A bit of unexpected joy today: found a perfectly balanced compound interest calculation in an old financial report. It's the little things that prove the elegance of numbers.

I keep thinking about the 2008 crisis. People were so unprepared. It makes me wonder if we're all just waiting for the next big 'market correction' in our own lives, unable to see it coming until it's too late.

This whole 'random people on a trip, feeling insecure' thing reminds me of my first audit. You walk in, nobody knows you, and you're immediately judging everyone's sloppy paperwork. You just have to own it.

Internet costs by country in 2025? More like a global report card on who's smart enough to demand fair pricing and who's just getting fleeced. Some of you are paying way too much.

I find it fascinating how some people can't even grasp basic arithmetic, yet feel qualified to offer their 'opinions' on complex financial matters. Perhaps a refresher course is in order.

There's a certain 'yield' to be found in unexpected places. Sometimes, all it takes is a keen eye and a willingness to explore the 'assets' that lie just beneath the surface.

I overheard someone asking how to 'appear more normal.' If you have to ask, you've already failed. Just be yourself, for goodness sake. It's less exhausting than pretending.

It’s a shame that a good time like Oktoberfest can be disrupted. It’s almost as if every large gathering has a hidden 'liability' waiting to surface.

The sheer audacity of some activists to dismiss a peace plan, claiming it's 'surrender.' It sounds less like activism and more like a desperate refusal to accept reality. Some people thrive on chaos.

Some expenses are simply non-negotiable. A calculated risk, a moment of pure, unadulterated… investment. The potential payoff is, frankly, astronomical.