
F
My
wife's
got
medals
in
the
olympics
in
the
pan
am
games
and
the
commonwealth
games,
and
so
I'm
really
just
a
a
geek
who's
been
in
technology.
Since
I
was
in
eighth
grade
and
at
a
certain
point,
I
developed
a
passion
for
bicycle
riding
and
I
used
to
ride
25
to
40
hours
a
week.
G
F
Almost
a
professional
cyclist
at
one
time
and
I
started
having
spiritual
experiences
on
my
long
eight
to
twelve
hour
bike
rides
and
didn't
know
what
that
was
about.
So
I
eventually
found
myself
in
silicon
valley.
F
Looking
for
the
brass
ring
during
the
crash
of
93
for
silicon
valley,
I
had
an
existential
crisis
and,
over
a
long
stretch
of
time,
figured
out
that
I
needed
to
get
it
or
sorry.
The
I
went
to
europe
to
try
to
become
a
pro
bike
racer
in
1983
in
2005.
F
I,
the
silicon
valley
crash
sort
of
put
me
out
of
work
at
a
startup,
and
I
in
silicon
valley
and
I
went
to
and
lived
in
hindu
monastery
for
two
different
ones
for
about
a
period
of
five
years,
and
this
is
in
the
in
the
terms
of
the
spiral
dynamic
side
of
the
thing
I
was
going
through
this
sort
of
green
period.
F
My
orange
period
was
my
silicon
valley
period
and
then
once
I
left
the
ashram
and
I
built
this
mud
clay,
straw,
cobb
yoga
center
was
kind
of
my
yellow
period
and
now
I'm
kind
of
moving
into
this
turquoise
period.
F
Here,
where
I'm
trying
to
get
everything
to
connect,
I
uploaded
a
caller
explanation
for
the
different
spiral
dynamics
stuff
and
I
was
I've-
been
involved
in
crypto
for
an
entire
three
months,
maybe
so
mostly
motivated
by
talking
to
sean
about
his
company
and
and
so
when
I
came
to
the
tech
community.
Seb
nem
was
nice
enough
to
make
me
feel
at
home
and,
like
I'd
had
something
that
I
could
contribute
and
lo
and
behold
I
actually
do
have
something
I
can
contribute.
F
So
that's
that's
really
nice
for
me.
So
the
gravity
group
is
kind
of
I've
founded
a
couple
of
different
nonviolent
communication
groups
and
we
have
a
spiral
dynamics
group
on
wednesdays,
at
5
pm
pst,
which
I've
been
attending
for
the
last
little
while
and
yeah.
So
I'm
just
trying
to
you
know
contribute
where
I
can.
I
don't
know
who
hasn't
gone
yet
to
metaverti,
I
think
maybe
hasn't
gone
yet.
H
Hey
so
this
is
like
recap:
I've
had
many
lives
too,
I'm
two
classes
away
from
a
degree
in
art
history.
My
emphasis
was
bronze
age
and
archaic
greek,
which
really
surprised
me,
because
I
thought
I'd
be
into
classical
greek
and
it
turned
out
that
I
wasn't
at
all.
Well,
I'm
you
know
all
art,
but
whatever
I
once
owned
a
granddaughter
of
seattle,
slew
not
as
a
racehorse,
but
after
she
was
a
racehorse
and
I
homeschooled
in
alaska
and
raised
goats
and
farmed
there.
H
So
I
went
over
a
decade
growing
all
my
own
meat,
so
I'm
like
pretty
close
to
like
production
ends
of
feeding
myself.
You
know
so
like
all
of
this,
like
international
turmoil,
doesn't
particularly
bother
me.
I
could
walk
around
the
block
and
feed
myself,
so
I'm
not
worried
about
any
of
that,
and
I
got
I
got
into
crips
this.
This
used
to
be
actually
on
all
my
social
media.
H
I
started
buying
bitcoin
with
my
wine
money
and
now
here
I
am
somebody
my
son
had
talked
to
me
about
bitcoin
when
he
was
like
12
back
when
it
was
being
verified
on
paper,
but
in
2017.
One
of
my
internet
friends
that
I'd
based
on
david
wandras,
who
I
was
the
first
person
married
on
the
bitcoin
blockchain
that
was
pretty
cool,
had
started
a
project.
He
said
he
was
starting
a
project.
This
was
just
like
on
facebook.
You
know
people
say
social
media
is
a
waste
of
time.
That's
how
we
got
here.
H
Right
started
a
project.
He
said
he
was
starting
a
project
and
I
was
like
I'd
been
doing.
