The Unjudged Solitude: Why Choosing Inner Depth Over Social Noise Is Radical Self-Love
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D., unpacks FreeJupiter’s viral article on misunderstood solitude-seekers, blending its insights with intimate stories of friendships that shaped his life’s work.
Through raw audio and transcript, explore how people who “don’t need friends” harness habits like energy conservation, purpose-focused creation, and emotional self-reliance—all while facing societal misjudgment.
Learn why Dr. Alexander calls this a “5-star resort mind” lifestyle, how his late wife Flor embodied benevolent love, and why Earl Nightingale’s “progressive realization of a worthy ideal” defines true success.
Includes the full Galaxy AI-generated transcript and podcast embed.
Listen to “Solo But Whole: How Purpose & Solitude Fuel Meaningful Living (Inspired by FreeJupiter)” on Spreaker.UnEdited Galaxy AI TraanScript
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (00:00)
This article that my longtime friend Amit, Sharabi, shared on Facebook is so good, it’s worth Reading and posting as a podcast, and it’s on this site called free Jupiter. And it’s called habits of people who don’t need any friends but always get misjudged. So amitya, Rabi, he’s a photographer.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (00:30)
I met him when he was Studying photo journalism in Los Angeles, I had recently moved to Los Angeles, and we happen to live right across the hall from each other. He’s an amazing person. And like I could always tell that he enjoyed his solitude, just as I did.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (00:53)
But we always managed to spend hours sitting in each other’s company drinking tea or coffee. And Even I spent more time with him even than my roommate. Kevin Green, who’s also a really great long time friend of mine, one of the few people that I’ve known for as long as and continue to stay in touch with as long as a meat, even though as friends, we don’t need to constantly be You know, in each other’s dm’s are on the phone with each other.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (01:24)
We still have that brotherly love for each other and I meet and Kevin both. Are huge influences on The direction I took for my doctoral thesis and metaphysical sciences. I knew them both at the time when I signed up for the class and it took me 16 years to get it done.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (01:49)
But it was all started by seeds that were planted by those 2 Gentlemen and others another great friend of mine, Christine I, who, you know, we keep a touch with, we were once a couple. But she is now marriage, he has a couple of kids and But you know, everyone small, she’ll send messages to see what’s up. Raul, you know, say hello, to her for her birthday, whatever cause she’s very a special person, one of those rare beings on this planet who is just a being of pure love, and I’m not talking about romantic, though, I mean, she just is a person who is She she, if one of the closest things to a benevolent deity that I I’ve ever known, and I really mean that.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (02:38)
So these people, Kevin Christine amid and Flor. No longer in this physical world, my wife Have really I believe that. All the time that it took to get to to finishing that it all those things needed to happen.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (03:00)
I just rewatched the film arrival last night. And it reminded me of how much exactly how parallel that was with my own life and my experience with Flor with Flor Elizabeth CarrascoI knew Very early on, that She would dead out of my life because she would die. And but I still chose to experience her in my life, because it’s worth it.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (03:36)
That’s really, if you look at the movie arrival, that was what I got from people might have different perspectives, but it wasn’t about the aliens and the linguistics and the physics. It was about Even though we know that We can lose that and whom we love the most. It’s still worth it to experience that.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (03:59)
So I’ve chatted on for 4 minutes here about that, but it’s very important. This article on free Jupiter called the habits of people who don’t need any friends but always get misjudged, I remember it says, don’t need any friends doesn’t mean don’t want sometimes, right? That’s why I name those people.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (04:19)
That’s why named a meat Kevin for Christine, very important people in my life. And And each one of them have contributed greatly, my understanding of success, which I really live by the definition of success that Earl Nightingale lay down in his 1956 recording, called the stranger’s secret. Which is that success is the progressive realisation of a worthy ideal, and that is actually, in the I haven’t even I’ve only gotten to the third point in this article, but I know that it’s worth reading, and that’s part of the vibe that I’m getting from them.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (05:02)
All right, so again, on free jupiter.com. This is called habits of people who don’t need any friends but always get misjudged. And there’s there’s a caption.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (05:14)
There’s a photo here which is great, and it’s the silhouette of a woman to black and wait for photo, and she’s walking down this long road, it’s a beautiful image, and the caption says these are the people who don’t need a buzzing phone or a packed social calendar to feel a whole Any images from preeppic, which is where the the AI assisted authors who write on my websites like exercising your mind.com hypno athletics.com and others, they use that as well as other sites to do their images. So let’s get into this year.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (05:48)
All right again, I’m remember to say the title wartime habits of people who don’t need any friends but always get misjudged. Let’s get one thing straight from the start being alone. Isn’t the same thing as being lonely?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (06:03)
