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Overview

  • 54 references 15 Confirmed & Positive
  • Fluent in Albanian, English; learning Spanish
  • 26, Male
  • Member since 2019
  • No occupation listed
  • No education listed
  • No hometown listed
  • Profile 100% complete

About Me

Hi understand if you can:

Know that success is lagging feedback—trust the process even when results are invisible.
Embrace internal scorecards—build a life based on your values, not others' approval.
Sharpen self-awareness by asking yourself hard questions daily.
Use environments and cues to shape identity—design your surroundings for who you want to become.
Channel your pain, stress, or jealousy into discipline and action.
Invest heavily in mentorship—it’s the ultimate shortcut to success.
Build a brand rooted in integrity and service.
Be a lifelong student—even billionaires stay teachable.
Develop grit—getting back up is what separates good from phenomenal.
Focus on solving expensive problems for high-paying clients.
Simplify complexity—those who master simplicity win.
Build your life around mentorship, mission, and massive action.
Invest in vertical integration—own more of the pipeline, not just the product.
Detach your self-worth from income and attach it to impact.
Stay humble, stay useful, and never stop learning—curiosity is your superpower.
Believe in yourself so deeply that even failure strengthens your identity.
Be a warrior with a rough exterior but a kind, understanding heart.
Love unconditionally—even the people who seek to harm you.
Help others not for reward, but because it’s what people do.
Don't pretend to be strong—become it through repeated effort.
Transcend ego by first completing it—only then can it be released.
Celebrate progress, endure storms, and always keep moving forward.
The warrior believes in preparation, presence, and peace.
Start working as soon as possible after waking up—reduce time to action.
Review and refine your priorities—work on the right things.
Practice aggressive self-ownership and gratitude together.
Observe your body language, tone, and posture—your cues shape outcomes.
Avoid digital distractions—schedule your dopamine.
Keep a personal scoreboard—track output, not effort.
Stay consistent—consistency beats brilliance in the long run.
Spend time visualizing and manifesting what you want.
Reinvest profits—don’t upgrade your lifestyle too fast.
Sleep well—performance declines with chronic fatigue.
Focus on inputs you can control, not just outcome goals.
Practice needs analysis—understand what others want before offering anything.
Create value every day, even when nobody's watching.
Review your long-term vision and recalibrate your actions accordingly.
Sell yourself daily—your attitude, clarity, and energy matter more than you think.
Go to war with yourself every day. Self-discipline and inner conflict sharpen your strength.
Express yourself with action, not excessive talk.
Smile when it feels right. Eat, sleep, love, and train with intensity and joy.
Forgive and stay true to your intentions.
Understand yourself before trying to understand others.
Apply volume over time—consistency always beats one-off brilliance.
Build inner strength by embracing discomfort and taking responsibility.
Refuse to play the victim—regain control through accountability.
Take bold action despite fear—most people lose because they hesitate.
Let go of perfectionism; speed and learning matter more early on.
Understand that rejection, failure, and loneliness are part of the process.
Build assets, not just income—invest in real estate or revenue-generating businesses.
Raise your self-awareness and get around people further ahead than you.
Outsource what you're not great at—leverage team and systems.
Use debt wisely: borrowing can be a growth tool, not a burden.
Stop partying and wasting time—focus on one vision and execute.
Network relentlessly—relationships lead to deals, opportunities, and growth.
Study leverage: use people, capital, and media to scale your efforts beyond your time.
Obsess over solving big problems—the bigger the problem, the bigger the opportunity.
Use mentorship as a shortcut to success; learn from those who’ve done it before.
Learn how to raise capital by selling a big vision and making it their idea to invest.
Use the internet to expose yourself to possibilities bigger than your environment allows.
Focus on building your personal brand—it builds trust and opens doors.
Observe and learn from others who have succeeded—steal strategies, adapt them, and grow.
Sharpen your skills daily and prepare beyond necessity. Preparation is key.
Train harder, live fully—don’t do things halfway.
Detach from labels and superficial identities to grow beyond perceived limits.
Forgive easily, judge less, protect more.
Protect yourself to protect others.
This house is not a hostel. Communicate when leaving or returning.
Focus on building high-income skills: communication, persuasion, emotional control.
Reprogram your beliefs—most of them were installed by others.
Position yourself where opportunities can find you—be visible and valuable.
Study the principles of wealth, ownership, and leverage early.
Play the long game—compound progress in one direction.
Get financially literate—know your numbers better than your product.
Train yourself to see value where others see problems.
Get into AI and healthcare—they’re shaping the next economic era.
Always have a plan that can work even when conditions change.
Be ready to pivot and seize deals when downturns hit (grey tsunami opportunity).
Position yourself in industries of exponential growth like AI and biotech.
Always keep cash reserves—opportunities appear during downturns.
Build reputation equity; it compounds like capital but can collapse in seconds.
Find and follow blue oceans—don’t compete where others are already fighting.
Surpass your limits with patience—everything happening now is preparing you for something greater.
Face your darkness; do not hide in comfort. Growth comes from hardship.