Magic
and
I'd
been
doing
magic
for
getting
money,
and
I
knew
I
needed
to
work
remotely
because
I
had
kids
and
I
knew
that
you
know
it
needed
to
be
online
because
I
was
in
alaska
and
I
put
out
for
200
000.
H
and
I
didn't
have
any
idea
what
I
was
going
to
do
and
I
ended
up
in
tribe.news,
which
was
an
ico
that
was
developing
an
app
to
crowd,
swarm
news
verification
and
it
was
actually
a
brilliant
idea.
It
was
just
the
baseline
of
people
needed
to
make
it.
Work
was
literally
going
to
be
thousands
of
people,
and
it
was
like
way
too
big
in
compass
and,
like
so
many
ico
ceos,
he
just
went
stark
raving
manic
right
ended
up
getting
fired
because
he
thought
he
was
friends
with
roger
bear
and
I
wouldn't
stop.
H
Hashtagging
be
cash
which
drove
there
straight
up
a
wall,
but
he
was
bear
was
so
rude
to
people
anyway
see.
This
is
why
I
need
non-violent
communication.
This
is
exactly
the
perfect
thing
for
me,
so
I
ended
up
getting
divorced
at
the
end
of
2017
after
being
married
for
well
with
the
guy
for
21
years
and
moved
to
seattle
from
alaska
and
seattle
was,
interestingly,
very
anti-crypto,
which
you
know,
microsoft,
google,
blah
blah
blah,
and
I
had
to
spend
like
the
last
of
my
bitcoin
to
pay
bills
right
before
it
crashed.
H
So
that
was
really
cool,
and
I
worked
really
hard
trying
to
keep
my
head
above.
Water
too
did
a
lot
of
like
big
tech
catering
trying
to
keep
my
head
of
water
and
trying
to
pay
off
the
marital
debt,
but
that
ship
eventually
sailed.
H
You
just
can't
do
that
catering
in
seattle,
and
I
got
stuck
with
all
of
it,
because
I
was
the
one
with
the
credit
right
and
not
community
property
and
over
the
summer,
just
because
there
was
nothing
else
happening
and
we
were
getting
that
jacked
unemployment
getting
that
employment
plus
up.
H
I
started
looking
you
know,
like
I'd,
been
intermittent
like
I
went
to
truffle
con
in
2019
and
met
some
people
there
and
I've
been
trying
to
learn,
crypto
or
not
learn
to
learn
solidity,
and
it
had
been
in
like
ivan
on
tax
academy
and
it
like
done
some
ethereum
classes
and
stuff,
and
I've
even
got
a
game
fat
ass
pony.
H
So
it's
like,
I
haven't,
been
able
to
look
at
for
months
and
they
actually
got
on
to
got
over
to
one
hive
through
honey,
swap
after
getting
the
unit
swap
airdrop
and
I
like
to
say,
come
for
the
honey
stay
for
the
bees,
and
it
was
just
so
amazing
that
people
were
finally
using
dows
to
like
build
community
instead
of
make
money
and
the
whole
like
the
whole
premise
of
of
like
running
the
governance,
experiments
and
the
economics,
experiments
and
all
of
that
and
like
I
spent
the
summer
getting
kind
of
radicalized
in
seattle.
H
So
the
idea
of
dual
power
structures,
which
is
what
what
we're
doing
with
our
network
of
dows,
really
really
appealed
to
me
and
I
ended
up
just
because
I'm
so
active
on
social
media.
I
ended
up
seo
for
tribe
so
because
I
was
so
active
in
social
media.
I
got
kind
of
conscripted
into
into
buzz
on
one
hive
and
now
we're
now
buzz
as
a
dao
and
they've
been
really
really
trying
to
like
reach
out
and
find
other
groups
to
get
into.
H
H
I
got
into
one
hype
at
the
end
of
october
and
just
after
like
being
sidetracked
with
that
and
then
getting
back
to
to
like
looking
at
the
different
dowels
and
then
being
sidetracked
with
that
and
getting
back
to
looking
at
the
different
dowels,
I
think
I'm
getting
a
better
handle
on
it
and
it's
really
interesting
because
I've
been
oh,
I
was
in
a
project
open
source
ecology
in
between
which
is
a
software
for
hardware
project
by
marcin
jakubowski
who,
like
they've,
got
ted
talks,
and
it's
actually
like
really
really
taking
off
and
they've
got
a
lot
of
good
stuff
going
on
too
long
to
talk
about
here,
but
they
have
ted
talks.