In a world that practically worships, social media followers, group selfies and the art of being seen, there’s something quietly radical about someone who genuinely enjoys their own company. These are the people who don’t need a buzzing phone or a packed social calendar to feel whole They don’t ghost their friends out of spite. Nor are they socially anxious Misfits, hiding under blankets.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (06:33)
They’re just wire differently, and yet, because this is so against the green, they often get pegged as weird, arrogant or call But let’s zoom in a little closer, what really sets these individuals apart. Why do they seem perfectly fine? Even flourishing without traditional friendships?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (06:56)
And what’s going on in that mysterious inner world of theirs? Here are 8 deep-rooted habits, shared by people who thrive solo, not because they’re incapable of friendship. But because they found another way to live, love and grow, and so I decided I’m going to post this before I continue, I’m gonna post this on world reading club.com.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (07:21)
And I’ll put the link to this there as well, of course, as the source every once in a while, this is how world wouldn’t club part of it started online, at least in the podcast, was reading articles mostly from neuroscience news, but periga. Number one. There’s a sore on point number one, their inner world is a wonderland.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (07:46)
Ask someone who enjoy solitude, what they’re thinking, and don’t be surprised if their answer sounds like a philosophical riddle. Their minds are rarely quiet, but not in a chaotic way. It’s more like a well-worn library, where every thought, memory and possibility is carefully catalogued and frequently visit it.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (08:09)
They can spend hours reflecting on conversations replaying events or inventing entire parallel realities. There are often excellent storytellers, idea generators or quiet artists, because their imagination isn’t just a tool. It’s a playground.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (08:27)
Now the paws we can hear just like today. For example, I went to this cafe, I was outside by myself, I had a brief Encounter with one of the baristas in there, when she came out to close up the umbrellas on the outside, so please call bad house coffee by the way, which is a bad house, please in Virginia Beach and but most of the time, I was out there I was just recording a reading of my thesis for my podcast also on world reading club and then After that, I, you know, I closed the umbrella myself and tied it up because, you know, I was there for a couple of minutes after they close and then I went down the street moved my car a little Waves down the road where there are some trees and some shade pulled out of stool that I specifically bought from Walmart so that I could play my guitar on anywhere.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (09:16)
And have a comfortable seat and a shot in the shade of a tree, and if played the guitar but myself, Noel was out there on the street, just me, and that’s what I was doing. What I was enjoying and you know, what was really amazing was I noticed an improvement am I playing, and there was like an automatic rhythm that my hand took over, that was completely different from my voice. It’s just, it’s just amazing.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (09:41)
This that’s why this article You know, a meat post and dishes isn’t post a whole lot of stuff like this, but this is it’s spot on, let me continue. Let me continue. This rich mental landscape means they never really feel bored.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (09:56)
I gotta comment on that again. That’s the thing people talking me all the time it. And so you get bored it.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (10:02)
And no I don’t get bored? And I like us a line that I say, and it’s not, I’m not trying to insult anyone, but I just like that, it’s it’s very potent, so I say, only boring people get bored. I don’t get bored.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (10:13)
Cause, I’m not boring to myself. Okay. So continue continuing this rich rich mental landscape means they never really feel bored.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (10:23)
A silent room becomes an opportunity, not avoid, and because they derived so much satisfaction from this inner world, they’re less reliant on outside noise or validation. Quirky, truth. They might come off as in their own heads, but to them.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (10:42)
That head is a 5 star resort with a view. 2, they treat their energy, like a rare currency. You know that feeling when you leave a social event and your brain feels like overcooked spaghetti, these people really know that feeling and they planned their lives around, avoiding it for them, socialising, even with people, they like, can be like spending from a limited energy budget.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (11:19)
It’s not that they dislike others. It’s that their emotional battery drains faster in crowds, small talk or environments that feel overstimulating. They tend to carefully choose who what and when they engage with others, even casual interactions like answering a text or making small talk at the grocery store are done with intention.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (11:40)
It’s not aloofness, it’s self-preservation. Yeah, and this is one of the reasons why I also a meat and I Kevin, and I floor and I Christine, and I could all spend hours and hours talking to each other, because it wasn’t small talk, it wasn’t just I don’t know again. Some people might feel like it’s it’s Putting them down, but we’re not the same, we don’t The thing is I remember people trying to criticise me, say, why does everything always have to be so grand with you?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (12:12)
