Big Technology Podcast - A Longterm Investor Looks Sudden Death In The Face — With Eric Markowitz
Episode Date: August 28, 2024Eric Markowitz is a partner at Night View Capital and a long-term focused investor. Eric joins Big Technology to discuss his harrowing brush with death and how it transformed his perspective on invest...ing and life. Tune in to hear how a mysterious brain abscess forced Eric to confront his mortality and reevaluate his approach to work, relationships, and long-term thinking. We also cover the importance of quality over quantity, the dangers of stress, and how to sustainably implement life changes after a major health scare. Hit play for a powerful conversation about finding meaning and balance in both personal and professional spheres. --- Enjoying Big Technology Podcast? Please rate us five stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ in your podcast app of choice. For weekly updates on the show, sign up for the pod newsletter on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/6901970121829801984/ Want a discount for Big Technology on Substack? Here’s 40% off for the first year: https://tinyurl.com/bigtechnology Questions? Feedback? Write to: bigtechnologypodcast@gmail.com
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A long-term investor stares death in the face and lives to tell the story.
Today we talk about what happened, what he's learned from it, and how it's changed his perspective on investing in life.
That's coming up right after this.
Welcome to Big Technology Podcast, a show for cool-headed, nuanced conversation of the tech world and beyond.
I think it's going to be a fascinating episode for you, something different as we round out our summer coverage.
I want to bring you the story that Eric Markowitz has to tell. He's a partner at Nightview Capel, which is a long,
term focused investment company and also somebody that I know from journalism circles. I've been a
fan of his work for quite some time. And recently, a story he wrote about a health scare came across
my timeline and just absolutely floored me, had me sort of standing in place for a few moments.
And I thought it was important to get Eric's story to you. And so Eric, I'm so glad to have you.
Welcome to the show. Yeah. Thank you, Alex.
so let's start at the very beginning here what happened to you in early 2023 i mean we can start there
but i think it's actually probably even more practical to start what happened a little bit before that
which was in 2022 um you know i i wrote about it in the piece but for all intents and purposes
that was a fairly healthy you know mid 30s guy married kid working a a job in in finance and
invest in 2020 was a really rough year it's very stressful and towards the later part of
of the year, I think that the stress started to really wear me down. And all of a sudden in like
January 2023, you know, just woke up one day and didn't feel right. I previously kind of been
feeling fine, no major health problems. But the major symptom I was getting, which was very
bizarre, was like an intense vertigo, dizziness, and nausea, which I hadn't experienced before,
you know, if you've ever maybe had a few too many to drink and you're sitting in bed that night
and the room's kind of spinning, you know, that was the feeling.
But it was constant, and I don't really drink.
So it wasn't related to that.
What did you think it was initially, like, when that started happening?
Were you like, I just need to sleep more?
Yeah, I thought it was like maybe some sort of bug.
You know, I told my wife, I was like, I just don't feel right.
I was going to go lay down.
And then it just kind of got worse and worse to the point where I was like projectile vomiting
and pretty intense symptoms.
So went to the hospital.
They kind of initiated stroke protocol.
So did an MRI of my brain.
And the scan, as far as the radiologist read it, came back clean.
So they, you know, the doctors were kind of a little bit confused, but said maybe it's something like an inner ear disorder, BPV.
So, you know, it just got worse.
So it was a constant state of just the room spinning, constant nausea, constant vomiting.
I just couldn't keep food down.
It was very scary, as you can imagine, where you just have this like intense vertigo.
And for anyone who's experienced it, you know, it's very unpleasant.
bordering on terrifying and quite miserable.
So went back to the hospital,
stayed there for two to three days,
I think three days maybe,
and still kind of like no answers.
You know, they gave me fluids.
That was primarily what happened with the hospital
and was checked out.
And the situation was kind of getting worse and worse.
And yet was discharged.
I think with the idea being,
we're not really helping him.
We'll just see if he can get maybe a little bit better on his own.
He's stable right now.
In retrospect, you know, probably should have stayed at the hospital.
Probably should have advocated for that.
But hindsight is 2020, of course.
And again, like that initial, I think the key thing here is the initial scan was read as, you know, no problems with my brain.
Fast forward, you know, a few days, then a couple of weeks.
We live in Fort La Noreen, so we flew back up, which was kind of a harrowing experience.
My father-in-law had to come, you know, I was wheeled onto the plane in a, you know, in a wheelchair.