H
So
I
wasn't
like
I
was
completely
out
of
the
tech
space,
but
they
they
don't
do
any
blockchain
stuff.
It's
hardware
and
hardware
is
great:
it's
just
not
my
thing.
So
I've
been
work.
I've
been
working
on
trying
to
learn
non-violent
communication
and
it's
like
I
finally
was
able
to
because
of
the
wonderful
health
care
here
able
to
get
counseling,
and
so
like
that's
one
of
that's
like
one
of
the
things
I've
talked
to
my
counselor
about.
I
really
need
nonviolent
communication
because
I
go
off
on
the
people.
G
H
Like
or
like
I'll,
let's
just
like
explode
about
something
and
I'm
like
you
know,
like
the
whole
time,
I'm
doing
it,
I'm
like
stop
stop
and
my
little
fingers
are
going
on
the
keyboard
and
like
stop,
stop
stop
typing
now,
but
you
know
so
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
this.
I'm
very
very
excited.
It's
exactly
what
I
need,
and
I
love
that
as
token
engineering
comments,
because
this
is
where
I'm
trying
to
get
in
and
so
it's
wonderful.
A
Yes,
I
just
want
to
know
what
is
your
name.
A
The
question
is
what
has
brought
you
here,
what
has
been
your
life
experiences
that
thing
that
has
brought
you
to
this.
G
I
It
was,
it
was
to
shove
them,
but
I
I
think
you
can
take
it
daddy.
G
I
leave
a
lot
of
guessing
and
kind
of
left
home
when
I
was
14
kind
of
walking
the
streets
walking
streets,
walking
streets
until
I
was
in
crisis
last
year,
so
gone
from
everywhere
from
shanty
towns
in
north
africa
to
super
rich
to
middle
class,
to
every
spectrum
of
humanity
traveled
for
24
years,
without
living
in
the
house
for
more
than
a
year
from
the
age
of
14
upwards
to
very
recently,
so
you
can
imagine
that
experience
in
life
would
be
very
anti-establishment,
very
anti-hegemony,
and
that's
basically
what's
brought
me
here
to
me.
G
It's
it's
an
industrial
revolution
which
is
a
lot
more
pragmatically
sensible
than
a
lot
of
the
other
actions.
I've
done
in
my
life,
which
many
have
had
good
outcomes
and
stuff,
but
don't
need
to
be
kind
of
repeated.
That's
basically
it
yeah
yeah
yeah
the
thing
about
this
industry
revolution
is
you
get
to
break
it
fixed
and
then
you
know
like
there
is
a
little
rich
person
and
we
make
money
in
the
same
time,
but
mainly
mainly
that
and
the
devil
and
the
devil.
G
When
I
got
my
first
tweets
the
I
found
the
ethereum
yellow
paper
and
yeah
in
the
door
printed
out,
so
whenever
that
came
out
was
2015,
I
think
that's
when
the
smart
contracts
tweaked
then
dropped
to
me-
and
I
thought
this
is
very
very
important,
but
I
haven't
really
had
a
chance
with
kids
and
stuff
to
go
into
it
so
mainly
doing
them
a
full
stack
web
development
and
digital
nomad
type
of
freelancing,
online
and
in-house
for
the
past
six
years.
G
Kind
of
I
am
which
has
kept
me
away
so
a
few
months
ago
I
decided
one
of
my
kids
is
17,
so
he's
close
enough
to
being
okay.
So
I've
only
got
one
to
look
after
now,
I
sort
of
decided
screw
making
them
for
the
people
richer
and
I'm
just
going
to
try
and
go
into
this
full
time.
G
I
am
getting
more
and
more
time
as
the
weeks
go
by
to
put
into
it,
which
is
good,
which
is
good,
but
definitely
that
though
they
see
that
the
2016
hack
it
did
broke
breaking
her
and
because
I
knew
nobody's
going
to
go
near
the
idea
again
and
then,
when
defy
came
out
at
the
start
of
the
year,
I
completely
missed
the
ball.
I
am
because
I
just
presumed
it
was
some.
G
I
don't
the
wall
street
package,
you
know
it
didn't
didn't
tweak
with
me
exactly
what
comp
we're
doing.
I
am
make
her
doubt
I've
heard
of
before
that.
For
them
I
thought
it
would
take
a
while
and
yeah
so
like
somebody
else
said
there
earlier,
it's
absolutely
amazing
to
see
that
and
that
it's
been
taken
seriously
for
things
outside
of
just
them
profiteering,
etc.
G
You
know
the
idea
is
so
my
next
spouse
kind
of
action
I
was
thinking
of
doing-
is
very
related
to
this.