It’s not it’s just that’s just really how I am all the time. That’s just that’s where my mind is that that’s where my friends that I mentioned here. For Christine, Kevin and a meat that’s where we’re at.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (12:28)
It’s just that’s just the way it is. Real talk, I’m continuing out real talk, think of them as emotional introverts, with a strong firewall, it’s not personal, it’s banned width management. 3, this is one of my favourites, and this is actually this is where I got to where I decided that I needed to read this and record as a podcast with my own commentary as you can hear by the way, but this is this is great.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (12:53)
So 3 And I even wrote a comment on a meets. Post of this where I simply put purpose is greater, you know, put the > popularity. They’re 3.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (13:07)
They’re fueled by purpose, not popularity. Scroll through social media and it’s easy to get the impression that successful life includes a large group of friends, constant meet ups and endless, shared brunch photos, but for people who thrive without traditional friendships, the measure of a good life looks very different. They’re driven by projects passions and ideas instead of worrying, or instead of wondering, who’s hanging out with them, they’re more likely to be experimenting with a new hobby, working on a passion project or simply diving into a rabbit hole of research that vaccinates them just that how I mean and you know, I gotta It meets at the same thing on his post.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (13:55)
This is this is what’s really amazing about this is that the words you put on them were so few, but it’s exactly exactly what he wrote finally someone else who gets the idea by every word. That’s what he put. It’s exactly spot on finally, someone else who gets the idea by every word.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (14:17)
I mean. That, I mean, that that’s that’s when I’m reading this, I just wonder it’s amazing. Also, they’re driven so continuing they’re driven by projects, passions and ideas instead of wondering who’s hanging out with them, they’re more likely to be experimenting with a new hobby, working on a passion project or simply diving into a rabbit hole of research that fascinates them.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (14:43)
These are the folks who will spend a week redesigning their workspace, just for the vibe or writing a poem, they’ll never show anyone the sense of flow and fulfilment. They get from these moments outweighs the thrill of social popularity. Big picture?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (15:01)
They may not chase cloud, but they’re building something that matters that matters to them. That’s their fuel. Self-reliance isn’t just a skill, it’s a lifetime, it’s a lifestyle And by the way, I can already tell by now that just like how I do this article was put forth by someone who Who understood this very well and then edited it?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (15:30)
It edited it with AI which is often what I do as I speak, my own voices like I’m doing right now with this recording, and then I’ll have the Transcript and summarised and now feed that a deep sea you can have deep create a title, a description and the tags, and everything like that. After I either, I read or I have stream-of-consciousness, spoken about a podcast. Whatever idea was that on my mind at the time and then I’ll have the AI.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (16:02)
Help me to package it altogether. But anyway, all right. So again, number 4, self-reliance.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (16:10)
Isn’t just a skill. It’s a lifestyle people who live without a strong social circle, develop a kind of internal tool kit, most others don’t even realise exists when something goes wrong. Their first instinct isn’t to call a friend.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (16:27)
It’s to troubleshoot research journal and figure it out themselves. I mean. That’s the other day.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (16:36)
I cut my finger really bad with a knife doing a leather project. And I mean, it took a huge chunk of skin was just flapping off, and I didn’t scream. Yowl, just I thought a moment, I was like, do it, this looks like something that needs to get stitches, it’s going to leave a scars, there’s a big piece of skin hanging.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (16:56)
Out there it was on my left hand am I gonna be able to play my guitar? But that very same day, I played my guitar. I simply went and bought some band-aids and bandages poured lavender oil, and I’m a crazy person, and that’s when people think But I alternated putting on bandages and taking off it, it’s it’s been bleeding on and off here in their days, but it’s healing, and I’ve been able to clean my guitar 1 day I spent like 4 hours playing my guitar and blood was dripping down my hand but it wasn’t so much that I was dizzy or anything.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (17:31)
It I just knew to do I don’t know that’s getting a little bit too gory in the literal sense of the word, but for some reason, that’s, we came to my mind there, okay. So Troubleshoot research, drond, figured out themselves and I’ve had cuts before that, I know that they heal well on their own, as long as I as I clean it and let it get some air so it can breathe so that the blood walk clot and dry on it and start the wound healing. Process by itself.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (17:59)
All right. So continuing over time, this builds resilience, then okay, I got to say, some of the tube, don’t do that people. You know, with your cuts and stuff like that, unless you know what you’re doing, this is probably gonna leave a weird scar on the knuckle of my middle finger of my left hand but I’m not concerned about scars.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (18:22)
So some people might be, you might have some part of your body, or something that this happens, you don’t want to do that you want to go get your stitches that you don’t have some weird looking scar on your body. I’m not concerned about those kind of things, and my hand is able. To fully function didn’t cut a muscle or a nerve or a blood vessel, major blood vests, or anything like that?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (18:40)
