Why Getting Old Sucks
4:41
2 ай бұрын
djyes - give me feelings
3:37
2 ай бұрын
djyes - Columbi (Audio)
2:13
3 ай бұрын
djyes - Saxy (Audio)
1:59
3 ай бұрын
djyes - Afro Ray (Audio)
2:12
3 ай бұрын
djyes - Punch (Audio)
1:42
3 ай бұрын
djyes - Fever (Audio)
1:30
3 ай бұрын
Solutions Create Problems
1:49
5 ай бұрын
The Attraction to the Opposite
14:27
What's the Point of Anything
7:42
How to Change Your LIfe
8:18
5 ай бұрын
Embrace Your Regrets
2:21
5 ай бұрын
The Identity Crisis You Need
9:54
The Cost of a Boundary-Free Life
3:10
You Need Help not Hope
5:12
5 ай бұрын
America Sold You A Dream
13:19
5 ай бұрын
Maui, Hawaii in 1 Minute.
0:58
4 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@peac3mak3r87
@peac3mak3r87 2 ай бұрын
Amen
@MirzabekHalmedov
@MirzabekHalmedov 3 ай бұрын
🇹🇲🔥👍
@DoomhauerBTC
@DoomhauerBTC 4 ай бұрын
I hit this realization decades ago and gave up on life entirely. What helped me keep going was realizing that it's exactly what most other people wanted and then learning how to hate and directing that energy towards the hurdles obstructing my goals. They took joy in my suffering, because it made them feel like they were achieving in contrast. Hatred kept me alive and I became successful out of spite. Now after making it, all of my energy is spent being the kind person that I was before and not taking joy in the suffering of those who tripped me up (too easy). My kindness is only given to those that earn it, I'm indifferent to everyone else.
@XanLouisEnt
@XanLouisEnt 4 ай бұрын
Thank you ✨✨✨✨✨11:11
@freespirit-111
@freespirit-111 5 ай бұрын
We try really hard to get out of survival mode, but when we have time and money, we also have to try really hard not to engage in self- destructive habits, always trying to fill the void…. There really is no escape.
@destinylove93
@destinylove93 5 ай бұрын
King Solomon thought everything was vanity. But he also said: ‘Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man’.
@BibleBound333
@BibleBound333 5 ай бұрын
God is the point.
@matthueloose7172
@matthueloose7172 5 ай бұрын
Hell yeah, Dune sounds epic and I wanna read it...!
@thomcarr7021
@thomcarr7021 5 ай бұрын
The "what's the point of.." questions have been around since Man could think. French philosopher Albert Camus did a good job of explaining life as an absurdity. Stop trying to make sense out of something that makes no sense is the first step. Buddhism teaches us that enlightenment comes from accepting everything as it is.
@freespirit-111
@freespirit-111 5 ай бұрын
Yeah, the definition of insanity. We will never figure it out.
@SylvesterMcNuttIII
@SylvesterMcNuttIII 5 ай бұрын
This outfit is clean.... If you are bored I wonder if htat's a bad thing or a good thing? I wonder if we need to get more excitement in your life and if so, how? But then, there's a part of me that's like, "Is boredom bad?" - Now, on the topic of social media brother, I'm over it. I don't even like looking at social media. That's one thing for me that has changed is that I truly do not care what others are doing. Would love to hear your perspective on someone who could care less what others are doing.
@BibleBound333
@BibleBound333 5 ай бұрын
This is "social media" And as far as "NOT caring that others are doing" Sounds alot like what Cain said to God. And the Lord said unto Cain, “Where is Abel thy brother?” And he said, “I know not. Am I my brother’s keeper?” (Genesis 4:9) Are you a child of Cain is the question.
@c_mendes
@c_mendes 5 ай бұрын
The part that it filled the ‘social void’, or ‘fun void’, I can relate to sooo much ❤️ For me the vice wasn’t alcohol, but it rings true all the same
@1594simonsays
@1594simonsays 5 ай бұрын
The west has fallen through subversion. Google yuri bezmenov
@sphumelelecele5595
@sphumelelecele5595 5 ай бұрын
Straightforward, simple guidelines .
@SylvesterMcNuttIII
@SylvesterMcNuttIII 5 ай бұрын
Let's go
@MrStax40
@MrStax40 5 ай бұрын
Don't come to England it's now a twat of a country , it's finished
@Morning404
@Morning404 5 ай бұрын
bro your video is a quite dumb in my opinion no offence. No depth or nuance in your dialogue.