I've
been
planning
in
my
head
and
telling
people
I'm
going
to
be
doing
it
for
about
a
month.
Now
I
am
to
deploy
it
out
on
the
zoom
chat.
I
am
with
the
innovation
centers
here
in
galway
and
go
down
one
two,
one
of
them
advertise
it
and
deploy
the
dow.
I
am
stick
a
bonding
curve
on
it.
G
You
know
galloway
talking
or
something
call
them
vouchers
or
legality,
etcetera
and
then
stick
200
quid
quit
in
a
vote
on
myself,
because
it
would
be
the
only
person
in
the
demo
and
then
the
two
they'll
vote
in
for
it
to
go
to
the
local
I'll
pick
a
charity.
Something
to
do
with
coronavirus
would
work
perfectly
you
know
and
then
the
phones
will
go
and
get
released
on
the
child.
People
and
then
say
you
know
any
questions.
G
So
I'm
looking
forward
to
doing
that,
like
I
said,
planning
a
few
weeks
and
still
still
getting
it.
I
am
at
the
moment
there's
mostly
on
the
proposal
for
smart
cities
contact.
I
hope
it
looks
like
looks
like
that.
Client
is
on
board
with
me
100,
and
so
I
know
he
is.
I
just
have
to
see.
There's
a
mistake
always
so
how
I'm
really
hoping
to
bring
that
to
the
table,
but
even
if
he's
not
I've
been
planning
in
my
head.
G
G
In
recent
years
things
have
gone
different
with
the
polarization
coming
through
youtube.
Yeah.
That's
definitely-
and
you
know
my
own
sort
of
building
up
stress
over
40
years
of
life
and
that
so
yeah
I
felt
okay,
but
had
a
repeated
opinion.
You
know
I
yeah,
I
didn't
really
kill
him.
He
physically
removed
him
from
the
house
when
it
was
just
out
of
ignorance
that
he'd
done
it.
G
J
Okay,
so
cool,
yes,
conflict,
resolution
or
gravity,
I
mean
why
I'm
in
token
engineering
or
how
I
came
here
is
like
you
know,
anyone
else's
rabbit
hole
journey
and
I
think
that's
something
we
need
to
figure
out,
but
one
aspect
that
came
out
over
and
over
again
is
you
know
we
we,
we
think
we're
moving
into
the
right
same
direction.
J
We
think
we
see
the
same
things
but
at
the
same
time
we
use
different
or
we
see
different
things
without
knowing,
and
I
had
a
hard
time
to
understand
that
and
my
normal
reaction
in
that
those
situations
are
actually
you
know
either
scream
really
loudly
at
those
people
so
that
they
understand
me
out
of
frustration
and
what
have
you
or
just
you
know,
turn
around
and
go
so
and
actually,
when
we
started
talking
engineering
comments
again,
it
was
all
of
us.
You
know
super
motivated
all
of
us
in
this
for
longer.
J
You
know
and
then
finally
we're
starting
off
and
we
have
defined
our
values
and
everything.
And
then
the
next
thing
is
like
deciding
on
how
to
move
right,
how
to
go
to
common
action
and
all
of
a
sudden
we're
like
okay,
but
I
don't
think
that's
what
commons
is
and
we
have
this.
J
We
have
these
fundamental
discussions,
which
are,
of
course
super
super
frustrating
and
then
again
it
was
not
the
first
time
so
I
I
knew
it
has
also
something
to
do
with
me
and
not
just
with
this
project
and
so
on
and
so
forth,
and
it
turned
out
that
everybody's
you
know
it
has
got
to
do
with
world
views
and
what
have
you?
The
fun
thing
is
out
of
nowhere.
J
Fabian
came
into
this
group
thanks
to
jess
and
jeff,
and
and
so
on,
and
basically
first
thing
he
shared
as
an
intro
hi.
I
should
say
hi
here
was
about
this.
You
know
world
views
and
then
different
paradigms
and
fundamental
assumptions
and
how
people,
if
they
are
talking
if
they
are
on
different
world
views,
if
they
have
different
perspectives,
often
time
they
don't
even,
are
able
to
have
a
conflict
because
they're
not
communicating.
J
So
that
was
the
first
time
I
said:
oh
okay,
so
there
is
a
theory
behind
that
so
and
and
couple
of
weeks
later
going
down
into
this
and
then
really
learning
a
lot
from
myself
as
well.
Durgadas
jumped
in
right
and
juan
was
building
this
group
anyways
and
I
wasn't
really
participating
but
definitely
knew
the
right
people
doing
the
right
things,
and
so
I
look
forward
very
much
to
this
evening.