Couldn't really walk. Any sort of slight movement in my head just triggered like intense nausea, vomiting, vertigo.
Got back to Portland though and went and saw a few more specialists.
Everyone was kind of, you know, just very confused by it. Couldn't really explain it.
I think going back because the initial scan, the radiologist read it as no problems.
You know, at some point, I think this was like February, mid-February of 2023.
So about a month passed.
And at that point, I had lost about 35 pounds in a month.
You know, I was kind of deteriorating, really couldn't get out of bed, couldn't sleep
because any sort of like motion would just trigger intense nausea, you know, quite literally
suffering.
I mean, just really deteriorating.
And I think like, you know, just taking a step back, like this is just like a, it
was just so bizarre because I had been pretty healthy at one to that point.
You know, I hadn't really experienced any sort of like major health crisis.
And for anyone who's gone through it, you know, especially when you have like an answer,
there's, at least there's a path to some sort of treatment.
But for me, because there was this sort of, you know, what in retrospect was a misdiagnosis,
there was no real answer of what I should be doing.
So the main kind of commentary from doctors until that point was just weighed it out.
And maybe it'll get better.
My wife, who, you know, is amazing, who kind of kept me like literally alive during this
period, like just bringing food, just scheduling doctor's appointments, just like literally
getting me through the day, the physical side, also the emotional side, to her credit, really
advocated for a second MRI. So a good friend of mine picked me up, went to the ER to do another
MRI and, you know, came out of the MRI machine. And, you know, it's like the tap you never
want to get. They were like, the radiologist wants to speak with you. So they put me in a little booth.
they hand me a phone. And I guess it's all, it's all done remotely these days. So the doctor on the
line just says, you know, you have to get to the ER right away. You have, and I think the worst use
was a rapidly enhancing lesion in your brain on your cerebellum, which is right, which is your brain
stem. You know, I asked him what it could be. He was kind of hesitant to give answers, but
basically said, you know, it could be a range of things. It could be, you know, brain cancer or brain
tumor. It could be something else, but we don't know. And you posted the scan in the article that
you wrote, I think, and it looks like this sort of grape that's just sitting there in your
brain. Yeah, like right. So if you feel in the back of your head, it's your, your cerebellum,
which is like your little brain. So I think most people know about the left brain, right brain
hemispheres. But there's actually like the much older human part of the brain, which is the
cerebellum, which is kind of like the air traffic control for your brain. I mean, so all visual
inputs going on that go to your cerebellum, your cellarum makes sense of visual inputs and also
vestibular inputs. So your proprioception, your ability,
to get balance in the world.
And yet, it had, like, sprouted this pretty, you know, walnut-sized or large grape-sized
growth right on my brainstem.
So went to the ER.
And, you know, at this point, you know, I saw some neurologists and they kind of said,
yeah, we don't know what this is, but you need to get it out immediately.
The worst-case scenario is it's a glioblastoma, which is brain cancer or brain tumor.
And if it's in your brain, it means it's likely metastasized throughout your body.
and I was told, you know, pretty much like six months, if it was a successful surgery,
that's how much, you know, you can expect to live for.
Alternatively, if it was something like an abscess, some sort of bacterial abscess,
which was extremely rare and in some ways very unlikely, that was more immediately fatal
because if it popped and that the bacteria from the abscess would get out,
it would go directly into my brainstem and mix them with my,
basically the fluid that goes through your spine and, you know, it could be pretty fatal.
Now when you hear this, do you even have the capacity to, like, sit back and be like,
oh, my God, what's happening?
Or are you feeling so bad at this point that the moment sort of washes over you?
Yeah, it's like a little bit of an out-of-body experience.
The real, like, devastation for me was, you know, we had an 18-month-old daughter.
and just like the what hit me was just not being able to be there for her and it wasn't even
guaranteed that you were going to wake up from the surgery that's right and it was unclear at that
point even you know who would do the surgery which was another element with to the story which
didn't didn't put in the piece but my like best friend who lives here in Portland who
I've known for since college he is Ben Jacobs the best man I already
gave a speech in my wedding, so texted him, called him, forget exactly, but said, this is
what's going on. And he said, let me call Zach, Zach being a high school friend of his that had
recently moved to Portland, who had recently also finished his neurosurgery residency at Stanford
and as a brain surgeon. And I had never met Zach, but because he was friends with Ben, we had kind
of like in the weeks leading up to this just had like tried to organize a poker game, but then I got
sick. So we never actually met, but I knew of Zach. I knew that Ben had this friend who was
brain surgeon. So Ben called Zach. Zach was like in the middle of a surgery, but his, I guess
Ben got his wife on the phone. And then his wife contacted Ben or Zach right after his surgery and said,
you got to take a look at Eric's scans. So that day, Zach took a look at the scans and said,
I'll do the surgery. And we got to do it right. We got to do it immediately. So,
So the next day, I got prepped for surgery.
