Author Archives: Darrick Dean

Making the Right Decisions

Sahil Bloom has collected 10 Life Razors to guide your decision making. Razors are simple tools that can produce bold results:


Smart choices start with simple rules (razors).

Here are 10 of the most powerful I’ve found:

  1. The Luck Razor: When choosing between two paths, choose the path that has a larger luck surface area. Your actions put you in a position where luck is more likely to strike.
  2. The Feynman Razor: Complexity and jargon are used to mask a lack of deep understanding. If you can’t explain it to a 5-year-old, you don’t really understand it. If someone uses a lot of complexity and jargon to explain something, they probably don’t understand it.
  3. The Optimist Razor: When choosing who to spend time with, prioritize spending more time with optimists. Pessimists see closed doors. Optimists see open doors—and probably kick down the closed doors along the way.
  4. The Young & Old Test: Make decisions that your 80-year old self and 10-year-old self would be proud of. Your 80-year-old self cares about the long-term compounding of the decisions of today. Your 10-year-old self reminds you to stay foolish and have some fun along the way.
  5. The Rooms Razor: If you have a choice between entering two rooms, choose the room where you’re more likely to be the dumbest one in the room. Once you’re in the room, talk less and listen more. Bad for your ego—great for your growth.
  6. Occam’s Razor: When you’re weighing alternative explanations for something, the one with the fewest necessary assumptions should be chosen. Put simply, the simplest explanation is often the best one. Simple Assumptions > Complex Assumptions.
  7. The Arena Razor: When faced with two paths, choose the path that puts you in the arena. It’s easy to throw rocks from the sidelines. It’s scary and lonely in the arena—but it’s where growth happens. Once you’re in the arena, never take advice from people on the sidelines.
  8. Hanlon’s Razor: Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity. In assessing someone’s actions, we shouldn’t assume negative intent if there’s a viable alternative explanation—different beliefs, lack of intelligence, incompetence, or ignorance.
  9. The Lion Razor: If you have the choice, always choose to sprint and then rest. Most people are not wired to work 9-5—long periods of steady, monotonous work. If your goal is to do inspired, creative work, you have to work like a lion. Sprint when inspired. Rest. Repeat.
  10. The Gratitude Razor: When in doubt, choose to show MORE gratitude to the people who have mentored or supported you. Say thank you more. Tell someone you appreciate them. Not just on special occasions—every single day.

The quality of your life is a reflection of the quality of your decisions. Better decisions require better tools.

Start using these razors and your life will start to improve.

Sahil Bloom is an investor and entrepreneur, and the New York Times Bestselling author of The 5 Types of Wealth: A Transformative Guide to Design Your Dream Life. © Sahil Bloom.

Categories: Critical Thinking | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Attacks from Outer Space

If NASA would make its role in planetary defense more well known, people would better grasp the importance of the space program. Still a too-small fraction of expenditures, there are nonetheless many men and women around the world working to protect humanity. Robin George Andrews’ book, How to Kill an Asteroid, takes us behind the scenes into these little-known programs. The Solar System is full of rocks big enough to destroy cities, countries, and entire civilizations.

One thing Andrews doesn’t cover in his book, is the other threat from space: Solar storms and superstorms, some of which could also crumble modern civilization. NASA and NOAA monitor the solar weather closely, but on Earth we have not done enough to harden our infrastructure, as depicted in William R. Forstchen’s novel, 48 Hours. A Coronal Mass Ejection may have nearly ended humanity, as Robert Schoch outlines in Forgotten Civilization. Threats from the sky aren’t just conjecture, we know they have struck Earth in the past.

Next time you wonder why we explore space, wonder why we don’t spend more time and money protecting the planet.

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Whose Story are You in?