J
Sorry
that
I
came
late,
but
definitely
this
is
something
that
one
needs
sorting,
because
even
if
you're
by
yourself
making
decisions,
you
are
going
to
get
into
paradoxes
and
conflict,
and
you
need
that,
as
you
know,
number
one.
If
you
just
have
one
person,
you
need
something
like
this
like
a
compass
that
helps.
J
You
resolve
your
paradoxes,
especially
if
you're
out
there
getting
more
and
more
into
this
complex
connected
world,
and
you
definitely
need
it
if
you
are
pulling
something
off
like
this
token
engineering
commons,
which,
where
we
really
know
from
the
start,
this
doesn't
even
have
one
funding
team
that
is
going
to.
You
know
embed
some
stories
and
then
founding
metaphors
into
it.
So
people
can
live
by
our
or
what
what
you
could
have
earlier,
but
we
are
really
doing
this
for
real
now.
J
We
really
need
these
tools
and
methods,
and
we
need
to
understand
them.
We
need
to
adapt
them,
certainly
that
it
fits
this
diverse
group,
so
look
forward
to
to
see
where
we're
at
and
and
also
how
we
can
makes
more.
You
know,
maybe
more
functional,
more
more
easier
to
onboard
and
so
on
and
so
forth,
but
certainly
the
training
is
the
step
the
right
way
to
go
so
super
psyched
for
what
is
coming.
I
I
was
kind
of
hoping
it
skipped
me,
but
fine
I'll
do
the
do
the
round
up
and
I'll
do
it
as
quickly
as
possible
group
and
go
into
high
school
blah
blah
blah
got
a
chemical
engineering
degree
and
started
working
for
amgen
and
biopharmaceutical
doing
crazy
stuff
like
genetically
engineered
chinese
hamster
ovary
cells
that
produce
human
proteins
like
wild
things.
I
didn't
like
that.
I
So
I
went
to
I
wanted
to
get
into
renewable
energy
and
was
designing
power
plants
and
they
also
looking
at
concentrated
solar
and
these
other
things
for
this
canadian
corporation
and
then
I
realized,
just
like
corporate
life
is
not
for
me.
Layoffs
came
in
2008.
I
asked
I
was
like
please
pick
me.
I
don't
have
any
kids
let
these
other
people
stay.
You
know,
and
after
that
I
did
all
sorts
of
random
stuff.
I
Mostly
I
I
pretty
much
had
become
an
anarchist
at
that
point,
and
so
I
did
lots
of
random
things
and
eventually
it
was
just
like
you
know
what
I
can't
even
stand.
The
states
anymore
and
I
just
wanted
to
travel
so
I
bought
I
started
well.
First,
I
did
some
road
tripping
in
the
states
and
then
I
figured
that
wasn't
good
enough.
I
went
to
burning
man
the
first
time
and
then
kind
of
went
to
south
america,
where
I
am
now
actually
in
vilcabamba
ecuador.
I
I
By
far
like
in
the
last
eight
years
and
yeah,
I
got
into
crypto,
I
actually
heard
of
crypto
when
it
was
or
bitcoin
when
it
was
five
dollars
through
like
a
trace
mayor
video,
but
I
couldn't
figure
out
how
to
buy
it
without
wiring
money
to
japan
and
the
whole
point
was
to
avoid
banks,
so
I
didn't
end
up
buying
any
until
it
was
like
somewhere
around
70
dollars
after
in
2013,
and
I
actually
traded
gold
and
silver
for
bitcoin,
which
is
kind
of
cool,
because
I
I
really
I
did
not
have
a
bank
account
at
the
time
and
and
then
later
that
year,
I
kind
of
while
I
was
traveling,
I
kind
of
ran
out
of
money.
I
I
was
living
off
savings
for
a
little
bit
and
I
went
to
australia
and
then
was
like
well.
You
know
what
this
isn't
going
to
work
out.
I'm
going
to
have
to
go,
sell
out
again
to
be
a
chemical
engineer,
but
not
in
the
states
I'll
do
it
in
australia,
doing
algae
farms
or
something,
and
then
bitcoin
went
to
the
moon
in
in
to
in
late
2013
and
was
like
what
is
this
stuff
and
I
never
stopped.
I
just
can't
like
get
enough
of
it
as
the
rabbit
hole
goes
deeper
and
deeper.
I
I
So-
and
I
have
a
great
picture
of
me
with
like
a
cap
and
the
gown
and
bitcoin
underneath
that's
really
fun
graduating
and
then
the
week
before
I
graduated
the
dow
got
hacked
actually.
