Few days back I blurted out (on a podcast) some unholy advice that could help you achieve a level of power that few humans know about, and less would dare to admit:
Becoming the villain
Now before you assume my mansplaining has anything to do with ‘good’ or ‘bad’…
…villains aren’t always evil…
….but they are always proactive.
Think about any villain you know, from any horrible Marvel or DC movie or whatever (I hate them all) and then think about their dedicated ‘hero’ whose sad and pathetic job it is to dress up like a lunatic and stop the villain.
I mean, if the hero’s only purpose is to stop the villain from accomplishing their mission, then…
Who is proactive?
The villain.
Who is reactive?
The hero.
Even superheroes are weak compared to supervillains. Heroes only win in movies because script writers ensure they win, so you feel fuzzy and buy more movies or merch or whatever.
Outside Hollywood, movies are meaningless.
In the real world reactive people spend their time without any mission, usually complaining about the latest villain’s accomplishment. Today they complain about Elon Musk buying Twitter, tomorrow it’ll be something else equally unimportant and completely out of their control.
Villains just get shit done.
Having a mission not only improves your money, health, and relationships, but it also gives you the absolute authority and resources to provide for any other human you choose to rule over… or even care for.
That’s real power.
But it gets better…
…it’s also difficult to keep an addiction (or even stay poor) once you pursue a mission bigger than yourself. It seems there is just something about having a mission that defuses your pleasure-seeking schemes.
That’s why November’s Evolve Already is about becoming a supervillain. You’ll be spawning a mission that provides you purpose reliably, so you can finally leave that mundane pleasure-seeking lifestyle behind, as you accomplish mission after mission — regardless of what any ‘hero’ says or does lol.
Sub to Evolve Already before month’s end to get at it:
A Villain Without A Mission Is Like A Bloke Without Balls
Back in my drug dealing days, there was a guy who would buy weed from me and sell it for a small profit. He never sold a lot because he was the most awkward person I’d ever met in my life.
Think Mark Zuckerberg…
…but drunk and high all the time.
He had very few friends, even less money, and zero confidence. The only reason he sold weed for us was because his personality was so repugnant that he couldn’t keep a job for more than a week.
I’m serious.
Every man he encountered would either avoid him or actively mock him, and although he made a career out of chasing women, he couldn’t seduce even the loosest and most average of dames.
He was a pitiful wrench of a man.
And, even he would agree with my harsh assessment…
I know that because it wasn’t long ago I caught up with him.
Check this out:
My mate is now a millionaire without trying.
He builds legit brands from scratch and drives fancy cars, eats at romantic restaurants, and has desired dames chasing him all the time. He definitely agreed he was a loser in his 20s, but laughingly pointed out that he now lives a lifestyle 99% of men will never know.
I agreed.
But how did my mate go from Loser to Giga Chad in a few short years?
And, more importantly, how can you do the same thing?
His answer was congruent with my latest preachings:
- He stopped caring about social norms.
- He stopped ‘job hunting’ random gigs.
- And, he decided to pursue his own mission.
It was only then that he could overcome his addictions, get in shape, and join the ranks of villain millionaires.
Seems to me a villain without a mission is as useless as a glass hammer. Just as a bloke without balls cannot reproduce, has no drive, and is pitied by men and women alike, a villain without a mission has no value to those he wishes to subjugate, and will often fall prey to pleasure traps like drugs, alcohol, sex, or gambling.
So if you have a problem with any addiction, lack of finances, or even just your own damn health — then you should figure out what your mission is… just as gas station attendant Socrates prescribed:
“The Secret of Change Is to Focus All of Your Energy, Not on Fighting the Old, But on Building the New”
I go into it in detail in the video from that podcast, which is here:
What should your new mission be?
I don’t care, and only you can know.
But I do provide a beacon of insight about why this works so reliably, and how you can go about choosing and achieving yours, in November’s Evolve Already. Tomorrow is the deadline for both video + magazine (in 24 hrs).
Live countdown yonder:
Keep Reality Real,
Tristan Weatherburn
https://tristanweatherburn.com
Get insane brain training to help you quit dumb shit, get shit done, and reliably change the human you are being, with Evolve Already.
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