Phase 3 Day 3 : Habits of Action.

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Today’s post is about “external” habits but that might be a misnomer. They’re still your habits and so they’re in you and therefore internal. The differentiation is made more clear however when you call these by another name “habits of action”. 

Clearly stated, action habits are what you do while the internal habits are what you think and feel habitually. 

Just like with the internal habits it’s important that you not look at these habitual actions as “you”. 

Yes one way to view yourself is by what you think and do on a regular basis BUT you are also free to choose those thoughts and actions... even if it doesn’t always feel like it. 

When looking at our habits of action, it’s important to note that too many people try to leave changes they attempt to implement to will power. Trying to psyche yourself up to take on a new set of actions is not a sustainable behaviour. We must set the table to win. Stack the cards in our favour and ... some other cliche involving making things easier on ourselves. 



In order to look at what behaviours need modifying we need to look at a number of things. We must look at how much time we spend working towards our goals a day, how effective that time is and how much recovery we’re allowing. 

To simplify this, how much time are we spending driving, idling and refueling. 

In order to achieve what we want, our actions must support more driving and more refueling while eliminating as much idling as possible. If you complain that there aren’t enough hours in the day then you need to look at your habits of action and see how much you idle. 

I’ve found that I can only work for a certain amount of time before I need to take a break. I used to just push through and pat myself on the back for being so bullheaded in my pursuit of my goals while the reality is that I was being stupid. I became exhausted and was less and less able to function effectively. It’s not that anyone else really noticed but I did. I knew I wasn’t at my best, that my thinking was not at a level I was used to and my work was just “ok”. 

Changing a few small habits made a HUGE difference with me. One, I didn’t let myself work into the bleary eyed stage. I trained myself to become aware of the point where I stopped being effective and I would step away. Even as little as 5-10 minutes spent clearing my head allowed me to quickly finish tasks that I had usually allowed to drag on as I became more and more exhausted. 

Another habit I took on is so simple it is almost embarrassing to admit how long it took me to adopt.  This is similar to the last one but goes a little further... rest when tired. Managing my energy has become a huge theme of my life and it comes down to seeing a few friends come to visit and sleep a lot of the time. I have a home that is larger and more accommodating than many of my peers in the area. It’s not BIG by any means, but these things are relative. I also live by the beach and so I routinely have groups of friends stay here when they come through town. I remember seeing two of my most energetic friends sleep any time they weren’t needed and it got me thinking that perhaps they were energetic because they were more rested than everyone else. They weren’t being anti social or rude in any way... it was just in those dead moments where people were transitioning between one activity and another, they would rest. They wouldn’t play on their phones or watch TV... they would rest. 

This habit alone can change your life. 

You can choose as many are you like. 

Challenge:

  • What habits do you need to replace in order to move forward? 
  • What habits will you put in place? 

Phase 3 Day 2: Internal Habits. 

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Nearly everything we do is habitual. We’re used to thinking a certain way and acting a certain way. This serves us most of the time and yet it can be an obstacle when attempting to do something new.

We’re wired for the lives we have. We know this to be true because they’re the lives we are living. This does not mean that they’re the lives we were meant to have or anything that fatalistic, only that we keep doing the things that keep our realities in place. 

One example that most of us have heard of is how many lottery winners wind up exactly where they started within a year or two of winning. This is because there is a certain comfort in what we know and we keep returning there no matter what happens. 

In order to change our fortunes we must first change ourselves, and that really means changing our habits. 

Here we’re focussing on internal habits, external ones will come later. 

What that means is your thoughts and your emotions. 

People become attached to their thoughts and believe that they’re fused to who they are as a person. For this exercise it’s helpful to see your thoughts as something external to you... something that you can have... or something that can have you. The same thing goes for your emotions. 

Out of the womb we start linking beliefs (a.k.a. thoughts) and emotions to everything we encounter. Some things become forever scary because our two year old self reacted to something a certain way and we never completed the thought loop. 

I’m showing my age with this next metaphor and I hope that everyone can follow me but thoughts can be imagined as a record that skips and restarts forever. In fact, it is believed that all thoughts will continue indefinitely until they are interrupted and rethought. 

This is what we’re up to now. Taking on the habits of thought and emotion that will get you where you want to go by interrupting old thought patterns and replacing them with new ones. 

If you want to be more fit, you have to think of yourself as fit. An athlete who breaks her leg will get mack in shape as soon as she’s cleared to walk again. Her self view is of someone in shape and anything but that seems weird. 

When someone who is out of shape, a person who has always been out of shape, tries to become fit, a barrier they hit is that they see themselves as someone who is out shape.  All actions become seen through the lens of “I’m doing something out of character”. Sometimes this is used to self-congratulate, “Look at me doing this thing that is so out of character! I’m really making progress” and that is seen as positive at the time. While not exactly negative, it does reinforce the belief that these behaviours are foreign to your experience and ultimately the scale will tip back to what’s familiar. 

Making the shift to a different self view can seem false and delusional at first and this needs to be overcome. It is no more delusional to create a vision of yourself that inspires you and then set to consciously make it your “normal”, than it is to continue with a set of mental and emotional habits we picked up when we were still pre-verbal. 

The concept of Self is too broad to go into now... the idea of an Observer that is able to see our thoughts and emotions... 

For our purposes we have to be willing to let go of the past and embrace the future. New habits of thoughts and emotions will be key to this. Come back tomorrow when we’ll be looking at external habits.



Challenge: 

-Identify as many old internal habits that are in need of an upgrade as possible. 

-Come up with an upgraded version you’re going to replace it with. 

(remember that you will have to push through the pain of implementing these for about three weeks before they’ll even start to take as new habits.) 

Phase 3 Day 1: Measuring your goals. 

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In Phase 3 we’ll be looking at the steps, tools and techniques that you can use to make your Goals leap out of your head and into your life. 

In order to make your goals happen we’ll have to go from theory to practice. Your days will have to be spent on things that when stacked in weeks, months and years will amount to the life you want. 


We’ve talked about giving certain things up and we’ve talked about commitment. This will be even more evident as you start planning your days to incorporate aspects of what you say you want your life to be made up of. 

That essentially is what your goals are, right? The collection of days you want to live and call your life. We want to be, do and have a certain collection of experiences. In order to do that we have to start filling our days with certain ways of being and actions. 

If your goals involve stuff, you still need to start with how and who you’re being. 

