Logo

How are the brains of super geniuses (like Albert Einstein, Sir Isaac Newton, Elon Musk, James Clerk Maxwell & Donald Trump) different from the average person’s brain?

Last Updated: 27.06.2025 01:37

How are the brains of super geniuses (like Albert Einstein, Sir Isaac Newton, Elon Musk, James Clerk Maxwell & Donald Trump) different from the average person’s brain?

* Creative fields (Fine Arts)

Anyone can become great. Without waiting for the right environment, right timing, right connections, right opportunities, and even luck. If you wait for one. You will remain mediocre, average, and normal. That’s for sure!

Do you want the free resources available on the internet?

How is a narcissist likely to handle situations when confronted with hard truths about themselves?

* Athletic fields (Sports)

* Political and social work fields (Governing people, running the state or nation, and solving social issues)

They are not different. They are just humans like us.

What does it mean when you dream that your mother died?

* Business fields (Traditional business, entrepreneurship, management, sales, marketing, real estate, stock investing, and day trading)

* Skills-based fields (Market-driven fields which pays you money to build stuff or provide a service.)

Here is how everyone can do it.

Vero beatae repudiandae excepturi hic quia tenetur.

* Academic fields (Sciences, Commerce, and Humanities.)

Work on these things:

Try to become a self taught superhuman polymath.

Id ea voluptatem rerum temporibus expedita facere.

Here are some brief guidelines.

Have a variety of interests and obsessions.

“Ability to self-educate, self-experiment, and expand yourself at anything like a polymath by using the internet + Extreme focus + Continuous flow state of mind + Confidence + Thinking of risks like a child’s toy while failures don’t shake your brain and heart + Courage + Craziness + Not settling with being normal and embrace being unique and weird + Delusional Optimism + Perseverance + Urgency”.

Buried under 2 kilometers of Antarctic ice, scientists find a 34-million-year-old lost world - The Brighter Side of News

HOW?