So Anyway, that’s there’s that you really need to Take care your stuff, go to your doctor do that stuff like that I’m just, I’m again, I’m just wired differently that way. So but I just want to make that clear I’ve data, I don’t recommend that other people do that, if it’s not something that you’re, you’re accustomed to, as I am, all my whole life. Doing stuff like this right?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (19:03)
So continuing over time, this builds resilience, they know how to comfort themselves after disappointment. How to make decisions without constant circuit opinions and how to motivate themselves through hard seasons? It’s not always easy, but it’s incredibly empowering.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (19:22)
Quiet power They’re like emotional engineers, always tweaking maintaining and upgrading their mental systems. 5 They’re patient focused and unbothered by form Instant gratification is everywhere, likes swipes, replies delivery in 50 minutes or less, but the solo thrivors are playing a completely different game. They’re often good at resisting distractions and holding off on shallow pleasures.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (19:55)
If it means working toward something more meaningful, this might look like skipping a party to continue writing a novel that no one’s read yet, or spending the weekend deep in, they do it yourself project instead of social hopping. And guess what they rarely feel like they’re missing out if anything they’re relieved, they know that lasting fulfilment comes from things built slowly and intentionally, I mean, this, he’s, we was right man. This is so spot on again, what he wrote was finally someone else who gets the idea by every word I mean.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (20:32)
It’s daddy, I mean, thank you for sharing that on your Facebook, dude, it’s incredible. It remind me the other day I ran into the general manager of of a one lay fitness red Mel, where I have a membership, I rarely go, but Um Liz car, right? She amazing woman, friends of my sister.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (20:57)
I actually worked there for a little while Liz is an amazing person, but a ran into her had at a Food Lion the other day and just for a few minutes, I saw her. And I said, oh, yeah, this is, you know, I just I’m a late Boomer, but I finished my p. H.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (21:12)
D. And she just looked at me, she says, she says, you know, that’s what you do. You just move in silence, you know, I remember specifically those words, she said, moving in silence using that’s how you do it, you move in silence, which, of course, I don’t know exactly what she’s thinking.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (21:27)
But probably because nobody knew About it until it was finished, you know, and I started posting about it, and reading, you know, tons of people have no idea. Because that’s not what it’s about. I mean, if you look at my Facebook page, for example, you’ll see that what I post is 99.999% of stuff that I’m interested in, it’s like my notebook or things that I’m actually doing and because I’m just, I’m just always doing something.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (21:59)
That I enjoy, so continuing, all right, this is 22 minutes now. It doesn’t matter. This is just really great.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (22:06)
This is This is worth me reading through all of this. It’s like a really great kind of echo chamber. It’s a Ruth, this is the kind of like a chamber that I like to be, and that this someone else really does get it.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (22:20)
I knew a meat, always got it. Some right continuing discipline, decoded their lifestyle isn’t about avoiding fun. It’s about choosing what kind of joy is worth their time.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (22:33)
I mean, that is just so spot on It’s like the reason why I’m completely street edge. Because unless you consider Cat coffee and caffeine mate, I like, I like caffeine, coffee and adrenaline working out that kind of stuff. So But because being drunk being high, all the other stuff that I could possibly be doing is just, it takes too much too long to recover and for me, to be in my own mind, doing the things that I want you some other people can function that way, I think at it, but it doesn’t work for me.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (23:10)
It always reminds me of that passage in the Bible that says, you know, you cannot serve 2 masters. One cannot Sort of God, mahman, or something like that, all right, okay. So 6, they curate relationships like rare art.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (23:27)
Instead of collecting people like social trophies, these individuals are incredibly selective about who gets access to their world, their relationships when they do exist, are based on depth honesty and mutual understanding. They don’t need 10 friends who half listen, they’d rather have one person who gets them or none at all, if no one fits that description at the moment, and this is just This is almost like my mind is being red on here. Continuing this might be hard to understand for those who equate friendship with quantity, but for them, silence is better than small talk, oh, my God, I mean, every line of this thing is disincredible, it Continuing solitude is preferable to fake smiles, and if companionship doesn’t add peace, it’s simply not invited.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (24:26)
No clutter zone, their emotional space is sacred and they keep it clean. 7, they notice things others don’t When you’re not constantly distracted by group dynamics or endless chatting, you start to pay closer attention to the world around you, people who spend a lot of time alone often develop a sharp eye for detail and not just physical details, but emotional ones too, this is so true. Continuing they might notice the tension behind someone’s smile, the change in a friend’s texting pattern or the subtle shift in someone’s energy, during a conversation, they read people without trying to they observe digest and remember.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (25:14)