So
I
was
working
on
socket
with
the
dao
and
built
the
dao
with
like
four
other
people,
so
it's
kind
of
like
my
claim
to
fame
it's
like
the
biggest
failure
in
ethereum
history,
but
that's
okay.
I
I
went
on
to
do
lots
of
other
good
work
since
then,
with
the
white
hat
group,
saving
some
other
major
hacks
and
doing
a
lot
of
ethereum
security
stuff
in
the
back
end.
In
the
background
that
a
lot
of
people
don't
get
to
see
so
it's
kind
of
fun
to
feel
like
a
protector
of
ethereum.
You
know
and
then
yeah
and
came
to
the
common
stack
through
some
work.
That
jeff
did.
I
I
I
started
giveth
after
the
dow
hack
and
I
really
really
wanted
something
like
this
like
I
couldn't.
I
I
couldn't
figure
out
how
to
build
economies
around
nonprofits.
I
didn't
have
the
words,
but
I
knew
the
value
was
there
and
I
knew
the
coordination
needed
to
happen.
So
we
needed
an
economy,
but
I
didn't
know
how
to
do
it
and
then
token
engineering
eventually
arose
and-
and
these
ideas
started
to
come
and
eventually
I
saw
a
blog.
I
learned
about
bonding
curves
and
I
saw
a
blog
post
that
jeff
wrote
and
was
like
jeff.
Let's
do
this,
let's,
let's
just
do
it.
What
do
you
say
he's
like
yeah?
I
So
then
we
we
started
the
aragon
dac
at
first
and
then
that
was
the
first
flock
team
that
aragon
started
to
fund
besides
aragon,
one
and
then
that
transition
to
the
com
stack
and
then
common
stack
is,
is
supporting
the
creation
of
the
tec.
So
that's
how
we're
here,
sorry
that
was
longer
than
I
wanted
next
one.
E
Hey
hey,
I
just
want
to
say
one
real,
quick
thing.
This
is
really
insane
because,
like
totally
the
universe,
I
was
one
of
those
people.
I
was
bought,
aetherium
and
then
like.
I
will
open
it
hold
on.
Oh
my
god,
there
you
go
and
I
was
like.
I
was
one
of
those
people
that
didn't
really
know
what
I
bought
like
I
kind
of
was
like
well,
this
seems
cool
like
decentralized.
What
is
this
right
and
then,
like?
E
Oh,
the
dow,
and
it
was
like
well
we're
like
this-
is
a
government
thing
we're
in
government
now
look
what
we're
doing
this.
I
did
this.
I
bought
this
thing
and
then
they
got
hacked,
and
I
didn't
understand
that,
and
I
would
like
yell
at
my
computer
and
throw
stuff
at
the
screen
and
yelling
at
poloniex
and
the
troll
box
and
then
on
reddit.
These
guys
are
idiots.
K
A
Yeah
that
was
a
little
bit
the
the
purpose
of
the
exercise,
because
sometimes
we
talk
so
much
in
the
week
about
work,
and
sometimes
we
forget
that
the
people
behind
the
screen
has
a
a
life
with
a
lot
of
experiences
that
are
different
but
are
equally
worth
from
each
another.
One
and
all
of
us
are
equally
worth,
and
I
think
this
is
a
good
starting
point
for
for
the
training,
because
when
you
talk
to
someone
you
talk
to
all
of
his
and
her
history
at
the
same
time.
A
So
it
is
very
important
to
know
who
you
are
talking
to
when
you
talk
to
someone
in
order
to
to
be
able
to
fully
understand
that
the
other
person
to
fully
also
understand
where
his
thoughts
can
come
from
and
how
do
they
manage
their
feelings.
A
So
I
think
it's
it's
a
really
good
starting
point,
for
this
gravity
work
to
be
able
to
to
to
understand
each
other
as
equals
and
to
humbly
like
say
that
we
all
have
had
like
mistakes
and
good
things
and
that
yeah
it
doesn't
matter
if,
if
you
bought
bitcoin
in
2013
or
if
you
just
started
in
crypto
three
months
ago,
you
are
like
a
person
with
feelings
and
a
person
with
with
different
ideas
and
a
person
who
has
a
lot
to
offer
in
in
communities.
A
Because
one
thing
that
I
like
about
this
community
is
is
that
we
recognize
that
if,
if
we
do
the
things
that,
like
one
of
us,
think,
then
we
are
going
to
have
a
bias,
and
that
is
why
it's
so
important
to
have
like
multiple
points
of
view
and
to
realize
that
that
reality
is,
is
not
like
an
objective
thing
that
we
all
see
the
same.