That night, I actually, because I was in a different hospital and Zach had to operate in a different hospital, I was actually discharged, went home, grappled with this situation I was in, wrote my daughter a goodbye letter, very practically got things organized for my wife.
Right.
So you thought that this could potentially be your last night?
Yeah.
And you write in the piece, what do you tell an 18-month-old child the day before you die?
Sure, you tell them you love them, but what else?
How do you cram a lifetime of knowledge into one little letter?
What did you write?
I'm not really ready to share that, truthfully.
Okay.
I think it's like, if we're going to, I'll probably start crying if I start talking about it.
So I will say that the letter is not finished and I continue to write it.
So go to the hospital, get right for surgery, do the surgery.
I mean, the surgery itself is, like, highly risky because you're operating in a part of the brain that, I mean, within millimeters, if there's like a mistake, you know, we could potentially just not make it through the surgery.
So as far as I recall, Zach's initial plan was to actually biopsy the whatever was in there.
And he kind of conferred with his partners and they very rightly made the decision.
a biopsy was a little bit too dangerous because if it were to puncture this lesion and it was, in fact, an abscess, you know, it could puncture it, and that could be very dangerous.
So in some ways, I think the more risky surgery, which is a full craniotomy, which is to go in, open up the back of my skull, they'd kind of drill a hole in the skull, cut out the skull, and go in and actually remove it.
did that.
And, you know, his initial impression upon seeing it was, this doesn't look like cancer.
You know, it's like this bizarre abscess.
And so I woke up in the ICU.
I remember, I mean, I vaguely remember this, but I do remember seeing Zach standing there.
And, you know, my first question was, as a cancer.
And he said, I don't think so.
I'll never forget, but it was just like this odd.
just feeling of like relief, but then also in like the hours that followed, this uncertainty of,
well, are they sure?
You know, like the pathology hasn't come back yet.
I mean, just the moment of waking up, like you write it in the story and it's so powerful.
You said the anesthesiologist stepped into the room, count backwards.
Anyone who's had surgery knows this, right?
Count backwards.
10, 9, 8, darkness.
And you write, in my mind, I traveled a million miles and then a funny thing happened.
I woke up.
What was it like waking up?
First of all, I was under a lot of drugs.
So, you know, anyone who's woke up from anesthesia knows,
you sort of feel a little bit high, quite literally.
But of ultimate, like, relief and almost in the hours
and the days that followed a sense of euphoria,
which I've been very fortunate to talk with a lot of people in the last year or so
that have gone through these experiences.
And there is this like survivor's euphoria that you feel.
And I think I was beginning to feel it in that moment of, okay, I made it.
Everything's different now.
All of the like things that I thought were important before,
I'm recalibrating what actually is important.
And it's such a fascinating story because, as you describe it in your story, you're a long-term
oriented investor, always thinking about the long-term.
And here you're, like, faced with the prospect of maybe there is no long-term.
But in good news, it turned out that it was indeed, right, an abscess and that they cleared it out.
Yeah.
I mean, I'll get into the long-term thing in a second, but just to kind of close the loop on the story,
it was like an episode of house they took this thing out no one could explain where it came from
you know it was quite dangerous because if if the abscess were to rupture or break or pop it would
likely from what I understand prove to be a fatal situation yeah and so you were basically like
looking death in the face from two ways right whether it was cancer or an abscess so like it's lucky
it was an abscess but not like you know a guarantee of getting through yeah in some ways
it was like the options were all bad, right?
It was either some sort of brain tumor that was cancer
from what they suggested it could be.
It could be something like a glioblastoma, stage four,
and that would be, even if I survived the surgery,
then it would likely be, you know, less than a year,
maybe six months to live because the cancer
had likely metastasized throughout my body at that point.
The other scenario, which would be much better,
better was being abscess because I could survive that long term.
But in the short term, that was actually much more dangerous because it could pop at any moment.