The first thing to put in place is a system of measurement. Many people put in a lot of effort and time into actions that amount to very little because they’re not actually  tracking or measuring their actions. 

Some things are more clearly measured than others but all things that matter to us need to be tracked. This doesn’t have to remain a formal process, you’ll get a feel of the things you are tracking after a few weeks to the point that you’ll be able to start to go by feel. Until then however, you’ll have to track everything. 

To measure your goals you have to break it down to a measurable unit. 

For fitness, this is easy. How far did you run and how long did it take you? How much did you lift how far, how many times... etc. 

For other things you have to be more creative. 

You can create a scale from 1-10 for just about anything. Yes, this is subjective but it allows you to grade yourself on the fly. 

How much love is present today in your romantic relationship 1-10? How energetic are you feeling 1-10? How happy are you 1-10? 

You get the picture. 

You can also measure how often you do something, or how many things you do in an area... frequency or volume. 

What you track and how you track things is up to you. 

A small notebook or an app on your phone... really what matters is that you’ll use it. 

Tracking makes you measure and that makes things real. All of a sudden, you’re seeing the pieces of your goals swirl around you and fall into place. 

Have fun with it, turn it into a game and enjoy! 

Challenge: 

-Determine how you’re going to measure each of your goals. 

-Choose a tracking method. 

Phase 2 Day 8: What Would The Best Version Of You Do

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Goals can be grand, goals can be inspiring, goals can change the world. 

Goals get a lot of press and rightly so, they’re important. The simple act of writing your goals out on a piece of paper has been shown to have a major impact to the lives of the people who take that step. 

People who don’t have goals are at a disadvantage, as they don’t have the galvanizing focus that goals can provide. 

As stated, simply writing out your goals is a powerful step. It’s not the only step to take though. 

Because we’re writing goals in every area of life there’s something we can do to allow them unimpeded forward movement. We can make sure that the goals have a unifying element and that our action moment to moment flow from this place. 

Looking at your goals (which if you’ve been following along you have written already), ask yourself “do these fit together?” 

I was going to write a number of elements that I thought were so fantastical that no person could ever achieve all of them in one lifetime but then I decided that I didn’t want to let my mental limits limit you. 

If you dream of the fantastical, party on. 

Make sure however that the goals fit together in a way that YOU can comprehend. 

Once you do, determine what this embodiment of your highest self looks, acts and feels like. This is you at your Life Athletic best and you want to be able to access it from now until forever. 

Whenever you are faced with a question, any question, as yourself “if I were being my Life Athletic best, what would I do?” 

This is especially powerful with it comes to two seemingly positive options. When faced with two or more good options, it will come down to knowing that if you stay true to who you are at your best, you’ll figure it out. 

Even through this is clearly a construct of your own mind, it’s amazing how easy it is to access once created and how effective and satisfying it is. 

Goals come down to what you do moment to moment. 

Making sure that your actions match your projected best self allows you to start making the incremental changes that will lead you towards the giant ones. 

Having a simple set of trigger words is what you’ll need. This cannot be complicated as we’re accessing a pretty easily spooked part of your mind. 

You know those WWBD (What Would BATMAN Do?) T-shirts? You need your question to be this simple. 

Use “what would Life Athlete me do?” if that works for you (I think that’s a powerful one personally ;)  ) or whatever works for you. 

Just make sure that whatever you use has the layers of meaning and understanding that conjuring Batman has for me and scores of other awesome (okay geeky) guys and gals around the world. 

You know what this best version of you is like, get it to make your decisions as much as possible from here on out. 

WWTBVOYD? 

(What Would The Best Version Of You Do?) 

Challenge: 

-Ask yourself if your goals fit together into a unified whole life that inspires you. 

-Make any changes necessary. 

-Establish a word or set of words that immediately conjures the best version of yourself. 

-Commit to letting this best version of you guide your behaviour from here on out. 


(note: If the idea of your best self running the show sounds constricting or boring, remember that you created this! This isn’t some sunday school version of “best behaviour” we’re talking about. This is you at your most awesome! Add some fun for Batman’s sake!)  

Phase 2 Day 7

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With target goals acquired you now have a clear understanding of where to focus your attention and your efforts. 




To make it... more clear... your task is to fulfill and accomplish your target goals. 

In order to do this we need to break down your daily actions into achievable bits.

I like to call these clicks.


 I'm Canadian and we measure distance by kilometers, a nickname for a kilometer is a click, or “Klick”... it actually might be a military thing... or it might just be something that my dad said that has nothing to do with Canada or the military, it doesn’t really matter... and how many clicks you are traveling either speed or your distance.

What it represents here is a measurable unit. You want to be able to measure your performance measure your achievements.  

For me it also represents something clicking into place. The image of a piece of a puzzle going where it belongs,  is one I like a lot. 

Essentially these are right actions taken at the right times. 

How do you know what's the right action is?  

Ask if it will take you towards your Target goals and if it fits with your identity as a Life Athlete.  

If you follow this metaphor then really it should just “click”. 


Challenge: 

-Fill in the clicks from where you are to your first Target Goal in your calendar for at least three weeks.  

Phase 2 Day 6: Target goals!

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So far in Phase 2 we’ve been talking about goals, big goals, dream goals, your horizon goals. They’re exciting, they’re inspiring and they might feel very far away. Your job is to soak in the inspiration and then aim a little closer to home. 

Enter your target goals. 

Your target goals are that big step up from where you are that you KNOW you could get to if you put in a month or two of solid effort. You may have been there before or just have faith that you could make that leap with enough focus and sweat capital. This could be a few more lbs on your max deadlift, a few more bucks in your account or really anything that represents a big step up from your “now”. 

These goals need to be so close that you can taste them, but far enough away that you actually have to try in order to reach them. They’re worthy of celebrating even if they don’t represent “it”. 

(editors note: there is no real “it” this is a constant process of personal growth and evolution that keeps going for as long as you do.) 

This might be the first hundred dollars made in your business, or certain benchmark weight that you can lift, weight that you’ve lost or anything else that you see as a challenging but achievable level.  If you’re in debt, and have a goal of making a million dollars a year, getting out of debt might be a powerful target goal OR significantly less out of debt to start. 

These are the things that are on the path to your ideals and represent real achievement but also are the things that are accessible enough to not discourage you. 