A
But
it's
like
and
an
independent,
interdependent
interpretation
that
we
all
make
of
every
moment
and
the
the
present
moment
that
the
moment
we
are
right
now
summarizes
our
whole
life.
So
it's
not
a
coincidence
that
we
are
all
gathered
here
and
that
we
all
feel
that
there
are
a
lot
of
things
we
can
work
on
and
and
also
that
it
is
important
to
to
understand
the
relationships
and
to
understand
humans
and
to
value
human
dignity.
A
By
using
technology,
because
technology
itself
is
not
good
or
bad,
what
gives
the
value
or
to
technology
is
the
use
that
we
make.
I
always
like
to
like
use
this
example,
and
it's
like.
If
you
have
a
screwdriver,
you
can
like
fix
a
chair
or
you
can
stab
someone.
A
That
is
like
the
first
thing
that
that
normally
people
see
when
when
something
is
new
like
how
can
I
profit
from
it,
but
what
we
are
trying
to
see
here
is:
how
can
we,
how
can
we
make
the
humanity
profit
from
it,
and
and
and
yes
like
you
using
technology
for
for
for
humanity?
A
I
think
that's
like
the
the
topic
where
I
wanted
to
to
arrive
after
this
question
and
I
loved
everyone's
answers,
and
I
now
feel
that
I
know
each
one
of
you
better
and
that
now,
when
you
talk,
I
can
understand
you
better
and
also
that
I
can
comprehend
some
of
the
feelings
that
you
may
feel
and
and
some
of
the
things
that
that
you
might
think.
Because
of
your
background.
A
So
we
are
just
with
10
minutes
for
this
call,
and
I
want
to
go
really
fast
on
on
the
agenda
topics
that
I
that
I
previously
made,
and
the
first
thing
is
to
sync
up
on
the
on
the
spreadsheet.
I
will
share
my.
A
A
Here
is:
is
the
spreadsheet,
where
you
can
like
point
yourself
to
the
training
here
you
can
see
the
plan
of
study,
the
forum
post.
You
can
see
the
slides
and
I
made
a
a
type
form
so
that
you
can
each
a
week
address
the
three
questions
that
we
are
going
to
to
deliver
to
evaluate
the
course.
A
So,
yes,
they
are
not
like
explicit
here,
but
the
idea
is
that
when
you
see
question
number
one
we
we
will
put
the
questions
in
the
discord,
so
it
is
the
same
type
form
for
for
for
the
whole
course,
and
I
want
to
promote
the
the
resources
for
the
next
session
that
are.
A
That
is
in
charge
of
regis
of
durgadas,
and
these
are
some
of
the
of
the
of
the
study
materials
that
we
would
like
you
to
see
to
review,
to
study
before
the
the
the
first
session.
It
is
a.
A
Yes,
and-
and
he
has
to
make
some
editing
so
we
will
like
be
sending
you
and
posting
you
these
these
readings.
I
suggest
that
you
don't
need
to
read
the
full
documents,
but
to
have
like
a
quick
glance
of
everything,
because
we
are
also
going
to
like
go
a
little
bit
of
on
the
readings
in
the
in
the
course
and
the
the
questions
are
really
related
to
the
to
the
readings.
A
F
Oh,
I
was
just
saying
that
I'm
I'm
currently
editing
that,
because
the
two
hour
presentation
I
did
yesterday
as
well
as
the
hour
long
question
period,
I
had
added
a
whole.
There
are
33
slides
with
a
ton
of
information
and
I'll
be
modifying
those.
Some
of
those
things
to
include
some
of
the
things
I
found
there
and
I'd
like
to
talk
to
you
in
particular
to
see
what
you
found
to
be
the
you
know,
kind
of
best
out
of
that
group
of
things
that
we're
talking
about.
F
F
At
it
and
yeah,
I
I
think
I
gave
you
the
I
already
uploaded
the
the
powerpoint,
so
everyone
can
look
at
that,
but
there's.
F
That
I
sort
of
talked
about
through
the
whole
thing
perfect
and
some
questions
that
were
answered
in
the
middle
as
well
in
some
detail
that
other
participants
brought
to
the
picture.
So.
