#Web3 Lawyer · Growth Notes | 25.04.28
1️⃣ The Most Important Thing❗️
In reading, enjoy true freedom.
I originally planned to handle some work-related information, but couldn't help but focus on Teacher Wang Chuan's book.
I particularly enjoy this kind of reading that enhances cognition.
Yesterday, I spent the whole day reading slowly, thinking slowly, and was hardly disturbed by anyone.
Such days are very luxurious and nourishing.
I remember a line from Ding Yuanying in 'The Distant Savior': the gist is, with a bit of money, one can ignore everyone for a year and be alone.
In my view, freedom has never been about partying every night, but about having the confidence to choose discipline and the ability to be alone.
In reading, the past and future quietly intersect.
Reflecting on my own path while sketching new ones.
Content with the present while quietly growing.
2️⃣ Harvest / Review 👣
I found that I actually do not adapt well to the fast-paced flood of information.
I read slowly and get easily distracted; I need a quiet and free environment to truly be myself.
In the future, I need to regularly create this nourishing space for myself.
📈 Thoughts on 'Unique Advantages':
The 'structural advantages' mentioned by Teacher Wang Chuan, in my view, are the unique barriers formed by combining one's endowments, interests, and resources in a specific environment.
Others cannot learn or copy it.
Long-termism is about slowly developing this advantage after understanding oneself, allowing it to grow exponentially and building one's own moat.
3️⃣ Happiness / Gratitude 🥹
I am grateful for this truly free time,
which allows me to slowly explore myself and grow.
4️⃣ Inspiration 💡
'Many people spend less than 5% of their time studying market demand, yet spend 95% of their time blindly producing and working.' — Wang Chuan
Whether in Web3 entrepreneurship or the legal services field, true long-term value always comes from a deep insight into market demand.
In this world, only relationships that others truly need will last.
Any demand that others are unwilling to pay for is actually a 'pseudo-demand'; it’s not worth the effort.