Elon often says he wants to solve problems that matter — not miserable problems, but consequential ones.
He’s right.
Miserable problems are everywhere. They fill the real economy, the offices, the bureaucracies, the politics, the meetings that lead nowhere. They also fill most real-world transactions — the friction, deceit, and small cruelties that power day-to-day commerce.
Landlords lying to tenants. Disgruntled customers taking it out on service workers. Corporations quietly putting things in our food and products that make us sick. Managers defending inefficiency. Politicians selling empathy for votes. Sweatshops.
The real economy is saturated with misery masquerading as productivity — a machine that runs on resentment, paperwork, and entropy.
Miserable problems feed on human pettiness.
They generate hierarchy instead of progress.
They make people smaller.
But problems of consequence are different. They expand the world. They deal in physics, not politicking — in entropy, not ego.
Most people look at markets and see something financial, maybe even something shallow. They see speculation, prediction, or luck.
I create the opposite: I create resolution.
The market is the largest unresolved system on Earth — trillions of dollars of energy moving through incomplete equations every second. Solving for that resolution, bringing coherence where there was noise, is not a miserable problem. It’s a consequential one.
The World’s Biggest Problem Is Resolution
Every field, every system, every human endeavor suffers from the same disease: unresolved states.
I work to escape variance.
I convert uncertainty into presence.
Governed by the same physics: energy has to go somewhere, and so does consequence.
And unlike the real economy — where every layer of inefficiency hides behind titles and committees — the market is brutally honest.
It rewards precision.
It punishes delusion.
It forces you to confront whether your method works down to the second.
That’s what makes it one of the few remaining places where truth still has consequence.
What I do isn’t about finance in the conventional sense. It’s about authorship: bringing human consciousness back into a field that’s been automated into abstraction. It’s about agency — the ability to act, to collapse uncertainty, to create clarity where none existed.
Can market entropy be reversed?
Authorship and presence address the deepest fear about where our world is heading — the great gaslight of AI.
This is the future Musk talks about, just approached from a different axis.
He builds engines that reach the stars.
I build systems that reach understanding.
Both aim to prove that human presence still matters — that consciousness can still shape reality at scale.
And maybe that’s the real bridge between technology and humanity:
To show that solving the biggest problems doesn’t have to make you miserable.




