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Thoughts of Power✌️✌️🔥

Thoughts of Power✌️✌️🔥

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Do you ever feel like you are your own worst enemy?Do you struggle to make decisions with confidence? Do you procrastinate? Are you afraid to say what you really think and feel?Then this group is for you.if you facing any problem contact to @biotic_agent

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On the sacred occasion of Maha Shivaratri may the blessings of Shiva fill your life with peace, strength and prosperity 🕉️🕉️🙌🙌

during a mathematics course at columbia university a student fell asleep
When he woke up, he saw that the professor had written two problems on the whiteboard. He thought they were homework, so he noted them down in his notebook and took them home. When he tried to solve those problems, he found them incredibly difficult. But he refused to give up. He spent hours in the library, studying through reference books, and finally, he managed to solve one problem, even though it was quite challenging. In the next class, when the professor did not ask anything about the homework, he was surprised and stood up and asked, "Sir, why did you not ask anything about the assignment given in the last lecture?" The professor replied, "Assignments? I just wrote them as examples of problems that scientists haven't been able to solve yet." The student was astonished and said, "But I solved one of them! I even wrote four papers on it." His achievement was later recognized, and all four of his papers are still on display at Columbia University. The most important thing about this story was that the student didn't hear that "there are no solutions to these problems." He simply recognized that these were difficult questions that needed to be solved, and he tried wholeheartedly to solve them—and succeeded. This story reminds us – don't listen to those who say you can't do something. Today's generation is often surrounded by pessimism and negativity. Some people deliberately sow the seeds of failure and defeat within others. But you have the strength to reach your goals, the power to overcome obstacles, and the courage to achieve your dreams. Just believe in yourself – and keep trying. This student's name was George Dantzig, and this problem was taken from Math Stack Exchange. "Dantzig proved that in the context of the Student's t-test, the only way we can create a hypothesis test that is independent of the standard deviation is to create a null test, which always rejects or accepts with equal probability, which is not practical.

Logo header en Video-downloader Photo-downloader Reels-downloader Story-saver Highlights-downloader https://www.instagram.com/reel/DS5VMu1E_BW/?igsh=czhsbHQ1OGFlaGRn Clear Download Search result preview Download When he woke up, he saw that the professor had written two problems on the whiteboard. He thought they were homework, so he noted them down in his notebook and took them home. When he tried to solve those problems, he found them incredibly difficult. But he refused to give up. He spent hours in the library, studying through reference books, and finally, he managed to solve one problem, even though it was quite challenging. In the next class, when the professor did not ask anything about the homework, he was surprised and stood up and asked, "Sir, why did you not ask anything about the assignment given in the last lecture?" The professor replied, "Assignments? I just wrote them as examples of problems that scientists haven't been able to solve yet." The student was astonished and said, "But I solved one of them! I even wrote four papers on it." His achievement was later recognized, and all four of his papers are still on display at Columbia University. The most important thing about this story was that the student didn't hear that "there are no solutions to these problems." He simply recognized that these were difficult questions that needed to be solved, and he tried wholeheartedly to solve them—and succeeded. This story reminds us – don't listen to those who say you can't do something. Today's generation is often surrounded by pessimism and negativity. Some people deliberately sow the seeds of failure and defeat within others. But you have the strength to reach your goals, the power to overcome obstacles, and the courage to achieve your dreams. Just believe in yourself – and keep trying. This student's name was George Dantzig, and this problem was taken from Math Stack Exchange. "Dantzig proved that in the context of the Student's t-test, the only way we can create a hypothesis test that is independent of the standard deviation is to create a null test, which always rejects or accepts with equal probability, which is not practical.

A new year doesn't arrive to fix everything.It arrives quietly, asking if we're willing to try again. To turn the page even when the last chapter hurt. To carry the lessons, not the weight. To forgive ourselves for the pauses, the detours, the silence. This year isn't about becoming someone new overnight. It's about becoming a little more honest with who we are. New chapters don't erase the past.They grow from it. And the story.. it's still being written. & Happy New Year, the story continues.口

When Dreams Break Through Possibility Your waking mind knows the rules. It counts constraints, measures against precedent, asks the reasonable question: *Has anyone done this before?* But your dreaming mind? It doesn't play by those rules. When you're truly obsessed—when something consumes your thoughts from morning until sleep pulls you under—your dreams become a different kind of workshop. They're spaces where the impossible doesn't need permission to exist. Where a ring of atoms can dance in a circle. Where an atom can hold electrons in orbits you've never seen. Where a needle can pierce and pull thread through fabric in ways that never existed before. Ramanujan saw infinite formulas unfold in his sleep. Kekulé watched a serpent swallow its own tail and understood benzene. Mendeleev dreamed the gaps in a table and filled them with elements no one had discovered yet. A dreamer imagined thread could be sewn by a machine when human hands had always done it. They weren't visited by magic. They were visited by their own obsession. When you care enough about something—truly care, deeply, obsessively—your mind refuses to stay confined by what's ordinary. It works while you sleep. It makes connections across chasms. It asks questions that have no precedent. It dreams what waking life deemed impossible. The boundary between genius and ordinary isn't talent. It's obsession. It's caring enough that your dreams have to break free from the prison of the possible. When you are obsessed with something, your dreams push the ordinary limit of your waking life to think beyond possibility Your waking life has rules. Your dreaming life has none. The breakthrough you're looking for might not come at your desk. It might come in that space between sleep and waking, when your obsessed mind finally stops asking Can this be done? and just... shows you how. The greatest discoveries aren't made by people who follow the rules. They're made by people too obsessed to remember the rules existed.

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