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108 sats \ 5 replies \ @DiedOnTitan 5 Mar \ on: Tips to flourishing in Million Sats Madness bitcoin_beginners
Money dysmorphia is a very interesting turn of phrase. There are people, one person in particular, in my close circle that I immediately linked to this term because no matter how much money they earn and save in various assets - and it is a lot by any standard, they perpetually fear loss and deprivation. It's kind of a hoarder's mindset that I have observed. On the flip side, I know people on the edge of poverty that appear completely content and "happy" living simply and seemingly unconcerned with their financial health. I guess this would be termed "money eumorphia".
Thank you for your comment! As an English teacher, I learnt that the prefix -eu is the opposite of -dys. So thrilled to learn something new
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Eugenics, euphemism, euphoria are other words that share this prefix from Ancient Greek.
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Eugenics, euphemism, euphoria are other words that share this prefix from Ancient Greek.
Did you enjoy studying Ancient Greek n Latin when you were a student?
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Enjoy is probably the wrong word, especially at the time. I did not realize how much it would help with learning languages in the future. Once you have Latin, learning the Romance languages comes with a 60% down payment already made: Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian all share the same foundation. It's like having C and then taking on Awk, Perl, Python, and so on. I also think the structure of Ancient Greek helped me think about data structures and other systems in deeper ways. It molds ones thinking.
So the answer is that I did not really enjoy learning Ancient Greek and Latin as a student, but I am tremendously grateful that I did.
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Sounds like what Steve Jobs said, you can only connect the dots looking backwards
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