Especially I guess when they're going and operating on it.
Exactly.
And so if it were to rupture mid-surgery, that would be very problematic.
And later I would learn this, but abscess is typically rupture after just like a week or two.
At that point, it had already been in my head for, you know, over a month.
Yeah.
I mean, how did you feel once you learned you were that close?
Just terrified is the truth.
You know, I don't think anything really prepares you for this kind of situation.
It's profoundly shocking.
It's terrifying.
And, you know, like I said, I mean, it was mostly just this deep sadness, the potential for not even myself at that point.
It was mostly for my family, for my wife and daughter.
Yeah.
You're lucky, man.
Super lucky.
And so what happened once it was out?
In the weeks and months that followed, I had to do really intense intravenous antibiotics to begin with nine times a day.
So I had a port in my arm, and then I had a port in my chest.
And after even I was discharged from the hospital, I would have to give myself injections throughout the day of these really hardcore.
kind of like just intense antibiotics that make the symptoms way it works you know just it's almost
someone describes it as like kind of like chemotherapy it just makes you super nauseous it kills everything
in your body so you didn't feel instantly better um like the symptoms that you had no they remained
even though the abscess was out yeah yeah and you know there's like a a piece of i mean there's
it's funny it's like there's an old yiddish expression that i remember like my grandparents using
called lock and cuff, which means like, oh, I need this like I need a hole in my head. And it's
like, I have a hole in my head. Like, I know that experience. They took something out. And so
the most important thing is in the months of following, everything looked good. You know, there's no
recurrence. There's no like hydrocephalis. It should be fine. I have residual symptoms, but they're
manageable. I'm getting through them. The source of the infection was never located, which to
this day, I get like, you know, infectious disease doctors reaching out to me. Like, how did this
happen. Like, no one knows. At some, at one point, they scanned my jaw and found some sort of
lesion in my jaw. So I had surgery, like a really intense surgery in my jaw to remove this thing
turned out to be totally nonrelated. Wow. So we'll never know. So I think there's like a lot of
uncertainty to it, which is part of the experience for me. I think the irony and maybe not the
irony, but maybe, you know, just why this, this story is like so like interesting that it happened
is like I had really based my professional and like kind of personal life around this idea of
of long-termism as a firm or long-term investors truly believe in the power of compounding.
I write about this in a weekly newsletter.
Like, all good things take time.
The whole sort of like I've been enamored with like the Buffett ideology of just weighted out, patience.
Yeah, you write in the piece that you said, I mean, this is just what you say.
Here I was 35 years old, out of time, no more compounding, no more.
more long-termism. And by the way, this is long-termism like in finance, not like the long-termism
as far as like AI risk. I don't think. You can correct me if I'm wrong on that. But he wrote,
hell, our firm's tagline that I wrote myself was investors focused on the future. And you quote
the Warren Buffett saying that our favorite holding period is forever. Yeah. And it's, I mean,
in retrospect, it's like, man, that is like a real level of hubris to think you have that.
I think that we take this idea for granted, long-termism.
It's a nice soundbite, and it's true to say that thinking and acting long-term is really, really important.
But on a deeper level, it's not guaranteed.
None of it is guaranteed.
And so anything can derail the long-term at any point.
And so for me, it was a real, like, wake-term.
up call of it's a real privilege to have a long-term mindset to enjoy the fruits of compounding
is a really lucky position to be in you know i will be really lucky to have a 30-year career
of compounding and to not really ever lose sight of that okay i want to get into how your
life has changed since but i have to ask you a question that's been sitting with me since you
talked to me about, talked to us about Zach. You really entrusted your, your life to, I mean,
of course, he graduated from Stanford, but I imagine a rookie neurosurgeon who a friend recommended
that's bold. Yeah, there, in that moment, I think that there was actually quite a bit of
comfort in knowing that there was a personal connection. But yeah, I mean, we're like mid-30s.
it was like, yeah, you could go with the guy who's like maybe been around or for 20, 30 years
doing it or like you say, a rookie. I think given just the time constraints, it wasn't like I could
shop around for a neurosurgeon. Right. The reality was is that it was either Zach or whoever was on
call. Okay. So a good job going with Zach. Zach's man. Zach can go to the Oregon Clinic. If anyone
needs back surgery or brain surgery.
Yeah.
And you had a friend who texted you or told you as this was going on.
They said this kind of shattering event is showing up right on schedule.
