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From Mansion to Momentum: How a Depressed Millionaire Can Master Skool
If you're reading this, you might be someone who has "won" the financial game—you have the house, the cars, and the portfolio—but inside, the engine is sputtering. Depression doesn't check your bank balance. In fact, the lack of forced scarcity can sometimes make it harder to find the drive to do anything. So, how do you, a depressed millionaire, find success, connection, and even a renewed sense of purpose within an online community like Skool? You have unique resources that others don't. Here's how to use them strategically. 1. Focus on Contribution, Not Consumption When depressed, it's easy to fall into passive scrolling and endless video watching. In Skool, this is the "doom-scrolling" equivalent. - The millionaire advantage: You can easily afford to hire top-tier, specialized help. - The strategy: Instead of just watching the course content, ask yourself: "What is the unique knowledge I can share based on my journey?" It doesn't have to be about money. It could be about deal structuring, managing a large team, or a niche hobby you mastered in your downtime. - Action: Commit to answering one genuinely helpful question in the community forum a day, or share a single, high-value lesson you learned on your way to success. This shifts your focus from your internal state to external value, which is a powerful mood elevator. 2. Leverage Your Capital for Cognitive Ease Most people in Skool struggle with time and money. Your struggle is energy and motivation. Use one to solve the other. - The millionaire advantage: You can pay people to handle the energy-draining tasks. - The strategy: If the idea of writing a long post or making a video feels paralyzing, outsource the friction points: 3. Curate a "Micro-Circle" and Buy Back Time Depression thrives in isolation. Skool is a community, but a huge one can be overwhelming. - The millionaire advantage: You can offer incentives that attract high-quality, focused interaction. - The strategy: Identify three to five people in your community whose posts resonate with you. Reach out privately and offer to fund a hyper-focused mastermind group (e.g., pay for a premium Zoom account, cover the cost of a private accountability tool, or even offer a small scholarship/prize for meeting goals). - The goal: Create a small, high-accountability micro-environment that requires you to show up, not just scroll. The commitment to others is often a more potent motivator than the commitment to self when you’re depressed.
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Giga Chad is WILDIN
Bro you’re a menace 😂
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How to roast (defend yourself)
skool.com/how-to-roast-defend-yourself-1839
We roast.
And we roast eachother.
I will teach you how to ANNIHILATE that peon trying to rizz up your womans gyatt.
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