@mysteriousman4966
@mysteriousman4966 5 ай бұрын
cause my parents came from turkey to germany as gastarbeiter back then. i was then born and raised in gerrmany and get that: i only had one german friend in my entire life and that was as a kid. i just dont vibe with german people man. i dont like the culture. my parents came here to earn money and then unfortunately stayed in germany. people are so distant and cold to each other i never got used to that even though i was born in germany. i like warm people you know? i dont know how to say this....umm like people you can hang out with after getting to know them after a couple of days weeks etc. with german people its impossible you have to know them from a childhood. so yeah after my apprenticeship im gonna maybe work 1 to 2 years max and then move i dont know where but i have to or else i have the feeling im gonna lose myself if i havent already.
@williamfrost9910
@williamfrost9910 5 ай бұрын
If you could live in a country where you don't have citizenship and the support that goes along with it and still feel that it's better than your home country, then your home country is definitely not the best. The best times of my life have been spent outside of the country, but I had a pretty good time in California, too. Some people prefer the familiar and some prefer the unfamiliar. Citizenship pulled me back to the US, but I'll go abroad again when I retire and stay as long as is financially possible.
@Imkflow
@Imkflow 5 ай бұрын
I get what you're saying. If it make you happy to say it, so be it. It's not true, though.
@danielxbox28
@danielxbox28 5 ай бұрын
That's very subjective , going to America i thought some of it was depressing. The food was so artificial if you haven't been raised with it , it tastes nasty
@AsterCalibur
@AsterCalibur 5 ай бұрын
I travelled abroad lived most of my time in NZ. At heart you love your home country at the same time you see it's not the same place you loved. Isolation is a benefit and a curse of living in NZ. While I like the security and life feels comfortable. I find it hard to make good friends after being abroad a lot and but making some connections again you have days that old demons will come back in your life. Travelling abroad makes you appreciate home but not appreciate the mindset of some of the people around you.
@michaelrexrode3759
@michaelrexrode3759 5 ай бұрын
It IS the best country, but we need to make it BETTER.
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 5 ай бұрын
If we had M4A here the US would be unquestionably the best country on earth, it would fix alot of our other problems.
@draageel
@draageel 5 ай бұрын
Yeah biden, BUILD BACK BETTER loll
@AtarahStorm
@AtarahStorm 5 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in America. I have held jobs since I was 14 years old. I have worked in Public Service for 30 years. I am currently homeless because my Public Service Pay stub is less than the minimum requirement to rent a studio apartment. The pension I'm promised to get next year is even less. Banks cancelling accounts without reason, GMOs, poison water and soil, lab made meat, too easy to offend people when you can't keep up with neoprnouns, and the women are over the top entitled princesses. I feel betrayed by my Country.
@notsosuavemate
@notsosuavemate 5 ай бұрын
Lucky you being able to work at 14
@DAndyLord
@DAndyLord 5 ай бұрын
What's the problem with GMOs and lab grown meat?
@sci-fi.tsunami
@sci-fi.tsunami 5 ай бұрын
"THE GREATEST COUNTRY ON EARTH" is a BS propaganda tagline. An empty phrase. Just like "LAND OF THE FREE" & "FREE COUNTRY". They have brainwashed you from an early age. Go look up the actual statistics & this country ranks near the bottom. Try being disabled & see how "great" this hellhole truly is. This country runs 100% on GREED, LIES & CORRUPTION. It's supposed to be "WORK TO LIVE". But in this greedy Capitalistic nightmare, it's "LIVE TO WORK!" It's a good thing humans require sleep because if we didn't they would have us working 24-hour shifts 6 or 7 days a week. And we still wouldn't be able to afford the fucking rent.
@Qantz
@Qantz 5 ай бұрын
Best country for you, not the best country in the world. What do you base best in the world with? America ranks nowhere near top.
@matthewramsay1190
@matthewramsay1190 5 ай бұрын
If I were to say the United States is the best country in the world because that's where my family and friends are and that's where I developed my skills, that's fine. But all of those things are incidental. A person from Ghana would say Ghana is the best country because that's where his family and friends are. So you would have to say something qualitative, like the United States is the best because it has the best healthcare, or crime is low, or the people are generally happy, or the weather is fantastic, or something along those lines. Then we could have a discussion about whether it really is the best at that thing. Also, I think just because people come back to the states, doesn't mean they prefer living here or think it's better. There may be better financial opportunities. So you could say that the US is best because it has better financial opportunities.
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 5 ай бұрын
The US is probably the best country on earth to build wealth in, wages and opportunities are very good here, there is very little low level corruption, There is alot of choice in where and how to live, Speech in the US is freer than almost anywhere in the world, The education system is pretty good but it is highly regional, America is probably the least racist and most tolerant country on earth at an institutional level, especially in major cities. These are some of the immediate pros I can think of about the US.