A
Yes,
I
loved
your
presentation
of
yesterday
and
I
I
think
maybe
that
presentation
in
itself
it's
a
whole
topic,
and
maybe
here
it's
something
more
more
much
practical,
so
it's
like
sure
and
practices
for
for
non-violent
communication
and-
and
maybe
we
can
like
go
into
into
some
deeper
things,
but
in
in
a
very
shallow
way
like
if
you
want
to
research
more
on
these,
you,
you
can
like
invite
people
to
your
to
your
to
your
meetings
that
you
don't
do
on
wednesdays,
sure
and
yeah.
A
I
think
that
for
this
first
session,
it's
it's
very
like
practical,
practical
and-
and
I
will
see
I'm
gonna
see
here
what
else.
A
Okay,
so
I
I
promoted
these
resources
and
maybe
regis
is
add
some
other
one,
but
I
am
sure
that
this
one,
a
stroke
of
build
of
insight,
is
going
to
be
to
come
and
also
I
loved
this
video
of
orange
j
suffer
about,
say
what
you
mean
a
mindful
approach
of
non-violent
communication,
I
loved
it.
I
mean
when
I
was
hearing
it.
A
It
was
a
really
really
good
video
and
if
there
are
lectures
that
are
like
hard
and
long,
then
we
will
also
add,
like
a
summary
link
to
that
lecture.
So
so
you
can
like
study
all
this
really
fast.
Can.
A
And
the
other
thing
that
I
would
love
to
to
to
share
with
you
is
also
that
co-ops
for
for
for
these
sessions
and
the
idea
of
the
pops
is
to
be
able
to
certify
the
people
that
passes
this
training
so
that
they
can
become
mediators
or
gravitons
inside
their
organizations.
Here
is,
is
the
the
the
pops
of
each
session
and
yeah
the
I?
I
am
really
happy,
because
I
think
this
will
be.
A
We
are
going
to
certify
people
in
in
blockchain
of
nonviolent
communication
if
I
am
wrong
correctly,
but
this
is
something
that
really
excites
me
and
that
I
hope
that
the
people
that
go
after
this
course
then
can
help
on
the
cultural
builds
of
their
own
organizations.
I
A
That
that
is
a
really
good
question,
because
I
was
thinking
to
that.
The
pop
was
for
attendance,
and
maybe
the
answers
were
for
like
a
grade.
That
is
something
more
for
our
like
management
of
of
how
did
people
or
like
perform
in
the
course.
A
And
to
get
them
is
really
easy.
There's
a
discord
box
where
I
send
you
the
the
the
password
and
then
like
it,
sends
you
the
pop
immediately.
So
it's
really
really
easy
to
do
it.
A
And
well
to
finish,
I
I
am
going
to
like
make
a
really
brief,
brief,
brief,
brief
presentation
of
what
are
going
to
be
the
eight
sessions.
The
first
session
is
non-violent
communication
and
spiral
dynamics.
A
A
You
can
see
this
these
slides.
I
put
a
lot
of
like
effort
to
do
it,
and-
and
I
would
love
you
to
to
to
like-
if
you
like,
see
them
and
and
review
them
in
the
fourth
session.
This
is
going
to
be
amazing.
We
are
going
to
have
practical
cases
and
I
downloaded
some
practical
cases
from
the
program
of
negotiation
of
harvard
law
school.
So
we
we
have
these
two
cases
that
are
for
to
be
addressed
by
pairs.
A
One
is
power
screen
case,
that
is
a
case
of
a
hacker
and
and
a
businessman
that
bought
some
the
work
from
some
work
from
the
hacker,
but
then,
like
the
hacker
made
work
apart
from
the
businessman
and
then
the
businessman
feels
like
he
wasn't
fair,
and
this
is
another
one.
Is
is
a
little
bit
more
easy
for,
if
you
like,
would
love
to
have
low
complexity,
and
it's
like
to
on
on
the
settlement
of
a
house.
A
This
fifth
session
is
going
to
be
led
by
libya
and
she's
going
to
talk
up
us
about
her
working
soft
governance.
Why
did
she
notice
the
the
importance
of
working
in
software
governance
in
dallas,
and
how
has
she
like
learned
from
reading
and
studying
and
applying
ostrom
principles
and
the
sex?
Sixth
and
seventh
sessions
are
going
to
deep
dive
on
how
is
on
what
is
the
gravity
process
and
in
the
eighth
session
we
will
have
a
collective
role
play.
A
That
is
a
very
fun
activity
that
I
made
once
in
in
the
university
and
that
I
feel
that
can
be
really
good
for
this
community
and
for
the
community
building
and
the
the
role
of
the
gravity
member
is
also
of
the
gravity
of
the
graviton
is
also
to
be
a
community
builder.
So
it's
also
good
to
have
like
kind
of
rituals
and
practices
to
build
community.