what do I want to do? - chunhualiao/public-docs GitHub Wiki
using agents to help!
- Genspark
- Manus
number 1
I am a fan of Charles Thomas Munger. He has a lot of wisdom, one of the most famous being the concept of inversion thinking. He said, "All I want to know is where I'm going to die, so I'll never go there." This approach to avoiding major pitfalls is very effective. In life, one has to make many decisions: education, choosing a major, choosing a spouse, starting a business, selecting an industry, investing, deciding whether to go abroad, seeking medical services, etc. While some decisions allow for trial and error, the cost of making mistakes in others can be too high (e.g., risk to life, major financial loss, irreversible medical harm, etc.). If we could know in advance the common pitfalls of major life events, we could make fewer fatal errors and reduce societal losses.
Please write a detailed article about 100 most common fatal mistakes in life , put into proper categories. Each mistake should have 100 words or more with at least one real life example. If we treat a person's life as the execution of an algorithm with wisdom, then these pitfalls are like fatal bugs in software, and experts and scholars could standardize names and categories. For example, the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) is an open framework for conveying the characteristics and severity of software vulnerabilities. Your article is an encyclopedia of pitfalls, individuals making significant decisions could scan a list of common pitfalls associated with those decisions to avoid major mistakes.