Live a life worthy of peace—so your legacy leaves no regrets.
Understand others only after understanding yourself deeply.
Balance both sides of your nature: light and dark.
Life’s meaning lies in perishing while pursuing the impossible.
Take extreme ownership: Blaming others gives away your power; reclaim it by saying 'my fault.'
Success doesn't come from talent alone but from volume and persistence—do the reps.
Stop seeking perfect conditions; action creates momentum.
Root for yourself when no one else will—self-belief is essential in lonely stages.
Embrace boredom and sacrifice now for long-term gains.
Hardship builds character; an easy life leads to mediocrity.
Work when no one is watching—your discipline must not depend on external validation.
Fear is a signal of growth; leaning into it separates achievers from spectators.
The best art and work comes when made for yourself, not for external validation.
Don't get trapped in procrastination disguised as perfectionism.
Volume negates luck—do enough work and luck will follow.
Focus on internal scorecards, not external opinions.
Pain is not a problem—it's a sign of being alive and on the path.
Build self-awareness through reflection and action.
Seek solitude and resist crowd-think—greatness often comes alone.
The path of growth includes long lag times—don't expect immediate results.
Be someone who interprets anxiety as excitement—reframe your emotions.
Work 'open to goal': Stay at it until you hit your mark, no matter how long it takes.
Be a first liker—liking others makes you likable.
Build confidence through body language, communication, and self-awareness.
Develop people skills—they are essential for success in every area of life.
Act the part but don't lose yourself—know when you’re performing and when you’re authentic.
Don't take advice from those whose life you wouldn't want.
Use your environment to your advantage—change it to change habits.
Practice deep focus—work smart and hard with maximum leverage.
Your beliefs define your boundaries—question and raise your standards.
Execution is everything; ideas are cheap without action.
The most successful people have a strong sense of superiority, insecurity, and impulse control.
You don’t need to start from scratch—buying existing businesses is often smarter.
Avoid a broke mindset. Even in poverty, thinking beyond your circumstances is a weapon.
The best time to buy is when others are selling—opportunity is in the downturns.
You are only limited by what you’ve been exposed to—surroundings shape beliefs.
Don’t let fear-based advice from loved ones stop you—move forward anyway.
Even billionaires remain practical and grounded—integrity and value matter most.
Being rich starts with believing it’s possible and backing it with relentless execution.
Success is rarely linear—most highly successful people went broke before they got rich.
Self-belief is more important than circumstances; nearly all successful entrepreneurs believed they could rebuild if everything was taken from them.
Surrounding yourself with smarter people and delegating is a common trait among billionaires.
You don't need to know everything—learn to ask better questions and seek help from mentors.
Relationships matter more than resumes—business success often comes from who you know, not just what you know.
Think in decades, not days—build with long-term vision instead of chasing short-term wins.
Faith, gratitude, and integrity are non-negotiable values for the ultra-successful.
Mistakes and failure are part of the journey; don’t fear them, learn from them.
The journey teaches that even in suffering and hardship, transformation and growth are possible.
The goblins, once human, remind us that greed and shame can strip one of their humanity and purpose.
Demons reflect the dangers of indulgence and lack of self-awareness—destroying rather than building.
A warrior grows not by ease, but by constantly facing discomfort, solitude, and internal challenge.
Seth’s life illustrates how childhood hardships can birth deep self-awareness and resilience.
True love and peace come from within, not from external validation or pleasure.
Every challenge faced is a divine response to our request to become stronger.
Never break your word. If you do, discipline yourself.
You will only get rich if you keep going when no one is clapping for you.
Most people are stopped by imaginary critics in their head, not real ones.
The hardest part of the journey is before you see any feedback or results.
Hard work is not the means to the goal—it is the goal.
Burnout often isn’t real burnout—it’s emotional mislabeling from not reframing reality.
True ownership begins with saying: my fault. That’s when growth starts.
Say no when you mean no—don’t lie to yourself or others just to avoid discomfort.
Shrink the time between having a thought and acting on it. Power lives there.
Separate how you feel from what you need to do.
Repetition builds confidence—do it so many times you’re bored.
Authenticity means what you think, say, and do are aligned—even when no one's watching.
Practice viewing anxiety as excitement to perform at a higher level.
Act like the person who already achieved what you want.
Think in decades, not days—wealthy people always speak in longer time horizons.
Focus on the most leveraged inputs and eliminate distractions ruthlessly.
You gain freedom by working until you never need to do what you hate again.
Work when no one's watching. That’s where your real self is tested.
Root for yourself first—clap before anyone else ever does.
Do the task you’re avoiding first. It’s almost always the bottleneck.
Practice what feels hard—your brain builds muscle doing hard things often.
Track outputs, not just effort. Results matter.
Reframe your story. If you’re in pain, it’s because you’re alive and evolving.
Act like you already are the version of yourself that you're trying to become.
Be the kind of person who works harder when no one sees—not less.
Extend your time horizon and play for legacy, not validation.
Don’t seek motivation—build identity through repetition.