@matthewramsay1190
@matthewramsay1190 5 ай бұрын
@@linuxman7777 I would agree that the US has the best opportunities to build wealth. It also places a lot of value in freedoms, such as freedom of speech, press, and the right to arm yourself, that you’d be hard pressed to find in any other country. America has an unfortunate history of institutionalized racism, with things such as red-lining, that affected where people of color could live and buy homes. Institutions such as the prison system and the police also have a history of over-targeting people of color. So I’m not sure I’d agree with the US having the least amount of institutional racism. That would probably go to a majority black country, like Jamaica or Nigeria. While there are a lot of options on where and how to live in America, your options largely depend on your wealth. But that’s true everywhere so I’d say the US is standard in that regard.
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 5 ай бұрын
@@matthewramsay1190 Nigeria and Jamaica are incredibly racist countries. Not all racism is white on black, you should see how bushmen and pygmies get treated in Africa not even the institutions in the south were that bad. The US at least tries to deal with racism in ways so long as they don't interfere with certain rights and freedoms. The only exception is Freedom of Association, before the Civil rights era, the North had true freedom of association like Japan does today, You could discriminate or integrate and so long as it was between private individuals the state had nothing to say about it. Of course, the South had Jim Crow laws which are also anti-Freedom of association as they are forced discrimination. Today, Civil RIghts laws clearly violate freedom of association and are really just an overcorrection for Jim Crow Laws.
@matthewramsay1190
@matthewramsay1190 5 ай бұрын
As a current US citizen, I can say there are many great things about this country. Unfortunately, the war between the north and south didn’t end racism. Even now, after the civil rights movement with MLK, the US still struggles with the effects of systemic and institutional racism, as evidenced by the things like the high mortality rate for pregnant black women in the healthcare system and the recent Black Lives Matter movement which saw millions of citizens around the country take to the streets. I’m not saying that the US is the worst when it comes to systemic racism, I’m disputing your contention that it is the best country in the world when it comes to that.
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 5 ай бұрын
@@matthewramsay1190 while that is fair, the Black people in America do better than they do almost anywhere in the world except for maybe Europe or Japan. There is still racism in the institutions but that is charicteristic of all countries.
@natanfurman2467
@natanfurman2467 5 ай бұрын
nice room
@rsethi3033
@rsethi3033 5 ай бұрын
Why do you work a job you don't like? Why don't you scratch your ass in public every time it itches? Dumbest fucking video ive seen in a while. They just let anyone show their faces on the algorithm these days lmfao
@aidarosullivan5269
@aidarosullivan5269 5 ай бұрын
Yes, I live in Russia.
@mankymoo
@mankymoo 5 ай бұрын
Most of the reasons people complain are rooted in poverty. It's cute that you like the country you're from. You might even like it better than any other place. But to declare it better than everywhere else is a step beyond, and I think blinds you to the virtues of other places. By putting nations in competition in your mind, and putting yours first, I think you're downplaying the negative aspects of the USA. Your thoughts on travel and emigration show that you're lucky enough to have the ability to choose to move. All americans have that freedom, but not all have that luxury. If you really love the USA, you have to love it, warts and all. You have to understand that in many ways it is the best, and in others it isn't. Loving america is about making up that difference. Doing your part to fix what's broken. Not standing on a pedestal and saying look how great this all is, stop complaining. You seem level headed, but boy is this a bad take
@A_friendwithoutbenefits
@A_friendwithoutbenefits 5 ай бұрын
Nobody can objectively say any country is the greatest or best country on earth, because ‘greatness’ or ‘best’ is so subjective. Different people value some metrics over others. What you mean is, USA is the best country in the world FOR YOU. Doesn’t mean it is the best country in the world.
@BillyTimes-dw7vs
@BillyTimes-dw7vs 5 ай бұрын
Well said now that make sence facts
@ogawasanjuro
@ogawasanjuro 5 ай бұрын
I, as a Black man, have lived in Japan now for over 15 years. I like the fact that I do not have to spend my waking hours worried about when the cops will pull their guns on me AGAIN. In the US it happened multiple times for "driving while Black". I will never go back to the US.
@Tsvna-f8d
@Tsvna-f8d 5 ай бұрын
And were you going to tell us how you’re treated as a curiosity by much of the population and how the Japanese will never consider you as Japanese, no matter how much you integrate into their culture? Or you’re ok with letting other black men learn that the hard way?