It doesn't mean it will all be pleasant, but it might be redemptive.
It's the horrendous reset that's going to set you up for real creative synthesis,
for a real creative synthesis stage.
So, of course, like, you know, it only is applicable, you know, if you made it through
and you did make it through, thankfully.
So I want to hear from your perspective.
You know, one of the things that also stuck out for me from the beginning of this story was you described being healthy, but not really being healthy.
I think I highlighted this when I was like taking notes on your story.
This was the thing that really stuck out for me.
You said, I wasn't living an entirely healthy long-term oriented lifestyle, even though you were like a long-term preaching investor.
I was constantly stressed at work.
I had stopped exercising.
I was glued to my phone and to the market.
and in the months leading up to my condition, we were having a rough year, and it was all I could
think about. I'd dream about stock prices. I'd wake up in a panic and underscore you write. Despite the
ideals of long-termism, I professionally and publicly promoted, I was in fact living a lifestyle
that was just the opposite. I was myopically focused on the short term, on success, on the day-to-day,
I avoided seeing friends, my marriage was becoming stressed, things were unraveling. And I think
there's definitely elements of truth of that when I read it it's it reflected in my life for sure
and I think that like it's not a a uncommon thing I think among people working today to feel
these these very same things yeah so how did you look at that in retrospect after the health
incident yeah I think it's something that probably even as much as mental health gets talked about
now, it probably still isn't really talked about enough of, you know, how we actually, in our
day-to-day, spend our time. I think if you're ambitious and you're motivated, it's very easy
to fall into the sort of like success trap of staying focused on what's happening today. How can I
optimize for today? Like, how can I increase my output? How can I increase performance? And I think
you see that it's a line of this sort of intensity around optimization and performance.
And there are elements that are important, you know, and I think really healthy.
But I think for me, and probably for a lot of people, it's easy to get a little too focused on, on those sort of like metrics.
Right, like the next performance review, the stock price, you know, in the court or the whatever sales number for the court.
is what happened today.
Right.
And I'm abstracting because everyone's situation and profession is different.
But I think across like all ambitious mid career, later career, whatever it is,
like there's an intensity of success, whatever around the KPI is.
And I think coming out of this experience, it's not that I have like a lower level of ambition.
I think the ambition is still there to like really put up good numbers and succeed.
and have our firm do really well
and for performance to be really good,
those ambitions are still there.
It's just maybe put into a bit more of a holistic perspective
of how you go about achieving those things.
And ultimately, maybe ironically,
the more you subtract and the less intense you are,
the greater potential for better outcomes.
Say more about that.
Yeah. So I think that like so many things in life, you can't force things. Like you can't force relationships. You can't force success. And I think looking back, and not just in 2022, but like, you know, probably a lot of my professional life, there was a lot of like pushing, pushing, pushing to to achieve. And it didn't give enough space for like actual compounding and good things to happen.
And so I think that it's been a refocusing in a very simple way of like quality over quantity.
So if I'm going to do something, spend a lot of time doing it, you know, really like high quality time doing something.
And same thing with relationships.
Like really focus on important relationships, high quality relationships and devote time there.
And then just cut out the stuff that isn't important.
now you said like i think pretty definitively in your piece that you believe that the lifestyle
that you were leading led to the health issue i think that there are so many studies about
stress that reveal to me that we don't really fully understand how stress impacts the body
but we know that stress impacts the body and i think from like a very simplistic level i think
that my immune system was shot, I think I was burnt out. And I think that, you know, that stress
can kill. And it's a little bit vague how it can kill. But this is one example of how I think
it could, which is your immune system gets shot and then some sneaky little bacteria finds
this way through the blood brain barrier in my case. And it becomes an infection in like the
worst part. And, you know, stress also can just lead to other types of issues. I think sleep has
become like a really super important like cornerstone of recovery for me. And that's something that I've
learned a lot about just in the last year and a half of like, if you're not sleeping, you literally like
your brain is just not operating at like its full potential. Right. So what do you have
eight hours? Yeah. If I can. I mean, we're back up another kit.
okay so it's like that's a wish there goes the sleeve yeah so yeah um but it you know that
it's a long-term bet the next kid right yeah yes so yeah i'm you know i think if you can get
eight hours like for me that that's what works i go to bed super early but i i think like
all of these things matter and i think anyone who is like preached like they have the the right
you know formula is probably lying to some extent i think it's uh i think it's an iterative process
itself of like figuring out what sleep cadence the food stress levels there's a there's a really
healthy balance of both ambition but also just like not ambition whatever the opposite of
ambition is just relax yeah just enjoying a moment yeah it is interesting it's like it you you
were almost killed by the system effectively and you have decided not to disengage from the
system, but just to meet it on your own terms?