Why I’m on Couchsurfing

I am here to meet, cherish, help, create relationships, build trust, understand, laugh, have a conversation until 4 am, travel with strangers, meet new souls, and share love.

I don’t want to create meaningless relationships with the others, and to let that fade away into the abyss. Let’s make the meeting the most interesting one, finding the best potential of the human species, within you and us together, and find solutions on how to grow from our undiagnosed traumas, thrive upon the human futile.

I am looking for like-minded, or opposite-minded people, who have done the most challenging and have experienced the best experiences ever. I would like to know those people and try to see the world from their perspective.

Interests

I like finding the dislike of things. Find the meaning in the most meaningless argument. Become the rain on a sunny day for one. Spitting the truth on the face of the lost. Find and grow the self, from the traumas it has suppressed.

As we this way can understand. When we meet the irregularities of life, the emotionless reactions of the stoic monk, the way of the breath, becoming the shapeless, no form, one with the surroundings, arrow sharp-minded, focused in the way, with morals and dignity, we thrive and survive the most burdensome challenges that life offers. Because by the time we know, we are.

I like the poetry when I write it, not when I read it from others.
I have this god complex, which I am trying to remove. You can understand it or not, I don't care.

I like the faces of people, especially the ones that have scars, a plenty of history behind them.
I like the weirdness that you surround yourself with, the uncomfortableness, something that makes you itch. I like it because I can find a way to improve that. To improve you.

The laughter, the more unique the better. The plastic laughter is ugly.

The power of the thought is sexy. The warmth and the competence, also.

Dark humor is to accept reality and live with it. It is a must. Laugh to the events.

Of course, it is not about you you, it is about you me. You see? Again not you you.

  • culture
  • traveling
  • business
  • psychology
  • adventure travel
  • people
  • money
  • explore
  • experiences
  • stoicism

Music, Movies, and Books

Music: I would choose to listen to old music, 80 or 90 when they refer to the women as a goddess, when nowadays they objectify it as an object, a slave and people like it? No morals.

Books: psychology, philosophy, poetry, business, spiritualism, life - these would be the best topics.

Movies: Fight Club - No explanation needed.

One Amazing Thing I’ve Done

Defeated depression. Understood that it is in the mind. What stops you in the way, becomes the way.

Teach, Learn, Share

My way of being. Everyone has their own philosophy of life, unique and not related to the others. I believe that sharing those experiences that make you different, helps us (not at all) realize who you are, and even so connect with you more.

I want to learn something about your field of expertise and how you can become non-replaceable with the future artificial intelligence. Also how can I help you?

I want to share the energy with you.

What I Can Share with Hosts

My perspective of the reality. My own truths and beliefs as well, without imposing any danger on changing your views of the world, I will stand and talk to you with a pure heart, and good intentions.

Also, I believe in exchanging energies together. As dumb or as unheard of as it sounds it is a way of living life. It is part of who we are. I will try my best to give you good energy, no voodoo shit. Just good and true ones.

Countries I’ve Visited

Albania, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland

Countries I’ve Lived In

Albania, Hungary, Montenegro, Romania

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