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Avoiding Stupidity Beats Chasing Brilliance
We’re addicted to genius. We obsess over the wunderkind solving quantum equations at nine, the dropout who IPOs from his garage, the hedge fund oracle who posts a return so obscene it looks like a typo. Brilliance is seductive. But it’s also unreliable. And more often than not, it’s irrelevant.
You don’t win by being brilliant. You win by not being stupid.
It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to blow up a company, a career, a fortune. It takes carelessness, ego, shortcuts, and wishful thinking.
You don’t need to outwit the market if you don’t dump your life savings into the latest bullshit. You don’t need to be a genius innovator if you’re not tripping over your own ego every step of the way. You don’t have to predict the future if you’re not busy sabotaging the present.
People don’t fail because they lack genius. They fail because they ignore obvious risks. Because they gamble instead of plan. Because they chase dopamine hits and call it strategy. Because they overcomplicate, overpromise, and overreact. Because they know better and still touch the stove.
The edge isn’t brilliance. It’s discipline. Humility. Boredom. It’s knowing that playing defense keeps you in the game longer than trying to score a touchdown every damn play.