“Story is the way we orient ourselves in the world. Story is how we figure things out, bring order and meaning to the events around us. The story we hold to at any given time shapes our perceptions, hopes, and expectations; it gives us a place to stand…what story are you telling yourself—or letting others tell you?” – John Eldredge, Resilient

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Leave the World Behind

“Don’t be afraid to live your life with intense and deliberate essentiality, every day, all the time. However you can find connection to your moments, do it.” – Kourtney Thomas, “What I Learned From a No Social Media Vacation

Whereas tech is a great tool to assist you on vacation (finding places to go, directions, making reservations, etc.), many people let the social media part of tech take over their trip. I once saw a young lady spend so much time trying to create selfies at the Grand Canyon, I wondered of she even noticed the natural wonder in front of her. (And hoped she didn’t fall off the edge as others have done.)

Other people cannot fathom going a week without checking email, social media accounts, the news – or most horribly – work-related accounts and apps.

It might be hard to believe, but the world will survive without knowing where you are for a little while. It’s one thing to check in with friends and family occasionally, but for the most part, just go off the grid and remember what vacations are all about.

Leaving that world behind.

Ashlyn Pernice writes:

“Imagine leaving everything —phones, car, home — and traveling across the country on foot. Imagine truly living a simple life, not caught up with friend drama on Facebook or politics on Twitter, not worrying about the future, nor reminiscing about the past. Imagine being able to truly live in the moment and ignore the responsibilities of everyday life, take in all the beauty of new places and new environments, and meet new people without the distractions of technology.

“But how could you travel without technology in the 21st century? This is what truly bothered me. I knew I wanted to travel without a car, but how would I navigate new areas in this day and age without Google Maps at my fingertips?

“I decided that if people hundreds of years before me could find their way around without smartphones, then I could, too. It was just a matter of using actual maps, asking locals, etc. I threw my beloved iPhone into a lake.”

You don’t have to necessarily throw your phone out. However, before you go, deactivate all social media and messaging apps. Buy a map. Use GPS as little as possible. Take spontaneous photos, not staged ones. Immerse yourself in the moment, and wait until you get back to share your experiences.

Maybe by leaving your daily world for awhile, you’ll find the path you should have been taking all along.

“Money, of course, is still needed to survive, but time is what you need to live. So, save what little money you possess to meet basic survival requirements, but spend your time lavishly in order to create the life values that make the fire worth the candle. ” – Rolf Potts

Categories: What You Can Do | Tags: , , , , , | Leave a comment

How Bad do You Want This?

Angélique Letizia once again encourages us to align with our dreams, our purpose, rather than letting others tell us what we are meant to be:


Why not you?
So what if they don’t believe in you?
Who cares if they say your dream is delusional?

The real question is: Will you believe in yourself when no one else does?

Here’s what happens when you begin to align with your dream:

You set out on a path that feels less like a gentle walk and more like walking through a gauntlet of projections, doubts, mirrors, tests disguised as detours, and polarity in its rawest form.

It will ask you:
How bad do you want this?
Can you hold the vision through the dark?
Will you keep going when all seems lost?

Because fully aligning with a dream means confronting the polarity paradox, where expansion requires you to face both resistance and revelation.

You’ll encounter Champions, those rare souls who see your vision before the evidence shows up. They cheer you on because they genuinely wish you the best. Treasure these people — they’re rare.

Then there’s the shadow side of the Champion; what I like to call the Phantoms, because their overzealous show of support is a false light projection. Their smiles mask jealousy, and their energy carries a quiet hope you’ll fail. And if you don’t fail? They’ll still linger close enough to ride your coattails.

Then come the Naysayers.

The Positive Naysayers mean well. They may sincerely love you, but they prioritize your safety more than your evolution. They’ll say things like:

“Don’t get your hopes up.”
“Are you sure that’s realistic?”
“Can you make money doing that?”

They’re not trying to hurt you; they’re just speaking from fear.
But love offered through fear is still fear, and fear will always hold you back.

Then there are the Negative Naysayers. They mock, minimize, and criticize.
Often behind your back. Sometimes, to your face in the form of passive-aggressive jabs.

These experiences are initiations, invitations to strengthen your discernment and align with a bold, unapologetic narrative.

Because before the dream expands, you must expand. You must face your own shadow and your own light.

You must look yourself in the eye and ask:

Am I fully ready to claim the life I was born to live?

The dream doesn’t just require faith; it demands perseverance, fortitude, energy, and conviction.

