[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]  Jake Browatzke 🚀 [@jakebrowatzke](/creator/twitter/jakebrowatzke) on x 30.8K followers Created: 2025-07-11 21:21:59 UTC Why am I all-in $LMND? In simplest terms, I would rather go big on my strongest conviction and be wrong than live in fear. In our age, there really is no downside to most failures. In fact, it was only by overcoming the fear of public speaking that I started a YouTube channel at XX and made my first $20k from a viral video... after X straight years of failure and XXX videos, almost no one watched. It was only through a lack of fear about losing all my savings (and strong conviction in my research) that I invested everything I made from YouTube into $TSLA... and became a millionaire. Most people obsessively wonder, "What if I'm wrong?" Hedge funds underperform inherently because their fear of being wrong is so pervasive that they literally bet their money in both directions. In contrast, I obsessively consider all the counter arguments and try to understand them better than those who disagree with me. Then, if my conviction doesn't waver, I ask, what's the smartest action if I'm RIGHT? This is the question that outperforms. My lack of fear, powered by obsessive research, may lead to losing it all in $LMND, or more likely, it will lead to becoming a billionaire. There is no middle ground as mediocrity is the only outcome I fear, not failure. I learned this from my parents. They gave up everything society tells us matters, signed a lifetime vow of poverty, and became full-time missionaries. They believe treasure in heaven matters more than treasure on earth and bet everything on being right. I respect them deeply for this. Even if they turned out wrong, I would respect them no less for going all-in. Their example is perhaps the biggest reason i don't fear losing my earthly treasure. Money's only value is the treasure in heaven God allows me to gather by giving it all up for His glory. From day 1, it's been His money. And if God wants me to glorify Him without money, I'm happy to. This reminds me of the Parable of the Talents in the Bible, where a master entrusts his servants with varying amounts of money before leaving on a journey. The first two servants take risks, invest what they've been given, and double their master's wealth—earning praise and greater responsibility upon his return. But the third servant, paralyzed by fear of loss, buries his single talent in the ground to play it safe. When the master comes back, he calls this servant "wicked and lazy," takes away even what he had, and casts him out. The story isn't just about money; it's a warning against letting fear stifle potential and a call to boldly use what we've been given, even if it means risking failure. In the same way, hiding behind hedges or half-measures out of "what if" anxiety doesn't honor the opportunities we're handed—whether that's earthly investments or eternal ones. My parents embodied the faithful servants, multiplying their "talents" through radical faith, and it's that mindset that frees me from burying mine. Failure is a good sign. It means you're challenging yourself. It means you're outside your comfort zone learning. Failure is the ONLY road to outsized impact. XXXXXX engagements  **Related Topics** [$20k](/topic/$20k) [youtube](/topic/youtube) [$lmnd](/topic/$lmnd) [Post Link](https://x.com/jakebrowatzke/status/1943782849426895087)
[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]
Jake Browatzke 🚀 @jakebrowatzke on x 30.8K followers
Created: 2025-07-11 21:21:59 UTC
Why am I all-in $LMND? In simplest terms, I would rather go big on my strongest conviction and be wrong than live in fear.
In our age, there really is no downside to most failures. In fact, it was only by overcoming the fear of public speaking that I started a YouTube channel at XX and made my first $20k from a viral video... after X straight years of failure and XXX videos, almost no one watched.
It was only through a lack of fear about losing all my savings (and strong conviction in my research) that I invested everything I made from YouTube into $TSLA... and became a millionaire.
Most people obsessively wonder, "What if I'm wrong?" Hedge funds underperform inherently because their fear of being wrong is so pervasive that they literally bet their money in both directions.
In contrast, I obsessively consider all the counter arguments and try to understand them better than those who disagree with me. Then, if my conviction doesn't waver, I ask, what's the smartest action if I'm RIGHT? This is the question that outperforms.
My lack of fear, powered by obsessive research, may lead to losing it all in $LMND, or more likely, it will lead to becoming a billionaire.
There is no middle ground as mediocrity is the only outcome I fear, not failure.
I learned this from my parents. They gave up everything society tells us matters, signed a lifetime vow of poverty, and became full-time missionaries. They believe treasure in heaven matters more than treasure on earth and bet everything on being right. I respect them deeply for this. Even if they turned out wrong, I would respect them no less for going all-in.
Their example is perhaps the biggest reason i don't fear losing my earthly treasure. Money's only value is the treasure in heaven God allows me to gather by giving it all up for His glory. From day 1, it's been His money. And if God wants me to glorify Him without money, I'm happy to.
This reminds me of the Parable of the Talents in the Bible, where a master entrusts his servants with varying amounts of money before leaving on a journey. The first two servants take risks, invest what they've been given, and double their master's wealth—earning praise and greater responsibility upon his return. But the third servant, paralyzed by fear of loss, buries his single talent in the ground to play it safe. When the master comes back, he calls this servant "wicked and lazy," takes away even what he had, and casts him out. The story isn't just about money; it's a warning against letting fear stifle potential and a call to boldly use what we've been given, even if it means risking failure. In the same way, hiding behind hedges or half-measures out of "what if" anxiety doesn't honor the opportunities we're handed—whether that's earthly investments or eternal ones. My parents embodied the faithful servants, multiplying their "talents" through radical faith, and it's that mindset that frees me from burying mine.
Failure is a good sign. It means you're challenging yourself. It means you're outside your comfort zone learning. Failure is the ONLY road to outsized impact.
XXXXXX engagements
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