As you started marking down steps from where you are now to your horizon goals yesterday, this should be relatively simple. Your job now is to choose one of the closer steps to you and get yourself there. 

Challenge: 

-Identify a Target Goal for each area. 


Phase 2 Day 5: Live your future now!

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Today’s entry is picking up from Phase 2 Day 4. If you haven’t looked at that one yet, skip over there and come back a.s.a.p.! 

As you started looking down the line at each of the steps from where you are now, to where you want to be, were you able to feel what it would be like to actually be there? 

Could you feel the excitement of accomplishing your goals? Could you feel what it would be like to be and have those things come into existence in your life? 

If your goal was to have $1 million could you picture yourself having $1 million? Did it feel good? Were you happy? Did you feel powerful? Did you feel free? Did you feel how you wanted to feel? 

Did you feel in any way different than you do on a regular day now? Why did you feel different? 

You have not yet achieved these goals. If you felt that way now, it is because you're capable of feeling that way now. 

Think about that. You don’t need to have your goals accomplished yet to feel the joy, power, freedom, or whatever, that you know you’ll feel when the goals are achieved. 

Yes there’s of course an element of amplification that you’ll feel when you get there for real BUT you can still channel those feelings now. 

Think of it like a form of time travel. Many people wish that they could go back in time and give advice, or lend support to their younger selves. You can do that now by projecting forward, looking at how you’d be further along on your path. 

Also, and this is the point of all of this, the ways of being that you believe these goals will unlock are the ways of being you must take on in order to accomplish the goals. The journey will bring it out of you and you can help it along by adopting these ways of being now. 

It is in you, bring it out, and be it now! 

Challenge: 
-Look at the ways of being you feel would open up with the accomplishment of each of your horizon goals

-Write them down.

-Think about ways to incorporate those ways of being in your life now.

Phase 2 Day 4

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You know where you are, you know where you want to go, and you're excited to get there. You have everything that you need to get started getting the life that you want!

In a lot of ways creating a life of our dreams is a lot like going on a road trip. I’ve used this metaphor before and I’ll use it again! 

Many people are scared to take a trip, even a vacation can be a big comfort challenge for some. 

To leave the familiar in search of adventure, excitement, or discovery can be difficult, but it is worth it. 

We are Life Athletes! We are training ourselves to live at a high-level and we are LIVING at a high level. Living this way means taking risks. 

It means venturing into the unknown, confident that we can make it work. Confident that this way of being we have nurtured will pull us through. 

We are aiming at a higher standard and that can be scary. 

If your dreams don't scare you little bit, chances are you're not dreaming big enough. 

Really I don’t need you to be scared, just ready to have the life you want.  A lot of this preamble is to set you up for probability that you won’t be able to fully complete today's exercise immediately.

The fear I’m talking about comes from the unknown, the unfamiliar, the hidden. The thing about things that are unknown, unfamiliar, and hidden is that we don’t know a lot about them. 

If you already knew how to get where you wanted to go, you’d be there. Because you’re searching, there will be blind spots. This is normal and quite alright. 

So, fully acknowledging that there will be blind spots, I’m asking you to connect the points between where you are and where you want to be. Simple...  

Once again, I am well aware that you likely don’t know all of the steps to take now and that If you did, you would be taking them now. 

I’m telling you that it doesn’t matter. You can figure out A step and that’s enough to move forward. Too many of us wait, trying to figure every facet of our goals out before we start taking action. 

A friend passed along this nugget as we talked about this a while back, “you don’t wait for all of the lights in the world to turn green before you start driving” he said. No, no we don’t.  

Another one I like is a metaphor involving a dark country road on an overcast night... you can only see as far as your headlights shine but you trust that there’s more road in front of you. You drive and figure it out on your way. 

It’s going to be the same here. You’ll have to fill in as much as you can and as you get closer, you’ll be able to see more and so on.

As you connect the dots between where you are and where you want to be, you are to look at the “map” from two directions. 

For some it will be easier to immediately start plotting out next steps from where you are currently forward. While for others it will be easier to start marking out steps or stages backwards from your horizon goals towards the present. 

I suggest that you try drawing it out from both directions.

Also, you might not get the immediate steps from either point and instead be able to see some of the middle steps. 

Treat this like a jigsaw puzzle... start wherever you can and fit pieces in as you spot them. 

Start writing every step you can think of and leave spaces to be filled in later.  Big steps, small steps, write them all down.  

There might be branches, or detours to the road you are laying out. That's okay as well, write it all down. 

Try your best to be as detailed as possible, however don't get bogged down .Feel free to start with a general outline and flesh it out from there.

Write it down in such a way that you can fill in details later. Just keep going and don't stop.  Be thorough, be patient, and be unstoppable. This is is work, but it’s your life and if you won’t put in the time planning this, what will you spend time on? 

Let’s hit the road! 

Daily Challenge: 

-Take your current point and your horizon goals and fill in the in between stages. 

Phase 2 Day 3: Turn your excitement up to 11. 

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How you feel has a huge impact on what you do. 

If you are feeling run down, tired, or just plain unmotivated it can be hard to get out of bed let alone conquer the world. 

Emotions can help or hinder and really they’re up to us to guide. 

Emotions can be a powerful tool in achieving our goals and we’re going to look at that today. Turn yours up and get excited about the future you're creating!

Many of us have so much fear at the idea of never reaching our goals, that we put ourselves off of the hunt for them. Many people give in to the fear and satisfy themselves with the hope that their goals COULD happen rather than risk taking a shot and failing. 

As the Great One once said: “You miss a hundred percent of the shots you never take.” 

We’ve already talked about blocks and so now we’re going to look at how emotions can help. 

What we want to do is use our emotions for good. 

We want to be able to visualize our goals as something exciting, something desirable, something that energizes us. 

When we supercharge our emotions so that the image of the achievement of our goals fills us with joy, we are stacking the deck in our favor. 

Tony Robbins says that people are motivated by two things:

  1. The avoidance of pain.
  2. The pursuit of pleasure. 


While he does say that people are more motivated by the avoidance of pain, it doesn’t mean that you can’t make both serve you.  If you’re tired of being where you are FEEL THAT! 

Expanding that feeling and allowing that discomfort can be powerful. The pitfall is that feeling bad without purpose ... has no purpose. If you use your motivations to move you away from something, move away from it. 

The second part is where you picture your goals as a huge success.  Allowing yourself to fully feel how great it would be to get yourself to where you want to be pulls you forward. 

