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Inspired by the Google X model, I now feel every person should dedicate 20% of their free time/energy/passion to pursuing one of their “moonshot projects.” Like my mother always taught me: “Treat your own life like you’re a company.”  IMHO though, personal moonshot projects needn’t necessarily be hyper-ambitious or “world-moving.”  It simply needs to be something that moves you.  An endeavor/mission that inspires you to rise early in the morning.  (Inspired by this  YouTube video.)  In the video, Ben (DevDuck Games) describes how everyone aspires to wake early to work out Rocky-style or read The Odyssey, and maybe you’ll eventually get there– but in the beginning, Ben recommends that the best way to initially develop an early-bird habit (he rises every day at 5-5:30a, even on weekends!) is to wake early to work on something you enjoy.  In Ben’s example, he rose early each morning to play The Witcher 3 videogame!

I also think it’s important to nurture multiple personal moonshot projects.  Think of this 20% time as your time:  Pursuing some flame that inspires you.  But on some days, some flames burn more brightly than others.  Being promiscuous with your passions is important.   I’m already using most of my waking hours coding (and spending time with Bagel), but that coding has been mostly focused on day-trading concerns.  Kicking off 2020, I’m resolving to dedicate 20% of my time to:  A)  More writing!  At minimum, journal more frequently on this blog!  B)  More coding/data science projects that have nothing to do with day-trading.

Life is beautiful, expansive, and brimming with boundless, infinite possibilities!  But staying motivated and focused is critical path.  Even if you possess all of the money and time in the world, it’s all useless if you’re depressed and uninspired.  Stoke the flames of passion, stay hungry, and be promiscuous to keep your Galtian Motor healthily humming at all times!

A New Fiction Writing Project Begins!

So things on the health-front have unfortunately deteriorated recently.  I think Bagel, having been gone for over two months, certainly contributed to that, to some extent.  But of course I don’t blame her at all; I’m glad she’s off doing what she wishes to do.  She’s currently still abroad and having just finished training, she just flew off again, to yet another country, to actually begin her real job.  I’m very excited for her.  We still talk nearly every night over video chat and that certainly helps.  But currently, more than ever, I’ve been gripped by an ever-expanding loneliness, especially when it is late at night and I am alone in the apartment.  During the day, when I’m feeling well enough, I can escape to the library or to cafes and achieve some level of human interaction.  But at night I’m left by my lonesome.  And consequently, I think the illness has unfortunately become worse recently and more debilitating.

To this end, one of my doctors suggested I take on a new hobby to try to organize my time into a more specifically-directed activity.  The thinking is that by taking on a more active hobby, it could possibly help me feel better.  Because of the illness, I’m unable to perform any kind of strenuous physical activity so exercise and sports are out of the question.  And while I’ve always reads lots of books and watched TV shows, these activities are too passive.  So as we shift into a more palliative mode of care, doc suggested I try writing; specifically, writing fiction.  Of course I’ve always journaled.  But the idea now is I would try to marshal whatever mental energies I could summon into weaving together a story.  It’s an interesting thought.  And many decades ago, when I was a child, I’d always dreamed of wanting to become a writer one day.  So hell, why not.  Maybe one day I’ll look back on all this with great amusement; let’s write a story.

To start, before I begin writing in earnest, I think it’s necessary though to establish a tone for what is to come.  A sort of “organizing principle.”  Having read a lot of fiction, I feel all authors possess an “organizing principle” when they write fiction.  JKR writes with a childish whimsy with a firm grasp on worldbuilding.  Lev Grossman writes similarly, but more adult material.  John Scalzi is a shamelessly commercial writer, hugely successful, whose prose centers mostly around quippy dialogue.  So after some thought, I’ve decided that my organizing principle, if it can be called that, will take after what I affectionately refer to as the “Michael Bay/Fast & Furious” model.  Even when there are explosions happening on screen and a $100M-worth of special effects blasting into your eyeballs, I never want the personal and intimate human story to be lost.  It’s a tightwire balancing act of never losing focus on the personal while still acknowledging the sweeping grandiosity of the world writ large.  Because, yeah.  Whenever I write, I do wish for there to be a twinge of spectacle.  Larger than life characters and plots.  Monstrous villains and gallant heroes.  I strongly feel an important component of fiction lies in its ability to give the reader a chance to escape from the mundaneness of the real world, into another more exciting, funnier, adventurous world.  That’s my aim at least.  How well I achieve that humble aim, well, I leave to you, dear reader.

#001 | Welcome to Adventure!

I am starting a blog written anonymously about day-trading. Of course many posts will cover day-trading; but I envision some posts will also be about my general lifestyle– that is, day-trading as a means to pay rent, buy groceries, and pay bills. When you’re just a normal, regular prole trying to day-trade for a living, you’ll find that it’s not a 9-5 job. It’s more a like a startup you’ve self-bankrolled that’ll engulf your entire life and every waking moment. Even when you’re not trading, you’re thinking about trading. Or you’re preoccupied with a massive position you’ve taken on that’s moved against you. Or about half-a-dozen other things on your many to-do lists. I’ve transferred just about every last cent out of my Citibank and Chase accounts into my Fidelity brokerage and am putting it all on the line. It’s not some abstract number in some 401k that blithely moves up and down which you see every other quarter or maybe even once a year. This is real life. As John Hoynes would say, “Welcome to the NFL.”

Why written anonymously? Well, while my closest friends will know my true identity, I’m confident they will remain discreet.  And generally, it just makes me more comfortable.  In person, I’m usually reluctant to share personal financial details (I was always taught that it was bad taste and a faux pas to do so in polite society) but if this is a blog that’ll largely be about my adventures (or misadventures) in day-trading, then it’ll simply be unavoidable disclosing some personal financial information.  I’ve thought about this lots and have made my peace with it.  I love writing.  I love programming and finance.  Combining the two –at least for now– makes sense to me.

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