@michaelrexrode3759
@michaelrexrode3759 5 ай бұрын
Sorry man, but all foreigners in Japan are subject to profiling and anyone, foreign or Japanese, can be held in jail for up to 23 days, for ANY REASON. There's no habeas corpus in Japan.
@Morning404
@Morning404 5 ай бұрын
@@Tsvna-f8d Use your common sense - Japanese people not fully accepting him is obviously NOT as bad as being HARRASED by racist law enforcement.
@Tsvna-f8d
@Tsvna-f8d 5 ай бұрын
@@Morning404 that would actually be a lot worse. Idk what common sense you’re talking about but I’d much rather deal with a couple of bad cop encounters over my entire life than constantly being marginalized by everyone I interacted with. But wouldn’t they both be a problem that should be talked about? So then why be dishonest and lead others down the wrong path?
@draageel
@draageel 5 ай бұрын
@@Tsvna-f8d I'm white and American and I don't feel any sense of community in America compared to Japan. In Japan, you're welcomed in. Sure, you're not Japanese but at least you're not being screwed every day with lackluster infrastructure and poison food.
@ayzikj6819
@ayzikj6819 5 ай бұрын
These are all just personal perspectives. Just like food, someone's favorite food could be pasta, which doesn't mean this holds true for everybody, because everybody is not the same person.
@sasquatchrosefarts
@sasquatchrosefarts 5 ай бұрын
I've never met anyone in the USA who isn't a zombie. 100 percent. If you don't see it,...... You are one. Born and raised in USA, and lived in or visited a dozen countries. There are no good restaurants in USA because food laws make it too difficult to stock fermented food. There is no restaurant i desire. No movie I want to watch. No sports game I would pay to watch. No house is well built, because the permit department forces poor home design with poor moisture management in the structure.....and overcomplicated electrical. It's hell on earth. We can't get manual transmission cars. It's literal hell on earth. It's time for a flood. I liked Brasil better, when I visited. But sometimes owning a home and having a life makes it too hard to leave. If I could snap my fingers and be there I would. But it doesn't work that way.
@reginaldguitaroguillaume2203
@reginaldguitaroguillaume2203 5 ай бұрын
Good advice!
@edboss36
@edboss36 5 ай бұрын
I’ve realised that you can use the internet to teach yourself university degrees but for much cheaper. The only difference is you have to act as a student and teacher. Computer science for example is using a 1000 year system to teach a 50 year old topic it’s not the best way to
@Amariiiiie
@Amariiiiie 5 ай бұрын
I pray you find the strength to be true to you. I think I’m learning to say No the older I get.
@BlueCollar850
@BlueCollar850 5 ай бұрын
Something people don’t mention or admit is a lot of how a person turns out in life is a direct result of how they were raised, what they were born into and how they were conditioned their whole lives. And also who they know and who mentored them along the way.
@Rain-ec4jj
@Rain-ec4jj 5 ай бұрын
I'm good at being silly is that a skill? Can I make money with that? I wanna do prank call and be silly
@demontrader1222
@demontrader1222 5 ай бұрын
1st law of capitalism. There are no dream entitlements, only hard work and risk taking.
@BlueCollar850
@BlueCollar850 5 ай бұрын
When people say they are successful through “hard work” I’ve always found that to be vague and subjective. Capitalism doesn’t necessarily reward hard work. It rewards ownership of property, stocks and bonds, or a skill that’s in demand. And sometimes it’s plain dumb luck. The capitalists make their money off the hard work of others usually, not always themselves.
@demontrader1222
@demontrader1222 5 ай бұрын
@BlueCollar850 Rubbisĥ. Any old donkey can work brainlessly all day long. But the wealth that pays that donkey is earned via risk and strategising. Investing in stocks may acquire you capital, but talking risks acquires you the nuts and bolts assets of the system. Where workers are employed. Marx largely lived his life on the goodwill of others ie welfare.
@welcometosemeticpalestine
@welcometosemeticpalestine 5 ай бұрын
What we have in the US is not capitalism. R u still sleeping? 😅
@Cole5271
@Cole5271 5 ай бұрын
@@welcometosemeticpalestine who would you say has capatilism if not the biggest free market in the world?
@welcometosemeticpalestine
@welcometosemeticpalestine 5 ай бұрын
@@Cole5271 u must not live in the U.S. I ran away. America is no longer America. Its rules by corruption. Homlessness, crumbling infrastructure, veterans neglected 4 decades, unemployment, banks closing, endless wars, political corruption, rigged elections, fake media, internal strife. America is fudged.
