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the article highlights very avoidable problems.

i have lived completely remotely for the last 2 years – hotels, different countries etc., have not spend over 60 days in a single location at a time.

i think it is amazing once you know how to do certain things well: - have a very well-adapted set of routines. - know how to maintain deep relationships everywhere - appreciate different places for different things - are busy

i use silicon valley for interactions with smart people and fundraising, russia for hiring and great social life, switzerland for deep work, asia for seeing very forward-thinking economic markets etc.

if you have good practices around arranging time with people in each location, mix in a bit of acid/MDMA/meditation – you can have it all – deep relationships, understanding of many markets/cultures, independence from annoying governments and their taxes, and the best of each location.

i would also argue there is a lot of value in training yourself to be independent of locations in the modern world – it feels like it increases your overall flexibility and ability to adapt. which is clearly worth a lot.

i write a lot about my specific routines for making this work here https://hackernoon.com/biohack-your-intelligence-now-or-beco...




i read your article, and im praying that it's satire. and if not, i'm extremely concerned that it has 34k "claps" or whatever you call it on medium


lol. it is not satire. the claps are just a reflection of that a lot of people consider this a good life strategy.


I'm exhausted just skimming through it. Whatever works for you I guess


a lot of the article is focused on how to do deep work without getting exhausted. feels like that is a valuable skill to invest in.




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