When we are only mildly excited about something it's easy to be put off the trail. However, when we allow ourselves to be consumed with excitement then we must do this thing. 

The fear is that if we care too much and we don't get there we will be hurt, it's a real fear. That might happen. 

Allowing yourself to care at the risk of getting hurt might seem foolish, and you could find a lot of people to agree with that opinion. 

In response I leave you with this thought. 

In an interview I did with Dave Smart, he said this: “If you can’t learn to be a competitor in your passion... it’s going to be tough for you...” 

If you can’t get excited about your dreams... it’s going to be tough for you. 

Daily Challenge:

-Re-write your horizon goals and muster, fake, generate, create, FEEL 10X more excitement about them than previously. In fact, turn it to 11. Post your experience. 

Phase 2 Day 2 - Is there something hiding behind the goals you've set?  

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If you take a look at Facebook or the internet in general there are more advice givers on how to get the perfect six pack than I can count. Apparently lots of people want to have showy abs. 

or do they? 

Is there something hiding behind their stated goals? 

Something that they really want? Something that the other goal is just a cover for?

I believe that a lot of people think they want one thing while actually wanting something else. A person might want rippling abdominals because they think that this will make them sexier in the eyes of other people. Do they want the abs or the feelings that they think will come with them? 

The same thing goes for many goals that people commonly aspire to. They’re fixes, or said another way, they’re reactions to some perceived fault. 

People don’t feel sexy and so they want abs. They don’t feel powerful so they want more money. 

There’s nothing inherently wrong with this other than that it doesn’t work. 

When you have a goal for a purpose other than having that goal accomplished, it’s like you’re driving on a road thinking that you’re going one way but you’re going another. 

If you want to fix something, fix it. 

Setting a goal with the hope that the side benefit will be that it will “fix you” just doesn't work. 

Set goals for the things you actually want to be, or have, in your life.

There are plenty of people with rippling abs who have body issues and who don’t feel particularly attractive. Likewise there are all kinds of unhappy people who have achieved things other people aspire to because they believe they will make them happy. 

So, what’s the solution here? We know that goals are important to growth but here I am saying that some goals are fool’s gold... fool’s goals.  

Having goals that are authentic to who you REALLY are is key here. 

If you want to be sexy, or powerful, or whatever... be that now.  Be authentic. 

It is of course an over simplification to say “be that now”. These things can take time, but know that if your goal is to be (insert adjective) then THAT is your goal! 

Also, you can have more than one goal. You want to feel sexy AND have a washboard midsection? GO FOR IT! Just don't set a goal for one thing expecting it to give you anything other than what it is. 

Challenge of the day: 

-Ask: “have I set these goals to fix something in myself? or am I truly inspired by these goals?” 

-Ask: are these goals authentic? 

-If you find that you’re trying to fix something ask yourself this: If the things I want to fix in myself were already fixed, what would I want for myself and my life. Alter your current goals to reflect this. 

Phase 2: day 1 - Horizon goals. 

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Now that we’ve established a solid understanding of where we are, what’s working, what isn’t, our blocks, our strengths, our commitment and what we’re willing to let go of from the past, we’re ready to move forward. 

To create a life that we love we have to start with a vision. There are a number of metaphors we can use to explain why... I’ll use two: 

  1. If you don’t know where you’re going, how can you expect to get there. 
  2. If you don’t know what you’re shooting at, how can you expect to hit it? 

As I’ve looked at this over the years an element of this has become clear that I didn’t see before, although it might be obvious to you. What happens if you reach your goals by accident? Generally I think that people are dissatisfied if this happens unless they quickly recognize that “this” is what they wanted. 

I believe that a key element of goal setting is the ability to look back and notice our accomplishments. We can say “I have arrived!” even for a moment and feel great about that before moving on to the next goal. 

When I run I like to have some place that represents the destination and I’ll touch that before looping home. When I indoor climb I like to touch the metal beam the rope is looped on before climbing down. Having a clear “check!” point helps me and I believe that it can help you. We’ll go over that more later though. 

Onto the vision! 

I used to call this phase of goal setting “dream goals” but I changed it as felt there was a connotation I didn’t like.  Many people feel that dreams are not real. 

I’m now calling these “Horizon Goals” as they’re as far as you can see currently on your journey. 

Either way, I think they names explain what these goals are. Imagine your ideal reality and figure out what that would look like in the context of each area of your life. Regardless of where you currently are write our your vision. These are the ideals, not the immediately achievables. 

Make these inspiring to you! 

Notice whatever feelings come up as you write. Discomfort is normal here and while you don’t have to write anything grand to impress anyone, don’t avoid something you want to write down out of fear. 

Imagine that you are standing on a cliffside looking out onto the world preparing for the adventure that’s beyond the curve of the earth and dare to dream big! 

Challenge: 


-Get yourself excited about the future,
-Write your horizon goals for each area. (Write your goals in the present tense, as if they've already happened.)

Phase 1 Day 9: What are you willing to let go of moving forward? 

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Day 9! This is the last step of phase 1! Congratulations!

Moving forward there is one more question to ask yourself, what are you willing to let go of. 

We’re about to look at what you want in life. Presumably there are some shifts you want to make. 

You will not have more hours in the day. You will not magically have more energy.

You will be you, trying something new. 

In order to do something new, you will have to let something go to clear space.

This could be emotional, physical, something in your schedule, a connection to a person that's no longer healthy, or one that has been hurting you for a while.

Most likely it’ll be a combination of things AND they’ll be more visible as you’re actually moving forward. Still you need to be aware of this concept now. 

There’s an attachment that forms to the things in our lives that we’re familiar with, we see them as part of us. 

This includes things that we’ve outgrown. 

If you’re like most people, you have a hard time throwing out things with even the slightest bit of sentimental value. The problem is that, as old things accumulate there’s less and less room for the new. 

Letting go of those attachments can be hard yet powerful. As you clear the out the things that have outlived their usefulness, you’re allowing new things to enter your life that are more appropriate to where you are or where you’re going. 

This also holds true beyond knick knacks and extends to habits, emotions, people, behavioral patterns, belief systems etc. 

You can want to be wealthy until you’re green in the face but if you’re unwilling to let go of your view of yourself as someone who is bad with money... good luck. 

The same goes with fitness, relationships... really any part of your life. If somewhere you’ve determined your own limit in these areas, you’re stuck there until you let go of that self image. 