@BillyTimes-dw7vs
@BillyTimes-dw7vs 5 ай бұрын
Great video but living in the Philippines was a game changer for me. Cheap housing, the Philippine pesos is 57php to a US Dollar. Beautiful beaches, and beautiful women who's not worried about are you 6ft tall, 6pack abs and a 6figure income like women are in America your still young and got alot of life left but why waste it in America the country isnt like it use to be . I'm 6mo in America and 6months overseas Great 📹 video 👍.
@jamesrecknor6752
@jamesrecknor6752 5 ай бұрын
It may be more fun in the Philippines, but there are reasons the vast majority of the Filipinos in the USA are in no hurry to go back. We can build a beautiful new house in Mindanao for only 40,000 dollars / two million pesos, but we can earn 10,000 a month in the USA with a small business.
@BillyTimes-dw7vs
@BillyTimes-dw7vs 5 ай бұрын
@jamesrecknor6752 Right i agree but also be buried in debt and having more strokes and heart attacks due to trying to achieve making that $10k a month trust me their starting to wake up and realize is it worth it anymore my next door neighbor is Filipino and told me in 2years he retireing and moveing back to the Philippines 🇵🇭
@SylvesterMcNuttIII
@SylvesterMcNuttIII 5 ай бұрын
This shot is clean. You have me thinking about autonomy and freedom now.
@djyesss
@djyesss 5 ай бұрын
It's a big topic. It looks and feels different to everyone.
@jvirgilio8880
@jvirgilio8880 9 ай бұрын
That's where I'm at. I've had those long runs and then it got cold. I'm on the treadmill but I hate it. I'm looking for that motivation. Great work. Beating yourself is the hardest part
@EmorySeverance
@EmorySeverance 9 ай бұрын
Just buy a bigger hat
@pamelamolina5623
@pamelamolina5623 9 ай бұрын
Slow down and listen
@sandyreed277
@sandyreed277 9 ай бұрын
I wish I knew a way for more to hear you. Don’t give up.
@jameskellum4
@jameskellum4 9 ай бұрын
As someone with ADHD I didn't hear a word you said I just couldn't take my eyes off the fact that you were walking. It's very distracting, be still.
@battletested2934
@battletested2934 9 ай бұрын
Are you walking on a treadmill?
@djyesss
@djyesss 9 ай бұрын
Yes a walking pad under the desk!
@ruthgoldbergives6945
@ruthgoldbergives6945 9 ай бұрын
Amen 🙏🏻 ❤
@ruthgoldbergives6945
@ruthgoldbergives6945 9 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤Sunday January 21, 2024 The Devil's Advocate Sings About The Wonderful Grace of Jesus Wonderful Grace of Jesus, greater than all my sin; How shall my tongue describe it, Where shall its praise begin? Taking away my burden, setting my spirit free; O the Wonderful Grace of Jesus reaches me! Refrain Wonderful the matchless Grace of Jesus, the matchless Grace of Jesus, Deeper than the mighty rolling sea; the rolling sea; Wonderful Grace, all sufficient for me, for even Higher than the mountain, sparkling like a fountain, All sufficient Grace for even me. Broader than the scope of my transgressions, sing it! Greater far than all my sin and shame my sin and shame, O magnify the precious name of Jesus, PRAISE HIS NAME! Wonderful Grace of Jesus, reaching to all the lost; By it I have been pardoned, saved to the uttermost. Chains have been torn asunder, giving me liberty; O the Wonderful Grace of Jesus, reaches me! Refrain Wonderful the matchless Grace of Jesus, the matchless Grace of Jesus, Deeper than the mighty rolling sea; the rolling sea; Wonderful Grace, all sufficient for me, for even me Higher than the mountain, sparkling like a fountain, All sufficient Grace for even me. Broader than the scope of my transgressions, sing it! Greater far than all my sin and shame my sin and shame, O magnify the precious name of Jesus, PRAISE HIS NAME! Wonderful Grace of Jesus, reaching the most defiled; By its transforming power, Making me God's dear child, Purchasing peace and Heaven, for all eternity; And the Wonderful Grace of Jesus, reaches me! Refrain Wonderful the matchless Grace of Jesus, the matchless Grace of Jesus, Deeper than the mighty rolling sea; the rolling sea; Wonderful Grace, all sufficient for me, for even me Higher than the mountain, sparkling like a fountain, All sufficient Grace for even me. Broader than the scope of my transgressions, sing it! Greater far than all my sin and shame my sin and shame, O magnify the precious name of Jesus, PRAISE HIS NAME! Source: LyricFind Songwriters: H. Lillenas / Lari Goss Wonderful Grace of Jesus lyrics © Hope Publishing