Yeah.
It's like we're playing by my game.
By your rules now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I, I mean, that's part of the reason why I went public with the story is I think a lot of
people kind of like feel like they're, you know, sort of trapped in this system, right?
And it's really, it can be overwhelming.
And you don't really have to play by those rules necessarily.
It's very freeing to realize, you know, life.
is very short and you need to buy a bus tomorrow and you can kind of I'm also like I should point
out extremely privileged to be able to do any of these things right like financially socially like
just where I was born just won the lottery by being born where I was um so none of this like I take
for granted anymore and very grateful for it but for people who are like maybe in a similar
position that I was, I just wanted to maybe be somewhat of a voice out there to say, look,
I went through this really shitty thing. And I think it was like it happened because of my
lifestyle. This is unsubber. And coming out of it, I'm not like some genius who has like some
incredible perspective. I really don't know if I have any wisdom coming out of this. But I do have
like a real grounding for what really like matters is is not what I thought it did
necessarily one more question for you before we wrap to a personal finance standpoint
I mean it is interesting like a lot of people just like save up but never really get a chance
to see the fruit of all that saving like I've heard so many stories of like people who like
you know rough life retire die in the first year of retirement yeah do you think any differently
about the way that you approach personal finances now after having gone through this?
That's a really great question.
In some ways, yes.
I think, like, I think that inevitably I feel a little bit more averse to risk, right?
And that's like a complex thing to say because that doesn't necessarily mean that, you know,
oh, I go to all cash because I actually think that that means like very risky to do something
like that.
the only practical way that it's changed my view is I focus more on like terminal risk of an
investment what does that mean building in a scenario in which like I am completely wrong on the
thesis on something in 30 years is there what is the odds that this go to zero right and I think
about that a lot now I think about that also in the sense of like nothing lasts forever I mean it's
that, you know, like a renewed sense of just mortality.
Things, nothing lasts forever.
Things can die at any point.
And I think about that with investments and business constantly, which is, this is probably
a subject for another discussion, but like the area I've become really focused on is,
I think modern culture spends too much time focusing on growth and not enough on survival.
And when you focus so much on growth,
The key metrics you're trying to hit are top line numbers, like something that can grow at 30%, right?
What, in my mind, maybe a better metric if you're truly trying to think about, okay, can this investment, can this, you know, thesis sustained over 30 years or 40 years, like, can this provide for my kid?
The real question to ask is, can this thing grow at 2% a year, but for 50 years?
And it's a, it's a reframing of an investment.
idea. And it's one I think that doesn't get talked enough about in business media. And certainly
on, you know, if you pull up like Bloomberg or CNBC, they're not, you know, they're saying
what happened over this last quarter. They're not asking the question of like, will this
business exist in 25 years. I'll push back a little bit on that from the CNBC standpoint, but
and take your point. So you're also writing about the long term and you have a new column at
Big Think, which is this one kicked off the cadence?
Yeah, so I'll be writing at Big Think, which is a really great media organization in their
sister site, Freethink, which is also, I think, really high quality journalism and also just
sort of like practical advice for people who work in business.
But the column I'll be writing is called The Long Game.
It's about the practice and philosophy of long-term thinking.
I'll be writing a column every couple of weeks in addition to the newsletter,
The Nightcrawler, which I've written for three years now.
And so the nightcrawler is all about just long-term investing and technology trends.
The big thing column will be in a similar vein about business and technology,
but really focused on how people who work in business, investing, entrepreneurs.
Like, really, I think I'm trying to offer some practical ideas
and just thoughts about truly playing the long game, both in life and business.
Well, Eric, crazy story, a brush with death, and you live to tell the story.
And I think these lessons are really universal.
And I know I'll be taking them with me as, you know, as I think more.
about balancing business and life and i love that that that concept of being in the system but
but attacking it on your own terms so thanks so much for joining great to speak with you yeah
thank you Alex it was uh it was great to be here and talk to about it awesome all right everybody
thank you for listening enjoy uh another summer weekend and we'll see you next time on big
technology podcast