It can also be a behavioral pattern. You want to be more energetic but you don’t want to shut your computer off an hour earlier and get to bed. 

You want to be more present to your partner but you’re not willing to shut your computer off an hour earlier and get to bed. ;) 

Whatever it is that you want moving forward, you’ll have to let go of something now. There’s a cost to the steps you’re about to take. It might just be the fear that you can’t do it. Let go of that one as fast as you can. 

Challenge of the day:

-Make a list of the things that you’re willing to let go of. 

-Take a minute imagining these things being released and leaving your space, making way for the awesome vision that you’re about to create for yourself in Phase 2! 

Phase 1 Day 8: How committed are you to having the life of your dreams? 

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Once we look at where we are, and we realize that we want more, for whatever reason, the question really becomes: how committed are you to making it happen?

Is this a passion, or a passing interest?

We haven’t begun looking at what it is that you want to create in your life BUT that almost doesn’t matter. You know that’s where we’re headed, are you committed to yourself as you move forward?  The choice is up to you.  

Regardless of what it is that you want, the key to getting it, is your level of commitment.

Things that are, kind of, sort of, maybe, a good idea, don’t get done.

Knowing that you HAVE to make a shift is necessary to making a shift. Wanting to isn’t enough. Will you run through a wall to make it happen? Are you willing to pay what it costs?


It’s important to note that no one said that you had to choose to change something in your life. If you're thinking of changing something because someone else thinks it's a good idea... well that’s not a good idea. It needs to come from you. 

You can likely keep doing things as you’re doing them.  If lives were in immediate danger I’d hope you’d be doing something more than reading this installment of a 30 day challenge. You’re fine. 

Most of us aspire to more than “fine” though. We want to be more fit, more wealthy, we want to be smarter, healthier and happier. We want to make a bigger difference in the lives of those around us and we want to be closer to people. We want a better world... and we want six-pack abs.

We might not be in mortal danger but we might be dying a slow death, letting one dream die after another. Or we might just be in danger of being mediocre. 

The point is that these have all been your standards we’ve been talking about and now is the gut check time. Will you make a difference in your life? 

Are you serious and ready to pay the price for a new life, or are you just window shopping?

Challenge of the day: 

-Look at your life and ask yourself “am I committed to moving forward and meeting my potential?”

-Make sure the answer is yes. 

-Turn the volume of your commitment to 11.  

Phase 1 Day 7: What are your strengths? 

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Day 7 and still going strong! Well done!

Today we’ll be looking at our current strengths.

This always seems harder than anticipated. If you’ve ever tried to write your own bio for something, you know what I mean. Even just writing a resume can be difficult for a lot of people. 

It’s fascinating to me that self loathing is more acceptable than self love. People can run themselves down ad nauseam but if they try to pat themselves on the back they’ll have no problem finding someone eager to take them down a notch. 

Modesty is one thing but the inability to see one’s own strengths is not healthy. 

On the flip side, it’s not that much better to be in love with one’s strengths. People like to look good and we sometimes use our accomplishments as shields to hopefully convince people that we’re awesome... or worthy of love. 

I believe that the trick is accepting ourselves as we are, weaknesses, blocks and strengths alike. 

Recognizing our intrinsic worth is extremely important. 

We are not great for any reason other than the fact that we’re great. 

What I think people have to do is separate that conventional “I’m great because...” and replace it with “I’m great, and...”. 

Yes, I want people to feel good about themselves AND I want it to be authentic. 

If you’re financially wealthy, are you any less worthy a human being if you lose it all? 

If you’re a decorated athlete and you break your leg, or lose it, are you any less valuable? 

If you have never received any accolades or external markers of success, are you any less human? 

I’m saying no. 

...and yet, we reach. We aspire, we dream of greatness and of doing great things. We WANT to accomplish. For many of us, that’s why we’re here. We DO think that it’s better to achieve than not to. 

The nuance is that your accomplishments are not you. 

From a place where we accept that we just ARE okay as we are, I believe that we can truly build to greatness. It also builds empathy for others as we start to see the greatness in them as well. This is essentially the meaning of the word “Namaste” actually. “I recognize the divine greatness in you”. 

Now that that’s out of the way, what are your strengths? 

What are you proud of? What is it that you’d like to build on moving forward? What IS working? 

Once again what we’re looking for is as unbiased a view of yourself as possible. Don’t puff up and don’t hold back... what’re your strengths? 

Challenge of the day:

-List your strengths in each area. .

Phase 1 Day 6: What's working?

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So far we’ve looked at a general overview of your life and then we dove right into what wasn’t working, what was in your way and what you could do to get past whatever’s been stopping you.


That could be seen as a rather gloomy set of exercises.

The purpose was threefold:

First, if something was a thorn in your side, that needs to be addressed before any forward movement can take place.

Second, people are either motivated by moving towards something or, more common, by moving away from something else. Why not use both? 

Third, we want to separate the wheat from the chafe as it were and making the “chafe” conscious is a good start. 


Now it’s on to the cheerier part. I want you to look at what IS working. 

Before we go too far with this however, I want to put in a note... sometimes people are as stopped by what IS working as they are by what isn’t. We haven’t looked at your dreams, ambitions, deepest desires or just overall wants yet. So you might also choose to leave things behind that are working, but just not as well as you’d like. 

It’s important to find somethings that are working even if we’re in a dire situation. We’re human and we need to know that something is going right. So, if you’re in a low place, perhaps what’s working is that you at least have an internet connection and the ability to read this. Grab at anything. 

If things are going great for you... great! Many people suffer just as much in this state as they do when nothing’s going right. I have had more conversations that I can count with people for whom things are seemingly working out fantastically but who just aren’t happy. 

I’m pointing this out because I want to make sure that no one beats themselves up in ANY WAY as they go through this process. If you have a long list of things that are working but you aren’t feeling how you think you SHOULD be feeling... cut yourself some slack, take a deep breath, and ask yourself if you’ll let yourself feel that way now. 

As with each exercise up to this point we want to be as emotionless as possible for this part. We want to just observe the parts of our lives as though they were a story we were clipping together for a screenplay we were writing or looking at a map and planning a trip. Point out the rough roads and the clear ones and know that you’ll be able to handle things when you get there. 


Daily challenge:




-Look at each area of your life and identify what’s working. 