Because to reach the gold, you have to walk through contrasts on both sides of the polarity spectrum.

Meaning, you don’t just meet your purpose, you also meet everything that stands in its way.

So, if you’re waiting for a sign to pursue your dream, start a business, form a partnership, launch a new brand, or make a bold new move.

This is your sign. DO IT.

Because that dream burning in your heart wasn’t given to the naysayers —
It was given to you, the one who holds enough light to carry it through the dark.

Keep Shining ⭐

Angélique Letizia is the Founder & CEO of Starr Films. © Angélique Letizia

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Walking Back Into the Light

“Just compare how you feel after binge-watching hours of screen anything — TV, video games, YouTube — with how you fell when you come off a mountain bike ride or a swim in the ocean. Living in an artificial world is like spending your life wrapped in plastic wrap. You wonder why you feel tired, numb, a little depressed, when the simple answer is you have a vitamin D deficiency; there’s no sunlight in your life, literally and figuratively.

“Our body, soul, and spirit atrophy because we were made to inhabit a real world, drawing life, joy, and strength from it. To be shaped by it, to relish in it. Living your days in an artificial world is like living your whole life with gloves on, a filtered experience, never really feeling anything. Then you wonder why your soul feels numb.” – John Eldredge, Get Your Life Back

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Decoding Proper Human Health

Many people get frustrated when comes to figuring out how to achieve better health. How often have you heard, or yourself have said, “Who am I supposed to listen to? Everyone has different information. Health advice is always changing. I give up!”

Does it have to be that hard, or are we making it harder than it really is? Perhaps, if we step back and apply some logic, history, basic science, and some common sense, we will find the answers. There are two basic maxims for optimal health:

Eat what your body is designed to use.

We are not designed to be couch potatoes.

These two maxims, derived from science and common sense, quickly cut away any confusion about proper human health and the proper human diet. We will dive deeper into the supporting details, and examine the insights and revelations supporting these maxims.

Are you tired of suboptimal health? Do you want to avoid chronic disease and degeneration in your future? Do you want the “secrets” to the Proper Human Diet? Read on.

Continue reading
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Designed Not to be Sick

“It sounds a little far-fetched, because we all die in our 70s and 80s, and think 90 is amazing…[but] geneticists know…based on the length of our telomeres on our chromosomes that we are designed to live to 120 years on average. So why are we dying in our 70s and 80s, or 60s? That’s literally middle-aged. Genetically we are designed to live 120 years. If you eat what you’re designed to eat, you should live as long as you’re designed to live.” – Dr. Anthony Chaffee, MD

Watch the new documentary animal.

That is, watch it if you are tired of sickness and sub-optimal health.

Watch it if you don’t want to resign yourself to the last years of your life living in decline and on multiple drugs.

Animal shows why our ancestors, up to only a few generations ago, weren’t afflicted by chronic diseases and neurological disorders.

The state of human health is spiraling downward. We know why, and we know how to fix it.

Eat what we are designed to eat.

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Reclaiming Native History

“As with all historical events, it is a fool’s errand to judge it by contemporary standards.” – Michael Walsh

Far too often, historians, or those who pretend to be historians, try to understand history through modern eyes. Sometimes this is unintentional, but often in our era, it is purposeful revisionism driven by narratives and personal beliefs rather than a desire to understand the past.

One of the most interesting trends in history has been the changes in studies of Native American history. It is one of many historical subjects that have been battered by changing narratives and people with little regard for truth. This, though, is changing.

For many years, academia tended to paint Native Americans as helpless victims, wiped out by ruthless Europeans. Kathleen DuVal, in Native Nations, writes, “More recent U.S. history textbooks provide more coverage and rightly condemn the violence…but tend to emphasize victimization and decline.” Duval shows how influential writings on native history by Howard Zinn, Dee Brown, Jared Diamond, and Charles Mann enforced this idea that “Europeans dominated North America virtually from the moment they arrived here” and the natives were “helpless victims.” Even now, education still often portrays American Indians as peoples from the past, as if they no longer exist, and “overemphasize the periods of catastrophe” like the Cherokee Trail of Tears or the Wounded Knee Massacre.

