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The Enigma

Rodin is a mysterious presence on X — undefined in every metric but defined by an undeniable aura of curiosity. Their profile might be a blank canvas, but it sparks intrigue and invites exploration. A ghost in the machine, yet somehow impossible to ignore.

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Rodin’s profile is like a whispered secret in a stadium — fascinating if you catch it, but most just wonder if anyone’s actually there.

The biggest achievement for Rodin? Managing to stay a topic of mystery with nothing but an undefined profile and an undefined activity.

To embody the power of mystery and the allure of the unknown, encouraging others to find meaning beyond conventional metrics and definitions.

Rodin likely believes that presence is more than numbers and that sometimes, the most profound statements come from what’s left unsaid or unseen.

The strength of this profile lies in its intrigue — it leaves others guessing, which in turn can build curiosity-driven engagement.

Without clear content or metrics, Rodin risks becoming invisible or misunderstood in the crowded social media landscape.

To grow an audience, start sharing glimpses of your unique perspective or insights. Even a few thoughtful tweets can transform your profile from a puzzle into a magnet.

Fun fact: Rodin is a master of absence, proving that sometimes, zero can speak louder than a thousand tweets.

Most engaged tweets of rodin

mar 2 – had the idea mar 4 – 1st cold email burst (50 sent) mar 6 – first reply mar 10 – sent 325 more mar 15 – built first scraper mar 21 – pivoted hard mar 22 – @Alfred_Lin replied. account blew up mar 23 – picked a name mar 30 – domain bought, name locked apr 2 – built a working web scraper apr 11 – first VC call booked apr 22 – call happens apr 23 – pivoted everything may 2 – personal site live with book a call link may 3 – inbound investor call booked may 4 – @mcuban responded to cold email may 5 – referred to a top-tier VC may 8 – founder of newsletter offered distro may 10 – VC legend call booked (june 5) You don't need a co-founder. You need momentum.

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It always gets harder at the end. No matter what the task is. At 15 years old, I'm about to launch my first company in a few days. The first few months, I was on fire. I felt unstoppable. Then something hit me. It just felt impossible to be productive. I didn't open work for nearly a month straight. If I did, I'd close it and go to reels for an hour. But in the past few weeks, I realized how being young is truly something special. You have so much time (unlike what some say), but you don't have time to waste. But just because you aren't working doesn't mean you're wasting time. If you're out with your family in Europe and enjoying it, you didn't waste time. That removed a lot of my guilt, and now, I've been (almost) back to working harder than ever. But now, in the final few stages, pushing the final features, tweaking the final few words of the launch plan, is where I've experienced another period of friction. I feel that we, as humans, tend to overcomplicate things the closer we get to finishing, for whatever reason. I'll try to convince myself I need more features, or I get more stressed over a mistake that isn't that major. The main thing I've taken away from this is the importance of the fascinating concept known as perspective. Years ago, I read something online that was about golf. It presented a drill where golfers had to put 4 balls from 30 ft away, and get them all within 2 feet of the hole. The majority of them could easily get the first 3 balls within the 2 feet, but once it came to the last ball, a lot of them choked and missed it (badly). When they took a different group of golfers, and had them do the exact same drill with 5 balls, the golfers easily made the first 4 balls, and missed the last ball. Same thing with 3 balls, 6 balls, etc. The task never actually changed. What changed was the weight people decided to put on it (and that's what allowed them to perform at their true potential). That’s exactly how I’ve felt these past few days. The work isn’t harder, the code isn’t longer, the words aren’t heavier. It’s that I know I’m close, so my brain decides to throw pressure on top of it. Perspective is realizing the last ball is the same as the first. Finishing isn’t a different skill than starting. And that’s what I’m trying to remember as I close this chapter: hit the ball the same way I did the first three.

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