-Post to acknowledge that you’ve completed this challenge. 





Phase 1 Day 5: Moving obstacles out of the way and clearing the road.

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You’re going on a road trip, and you’re excited. You’ve packed your car, you’ve packed enough food to last you and you have a playlist that’ll be the envy of every 8tracks user out there. The weather has cleared and you’re ready to go! You strap yourself in, turn the car on, ease out of the drive way, turn the first corner and ... there’s a tree across the road, apparently knocked over in the storm the night before... now what?

It doesn’t matter how prepared you are or what your intentions are... there will be obstacles in your way that you have to deal with.

One I’ve encountered is with people trying to transform themselves and live a life that they love. The IMMEDIATE thing that happens is that they see everywhere where they’re not the person they want to be already. 

Another common one is the desire to look good and the fear that people won’t accept us if we go for our “weird” dreams... forgetting that most people have weird dreams of their own that they’re afraid we’ll judge THEM for... 

Whatever your personal obstacles, they’re as capable of stopping you as you allow them to be. 

"Obstacles cannot crush me. Every obstacle yields to stern resolve. He who is fixed to a star does not change his mind." -Leonardo DaVinci,

In yesterday’s post we talked about these obstacles and now the question is what can you do to move past them? 

Some might be mental or internal and some might be external. The first step in moving past them is to take full responsibility for yourself and your life and believe that you have the personal power to make a difference. 

Done taking full responsibility and claiming your personal power? GREAT! 

Now start to think of what you need in order to move past these supposed barriers. 

An important note on these is that some things need to be dealt with directly and some things need to just be dropped and replaced with workable versions. 

Again, this is is just to make sure that you’re ready to move forward and that you’re not bringing personal demons with you that’ll sabotage you on your way. 

It’s time to get some living done. 

Daily challenge:

-Look at your list of blocks from day 4’s challenge and determine the best way to get past each one. 


-Put any actions that can’t be done immediately in your calendar, to do be dealt with.

Phase 1 Day 4: Barriers? What barriers? 

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Michelangelo was once asked how he sculpted something as wonderful and lifelike as his “David” and he said, “I simply carved away everything that wasn't David and there he was".

I believe that being a Life Athlete is a similar undertaking. You are there in your greatness and there are some things in the way. We have to remove the things that aren’t true to our authentic selves in order to be truly free.


Judgements, self doubts, negative emotions, limiting decisions and excuses are all extraneous to the task at hand; getting the most out of the experience of being a human being as possible.

It might seem like we’re focussing on the negative, and in a way we are. Before we move forward we have to look at why we haven’t already.

There are three categories that you might fall in:

Things might be going great and you just want to keep that momentum moving and get to the next stage. You know what you want and are on your way. 

OR 
 
You’ve had your sights set on something for a while and yet you’ve never quite made the leap. Something’s always come up and the dream remains a dream. 

OR

You have NO IDEA what you want in this area but you know that you don’t like what you have. 


I’ve been in all of them and am in at least two currently. Today’s post is especially  for people in the second and third categories. 

“I like everything about everything right now and don’t want anything to change” isn’t really a category as there’s no pause button on life and if we’re not moving forward atrophy kicks in. You don’t have to overhaul anything but looking at what’s next is necessary. 

So, what’s in the way? 

It might look like this:
I’ve always wanted to X but haven’t because Y. 

Someone once told me “in life you can have what you want or the reasons why not... they’re not the same thing.” Making our reasons more important than the things we want in life is a low way to live.

“I’d start a business but I’m...” too young, too old, too smart, not smart enough, I don’t have enough money, energy, time, patience, experience... the list is wide and varied. People have thought of pretty much every possible variation. You are not alone here. 

These barriers can take many shapes and forms and I’m not suggesting that you necessarily remove them now... only that you notice them, and write them down. 

What are the thoughts that hold you back? Are there people who you put the responsibility on? “I’d do ‘Z’ but my ’Q’ thinks that’s ‘W’. 

What “truths” about yourself stop you? We’ve all made up all sorts of silliness regarding what IS that just isn’t. The number of people who when you dig a little have some version of “I’m not lovable” kicking around inside of them is enough to make you weep! 

Do you think that you can’t be fit because of your genetics and so you eat badly and barely move your body? Tell the truth here! 

A note on this... take responsibility here! 

Don’t say “I’d be living my dream if not for my mother.” Say instead “I blame my mother for why I’M not living MY dream.” 

You’re a powerful, beautiful, work of art. It’s time to chip away and brush off all that other crap.


Daily challenge:


-Look at all of the areas that you said weren’t working from yesterday’s challenge as well as any other areas where you’ve felt blocked. 

-Write a list of the areas and the blocks you have in each. 

-Check the list to make sure you’ve taken full responsibility and ownership of every single block on your list. 
-Ask yourself if now is the moment that you finally move past. 

Phase 1 Day 3: What's not working? 

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Now that you’ve taken stock of your life and figured out where you’d rate yourself in each of the 7 training areas in a non-judgmental way, you get a little reward! It’s time to judge.

Nothing need be wrong to pursue growth. Growth and development is healthy and necessary in humans. Pushing from good to great is what we’re looking for here, BUT if something is not working or not working as well as you’d like it to, it’s best to identify that early.

Do you have any fires to put out?

If you scored yourself a 5 or below in any area, this might be cause for concern. Essentially that’s the pass fail mark as determined by you. A score below 5 is a sign that you think you’re doing harm to yourself in this area. It’s up to you to determine if this is a fire that needs to be dealt with NOW. 


If your house is burning down, don’t wait until the end of this program to do something about it! 

If there aren’t any lives immediately at risk then take a breath and identify what’s not working for you. There can be all sorts of reasons for why things aren’t working but despite my earlier joke, leave the judgements to the side and just tell it like it is. If something’s not working for you, it’s not working for you. 

Also, don’t justify why it is the way it is. People will adapt to just about any crappy situation and you deserve better than that. Using language that softens (“It’s okay”, “It’s not THAT bad”, “It’s only been a few months, weeks, days, years..”) or making excuses will just keep you where you are. 

You’re the one saying this thing doesn’t work, notice if you have internal reactions that come up and then defend it’s existence. 

You are neither what works in your life or what doesn’t. Those things are external to your Self and you’re allowed to let go of them. 


Are you willing to identify them and let go?