This narrative has begun to crumble, a change often driven from natives themselves. They weren’t wiped out, and scholars trying to do native history justice, often have done the opposite with unsupported death, disease, and population numbers. Now, historians are recognizing, as Pekka Hämäläinen writes in Indigenous Continent, this was “a four-centuries-long war” and “Indians won as often as not.” While there “were colonists who utterly despised Indians and wanted to eradicate them” there were many who “sought to embrace them.”

Natives prospered from trade and contact, and sought out such activities. They suffered as well in this classic clash of different civilizations, not unlike what had played out thousands of times in history. However, they weren’t clueless, innocent hippies wandering through the woods, hugging trees. They weren’t much different from the Europeans, both good and bad. War, slavery, and torture were not uncommon.

There is a lot of overlap in DuVal and Hämäläinen’s books, and they are excellent histories of native history after contact. There are times where both authors seem to have trouble letting go of the very inaccurate histories they are trying to correct. DuVal likes to often remind readers the Europeans were white, not understanding ideas of racism weren’t the same as modern ones. For example, racist beliefs directed from one white European group to another were common well into the 20th Century. Nor did all Europeans base their perceptions of the natives based solely on skin color. Both authors talk about colonialism like it was a new invention in the Americas, as if this wasn’t a driving force in civilization’s expansion and growth since mankind began. These and some other points are artifacts of interjecting modernity into the past.

This why I think Jeff Fynn-Paul’s book, Not Stolen, adds good balance to these other studies. Fynn-Paul doesn’t obscure the bad events on the continent between natives and the newcomers, but he shows there was often more to the story. For example, the tragic Cherokee Trail of Tears was not something that went unnoticed at the time, nor was it widely supported. Quite the opposite, it was very controversial with the public, and the president was acting against a ruling of the Supreme Court. The point being, there wasn’t a widespread conspiracy to wipe out the natives. While DuVal and Hämäläinen sometimes throw around the word genocide, the individuals who were for such things didn’t have broad support for the total destruction of native nations.

Admittedly, trying to formulate a balanced history of such a complex era of the past, involving so many people, is no easy task. No one person can survey and collate every available source. We should all strive to examine a broad variety of sources on every subject we study, and do so with an open mind. As Fynn-Paul writes:

An ideal historian will look dispassionately at the evidence, the sources, and the probable facts of a case, and write a narrative interpretation based on reason, logic, and a well-honed sense of judgment. Personnel preference – including political opinions – is supposed to be relegated to secondary status.

Categories: Ancient America, History, Native Americans | Tags: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Darkness is Here. Which Side are You On?

In an age lost to myth, all human life nearly vanished from the Earth. War erupted between men and demon. The Blood Rain fell from the skies and the land was scorched and torn. The waters came and completed the ruin of the world.

In time, people ceased believing in such tales. This is what the Darkness wanted. It waited until the stories were forgotten, when most thought it foolish to listen to the warnings of their ancestors. Among the shadows malice lurked, and signs from the Light were ignored. Centuries passed.

A shadowmancer arose to launch a new Scourge. Evils unseen since the ancient wars returned from the Abyss. The modern world would soon fall. No humans could stand against them.

So the Followers thought.

Six Watchers, gifted by the Light, stood to meet the Darkness and destroyed the Dark One’s legions. The shadows receded, their terror extinguished. The Followers had been burnt by the Light.

Except one.

If a lost land could be raised, and the ageless weapon restored, she would have her revenge. New hordes would be brought through the veil. The final merging of both worlds completed. Ancient tales of the coming of the end of days made true.

An Awakening.

Will the Watchers, who had turned back what emerged from the shadows, be able to stand against a new onslaught? They will not fight alone. More of their kind, wielding gifts of great power, have also come forth. The Light surges in us all, but among the Watchers it is untamed and unbound. Only they can defeat what is coming.

In these last hours, they are our only hope.

Which side are you on? Get your copy now!

Categories: fantasy, Fiction, Writing | Tags: , , , , , | Leave a comment

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