This makes them great artists, analysts, writers, or impats, though they may never call themselves that their radar is just finely tuned, thanks to years of quiet observation. They’re hidden gift, emotional x, ray vision. 8.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (25:35)
They feel whole even without a social mirror. Perhaps the biggest misunderstanding is this, you must be so lonely. But that’s often not true.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (25:49)
Many of these people feel more at peace, without the constant need to perform socially, they know what they love, they pursue it, they don’t need likes comments or company to feel seen. And when they do feel something big grief, joy nostalgia, they express it through channels that feel natural to them. Art journally, nature walks music or even just thinking, deeply in silence.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (26:19)
This is wow. They’ve made peace with the quiet, and in doing so, they’ve tapped into something a lot of people never find inner fulfilment. The truth bomb, feeling scene isn’t always about who is watching.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (26:37)
It’s about whether you’re looking inward. The bigger picture? They’re not broken, just built differently.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (26:48)
Let’s be clear. This lifestyle isn’t better or worse. It’s just different, and for many, it works beautifully.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (26:58)
And that, and that’s exactly, you know, when I was attempting to see before, is not putting anybody down, I’m, we’re not better, right, it’s just different. This is just how I need to be is how we need to be. Continuing our culture tends to prize extrovertion group photos and busy schedules.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (27:19)
So anyone who opts out of that rhythm can seem strange, but solitude isn’t a red flag. It’s just another flavour of contentment. These solo drivers often operate with more clarity, focus and emotional stability, then many of their socially saturated peers.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (27:40)
They’re not missing something, they’ve just found something else, autonomy, inner peace and a connection to self that doesn’t require external, applause. So if you recognise yourself in this don’t panic, don’t second-guess, and definitely don’t let others convince you that your quiet life is a sad one, you’re not broken. You’re not lonely, you’re not doing life wrong.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (28:10)
You’re just navigating the world on your own terms with depth intention and a kind of magic that most people will never understand until they slow down and try it, and that that’s something to be proud of. And it looks like, uh here found I didn’t see the author in the beginning. What’s her name up there?
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (28:34)
Yeah, it was so this was published by Sarah avey, July 17th 2025 for just yesterday. And let’s take a look at Sarah Avi. Avi.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (28:47)
Let’s see what it says about her as I will buy you here for her at the end. So Sarah Abby is one of the authors behind free jupiter.com where Science News. Word wasus, give me we’re Science News and the wonderfully weird converge combining cosmic curiosity with a playful approach.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (29:08)
She demystifies universe, while guiding readers through the latest tech trends and space mystery go I felt at my Alex looks like I’m gonna have to be following this year. There’s a free Jupiter, I had no idea about this before, but this is it’s just my sort of thing as well. That seems like she is using the same tools and has a similar Passion stream of my own, that’s pretty cool.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (29:34)
All right, that’s from free jupiter.com again, it’s call habits of people who don’t need any friends but always get misjudged and wanted to just give a big shutter and thank you to all those amazing people who I just named is just a handful of them. My beloved floor Elizabeth Rasco I dream about you everyday and every night. Enter Christine to Kevin and to meet you.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (30:03)
All are great influences in my life and are You’re the fuel to my fire, even though you don’t hear from me every day and we don’t interact all the time. I love all of you. And I really appreciate everything that you you share with me in life.
Dr. Hakeem Ali-Bocas Alexander, Ph.D. (30:25)
So I am doctor Hakim Ali book as Alexander. I’m reading this for world reading club.com. Thank you a meat for posting this on Facebook and sharing it And until next time
end transcript
UnEdited Galaxy AI Summary:
Reflections on Friendship and Influence
- Amit, Kevin, and Christine are important figures who greatly influenced the direction of a doctoral thesis.
- These individuals, including Flor, have contributed significantly to understanding success.
- The essence of success lies in the progressive realization of a worthy ideal.
Habits of Self-Reliant Individuals
- The article ‘Habits of People Who Don’t Need Any Friends but Always Get Misjudged’ explores the characteristics of people who thrive in solitude.
- These individuals possess a rich inner world, manage their energy carefully, and are fueled by purpose rather than popularity.
- They are self-reliant, patient, and curate relationships selectively, valuing depth and honesty.
Inner Fulfillment and Emotional Intelligence
- People who spend time alone often develop a sharp eye for detail and emotional cues, noticing things others miss.
- They feel whole without needing constant social validation, expressing emotions through art, nature, or introspection.
- These individuals have found inner fulfillment and autonomy, connecting with themselves without external applause.