Again, nothing really needs to be wrong here. Just identify things that aren't working as well as you'd like them to, the things that you think could be taken to the next level. 


Daily challenge:


  • Look at each area and identify what’s not working.
  • As yourself if you’re willing to replace what’s not working with a workable version? (You don’t have to know what that is quite yet... we’re just looking for a willingness to live a life that works.) 
  • If yes, great! 
  • If no, what’s in the way and why are you holding onto something you’re saying doesn’t work? Look deeper and figure out what it’d take to make you willing to embrace a workable version in this area. 

Phase 1 Day 2: Where are you? 

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And off we go! 
 
The first thing we want to do as we draft out a plan to make the next stage our lives the most amazing yet, is to figure out where we are now.

First a warning... I love maps and journeys and I love map and journey metaphors, so brace yourself.

Lots of people feel lost because they don’t have that red “YOU ARE HERE” arrow clearly in their sites. We make plans that are too many steps beyond where we are or too many steps behind. By taking a moment to figure out exactly where we are, we’ll be better equipped to make a move.

This will demand honesty but despite what you may have heard, it need not be brutal... just courageous.


As you look at where you are, notice the judgements that come up, good or bad. Don’t judge the judgements. Just notice them. If you start saying to berate yourself for not being better off financially or if you start patting yourself thunderously on your shoulder because of your gigantic biceps (which prevent you from quite being able to reach your back) just know that both forms of self talk can be limiting. 

For some feeling bad can be a motivator, sometimes feeling good can make a person complacent. It’s your job to notice what you’re doing, what effect it’s having and then to use what works. 

You get to decide what “working” means for you. 

To find our current whereabouts we’re going to use a program I developed a few years ago. I’m not editing it overly from the original form as I still dig it. Have fun with it. I did!

We’ll be looking at the 7 areas of life that I’ve identified. I’ve called them pillars, I’ve called them training areas, you can call them whatever you want. The important thing here is that you look at yourself as a whole being. 

If we let one area sag it will drag the others down. The same is true for improving one area, it’ll improve others. I just haven’t found that to be a lasting thing unless I use that energy to shore up the areas that aren’t working well. When life is working across the board, even if it’s just to the level where no one area is hurting you, it’s a great feeling! 

My goal is to get the most out of the experience of being a human being, to get the most out being me. It lights me up to think that my journey might inspire others along their own. 


The 7 training areas are (in alphabetical order): 

Finances

Health/Fitness

Mind

Play

Relationships

Self

Work


(At the bottom of this post is a collection of words that explain what I mean by these)


Now we’re looking for a simple way to identify where we are and so I’ve created a ranking scale. Some people really, really have a problem with being ranked or graded and resist this part. It seems to me that this resistance is due to the fact that they’re already grading themselves as not good enough in their heads... we usually call this judging. This is where the courage comes in. Just tell the truth and let it be okay. You’re fine where you are and I’m not telling you that you need to change a thing. 

Most people do want to change something however and this kind of honesty is key. So, in each area You’re going to calibrate the scale by figuring out what you think 10/10 is. I like to calibrate this on a global level but it’s really up to you. 

From there it’s about figuring out where you land using the scale I’ve included. 

I’ll explain this a little further. Let’s say that we’re looking at physical fitness. 10/10 for me would be a cross between Aja Barto (the tallest crossfit games competitor ever, measuring 6’5”) and Kobe Bryant who is also about my height and weight and is also about my age. I’ll toss in Rich Froning Jr. as he’s the reigning three time male Crossfit games champion and therefore holding the title of fittest on earth.  These guys not only represent the best in the world at what they do but for Aja and Kobe, they represent the best at my body type. This is personal, obviously, and you need to calibrate it to YOU. 

You might be a distance runner, or a power lifter, or simply a person living their life with no specific sporting back ground to compare to. What you do is find a person, group of people, or set of ideals that you think represent the best in the world. 

If you ARE the current best in the world you can raise the bar and imagine where growth is possible and set that as the top mark. 

Being 10/10 yourself isn’t the goal, it’s all about seeing what’s possible and having something to work to. 




I’ve been asked many times about using your perceived best as 10/10 and I really think that most of us are too skewed about ourselves for this to be effective. Why set a top limit for yourself? If you’re more comfortable doing it this way, go for it but know of this possible pitfall so that you can figure out a way to avoid it. 

Also, some people have been worried about feeling bad comparing themselves to someone farther along in the process than themselves. If you fall into that category, don’t use real people and be careful of that pitfall. 

What you must do is imagine what you’re current view of the best is in each area. 

Next, use the tongue in cheek grading system I’ve concocted to place yourself somewhere on the scale. 

Daily challenge:

- For each area of life (Finances, Health/Fitness, Mind, Play, Relationships, Self, Work) Establish what 10/10 is for you in each area. 

- Use the scale to determine where you are. Write a brief explanation of why you think this is your grade. 



(note: This is to be a matter of fact assessment not a list of the blessings or curses you’ve encountered. Ex. I can deadlift 320lbs and run a 5k in about 30 minutes which places me at about 6-6.5 on my scale.  Lots of room grow! Exciting!) 


-Post what you come up with. (note: you can do so anonymously if you don’t want the world to know too much about you.) 

That's it! 

(Bonus! A series of words that kinda explain what the training areas mean to me:

FINANCES

money, cash, dollar dollar bills yʼall, investments, donations, earnings, savings, spend, invest, manage debt, plan, “money doesn't solve your problems but with money you can show up in a limo to deal with them.” -Tony Robbins -, managing for your future, managing for your present, having the means to live your life on your terms, paying your bills, makes the world go ʻround, assets, liabilities, your ticket to ride, trading, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, RRSPs, your portfolio, toys and flashy things, purchasing power, your ability to help with your checkbook, food on the table and a roof over your head, fiscal matters, capital, funds, resources, “A big part of financial freedom is having your heart and mind free from worry about the what-ifs of life.” - Suze Orman -, sponsorship, scholarships, bankroll, angel investments, underwrite, backing, the willingness to be wealthy, to prosper, to thrive financially, markets, bulls and bears and the bellies of pigs, commodities, value, lean times and times of plenty, the line between needs and wants, your ability to handle your needs and afford your wants, your bank account, your overseas bank account, the money under your mattress, your piggy bank, trust fund your milk money, your fortune, your parachute... whatever colour it might be.

HEALTH/ FITNESS

force x distance/time, sweating (whether to oldies or something else), building work capacity, moving your body, maintaining your body, what you eat and ingest, freedom from illness and disease, the ability to function, cardiorespiratory endurance, jumping power, sport, leisure, looking good, feeling good, pretty much anything to do with your body, hair growth, muscle retention, skeletal alignment, bone density, gum health, your feet, rest and recovery, power, pull ups, flexibility, yoga, coordination, throwing, catching, hitting, striking, agility, balance, pushups on rings, walking lunges, handstand pushups, challenging yourself to lift more, run faster, jump higher, taking care of your body so it can take care of you, trying new things,, rest, pushing to the limit and then recovering, “Our health always seems much more valuable after we lose it.” -anonymous-, 3 2 1 go, sex, rings, sandbag, medicine balls, bumper plates, other heavy things, running on trails in the woods, running through the city, doing pull ups on scaffolding, skating, playing new sports, playing old sports, stretching, doing crossfit, doing yoga, martial arts, swimming, getting yourself checked out, medicine, alternative medicine, good food that nourishes the body is my favourite medicine.

MIND

your brain, your capacity for thought, your capacity to reason, interpret, understand, derive, intellect, learning, education, state of mind, “A man is but the product of his thoughts what he thinks, he becomes.”- Mahatma Gandhi -, clarity, consciousness, awareness, being observant, calm, healthy, aware, learning, be educated, discover, explore, consult, relax, inform, read, ideas, plan, refresh, new concepts, knowledge, clarity, outside the box, judgement, outcomes, develop, redevelop, search, find, connect, meditate, integrate, immerse, open, experience, something new, calculate, research, examine, frame of mind, enhance, productive, organized, peace of mind, fearlessness, your brain, wits, sense of humour, memory, judgement, concentration, grey matter, intellectual capabilities, the mind

is a muscle that can grow and thrive when used properly, it can become stronger, more agile, more flexible, “In a world in which the total of human knowledge is doubling about every ten years, our security can rest only on our ability to learn” - Nathaniel Branden - , learning something new, being a lifelong learner, learning languages, musical instruments, new skills, mastering old skills, doing more than one thing at a time, perspective, blowing your mind.

PLAY

laughter, sport, fun, romp, cavort, enjoy, frolic, unwind, de-stress, cards, theatre, loaf off, glee, bliss, love, music, incubation of ideas, access to the subconscious, sabbaticals, “You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation.” Plato, joy, enjoyment, passion, folly, fearlessness, innocence, entertain, like, pleasure, “We donʼt stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing.” George Bernard Shaw, be silly, watch movies, watch t.v., be a kid, be a grown up, socialize, read a book, read a newspaper, read a comic book, read nothing, do nothing, play with your dog, play with your cat, play with somebody elseʼs dog, play with somebody elseʼs cat, have a beer, have another, join a club, go shopping, get your hair done, treat yourself, treat somebody else, eat out, eat in, make someone laugh, party, have sex, go on vacation, travel, flirt, dance, sing, fall in love, spend time with friends, make new friends, learn something new, take a class, join in, laugh and then laugh some more, do something crazy, let loose, forget your inhibitions, play tennis, go sailing, scuba dive, have a picnic, play with your kid, play with someone elseʼs kid, fly a kite, go for a hike, play frisbee, chill out, smile and relax life is good.

RELATIONSHIPS

friendships, romance, family, friends, acquaintances, coworkers, teammates, classmates, roommates, drinking buddies, the people you pass on the street, the people in your neighbourhood, the guy who works at the corner store, your employees, your employers, pen pals, lovers, on-line dating, real life dating, that girl at the gym, that guy at the gym, your trainer, your coach, your guru, your husband, your wife, your ex, “Shared joy is a double joy; shared sorrow is half a sorrow.” ~Swedish Proverb~, your boyfriendʼs new boyfriend, your boyfriendʼs other girlfriend, your girlfriendʼs other boyfriend, your best friend, your new friend, your college friends, your teacher from grade 3, the teacher you had a crush on, the teacher who had a crush on you, your crush, your stalker, that guy you just canʼt stand, “Remember, we all stumble, every one of us. That's why it's a comfort to go hand in hand.” ~Emily Kimbrough-, your parents, your siblings, your grandparents, your aunts, your cousins, your uncles, your doctor, your therapist, your tailor, your butcher, your grocer, your local farmer, your mentor, Let us be grateful to people who make us happy, they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.” ~Marcel Proust-, people who inspire you, that person you dream about being.

SELF

your self esteem, your self perception, how you view YOU in relation to the world, you inner space, your outer space, how you dress, how you talk, how you walk, your habits, your habits of thought, your habits of action, “Self esteem is the reputation we acquire with ourselves.” - Nathaniel Branden-, your apartment, your girlfriend, your boyfriend, your car, anything that you might see as connected to you and what you deserve, your wealth, your drive, your motivation, that little voice in your head, your doubts, your insecurities, your failures and triumphs, your ability to bounce back from adversity, what you think you deserve, your story, what makes you YOU, your memories and what you think they mean about you, your choices, your decisions, your vision for yourself, your dreams, your ambitions, your fears, “You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.” -Buddha-, your floor and your ceiling, all of the good and bad that you see about yourself, if you donʼt think you're good enough... you're right, if you do think youʼre good enough... you just might be, It's not who you are that holds you back, it's who you think you're not. ~Anonymous-, self-acceptance, worthiness, the drive to improve while being okay with where you are.

WORK

your job, employment, career, money, skill, performance, the thing you do with your time, what youʼre giving to the world, your legacy, “Whatever your life's work is, do it well. A man should do his job so well that the living, the dead, and the unborn could do it no better. - Martin Luther King, Jr - your effort and your input, your output, a challenge, stimulating, a project that lights you up, a cause that gets you up in the morning, that thing that you wish you were doing with your life, Nothing will work unless you do. -Maya Angelou-, Choose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life. - Confucius -, good work, the satisfaction you get from a job well done, your passion, what youʼd be doing even if nobody paid you to do it, Leaders aren't born they are made. And they are made just like anything else, through hard work. And that's the price we'll have to pay to achieve that goal, or any goal. - Vince Lombardi - reaching goals, breaking a sweat and loving it, "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."-Thomas A. Edison- that thing that keeps you up at night plotting and scheming, your white whale, your reason to get up in the morning, your vocation, your calling, your trade, your business.