Sunday Sendoff #45: You Can’t Bubble Wrap Life

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

My son fell off a scooter this week and broke his arm.

And yeah—I felt it immediately.

That punch of guilt.

I’m his Dad.

I should’ve said no. I should’ve set better rules. I should’ve protected him.

That’s where your mind goes.

Backwards.

Replaying it. Rewriting it. Trying to fix something that’s already done.

But here’s the truth:

He’s ridden those scooters hundreds of times. The risk was always there. I accepted it.

Because you can’t bubble wrap life.

Kids are going to run. Climb. Fall. Get hurt. That’s part of growing up. That’s part of living.

And if you try to eliminate all risk…you don’t raise a strong kid.

You raise a fragile one.

So yeah—it happened.

It sucks.

But we handled it. We got him taken care of. He’s healing. He’ll make a full recovery.

That’s what really matters.

And it gave me something I didn’t expect:

Perspective.

It reminded me how much I love him. How much I take for granted.

His health. His energy. His presence.

The normal, everyday moments that feel so routine…until something shakes you awake.

I’m not taking that for granted anymore.

Here’s the bigger picture:

You can play it smart and minimize risk…but bad things are still going to happen.

To you. To your family. To the people you care about.

You don’t get to control that.

What you do control is your response.

Are you going to sit in guilt? Beat yourself up? Shut down?

Or are you going to step up?

Accept it. Handle it. Make it right.

Then move forward.

That’s the job. That’s the standard.

Because life doesn’t stop.

And neither should you.

Builder Principle

It’s less about what happens, and more about how you respond.

Something to Ponder

When things go wrong, how have you handled it in the past? How could you have handled it better? How are you going to handle things in the future?

See You In the Arena

This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.

Brick by brick.

Sonny the Alien: The Case of Really Bad Timing

Sonny the Alien

Earth Log Entry #17: Hoopus Interruptus

Sonny, Chad, and Vanessa were on the couch watching the NBA playoffs.

TV blaring. Final minutes.

Chad was standing. Vanessa was pacing.

Sonny sat on the couch, watching stoically and crunching numbers on his laptop. “The Timberwolves still have a 48% chance of winning the game.”

Vanessa glanced over. “You’ve been saying that for five minutes, Good Will Hunting.”

Sonny didn’t look up. “The probability has remained consistent.”

Chad gestured with his hands. “We’re good. A couple stops and we’re in control.”

Vanessa took a sip of her soda. “Yeah, we just gotta stop the best scorer in the league.”

Chad shrugged. “If anybody can shut him down, it’s us.”

Sonny looked up. “Win probability has dropped by four percentage points.”

KNOCK KNOCK KNOCK.

They all looked to the door, then at each other.

Chad turned back to the TV. “Not a great time.”

Sonny stood up. “Someone appears to require access to us.” He walked to the door and opened it. “Oh. Hello, Dale.”

Dale sauntered in, bathrobe on. “Hey Sonny. Hey y’all. Quick question…you guys know when Chipotle closes?”

Vanessa gestured toward the TV. “Not now, Dale!”

Chad looked over. “Really bad timing, dude.”

Sonny, still at the door, folded his arms and peered at him. “This moment in time is suboptimal, Dale.”

Dale chuckled nervously and backed toward the door. “Okay…I’ll just give ’em a call.”

Sonny closed the door and sat back down.

Shot goes up.

Ball clanks off the rim.

Horn sounds.

Sonny glanced at his laptop. “…0%.”

Vanessa dropped onto the couch. “We can see that.”

Chad stood frozen, hands on his head. “…that was it.”

The door cracked open. Dale poked his head in. “Chipotle closes at 11.”

They all turned and glared at him.

Dale nodded. “Just FYI.” He closed the door.

Chad sighed. “A burrito does sound good right now, though.”

Vanessa nodded in agreement.

Sonny took out his Earth Log device and began typing.

Levers

Life is full of levers.

The mistake isn’t pulling them.

The mistake is pulling the wrong one at the wrong time.

Not every lever works in every season.

Not every lever is meant to be pulled often.

Take the convenience lever.

This is the one you pull to save time and effort. It’s useful when you’re overwhelmed. It’s helpful when you’re in a pinch.

But pull it too often?

You lose self-sufficiency. You get soft. You become dependent on systems you don’t control.

Then there’s the grind lever. The sacrifice lever. The patience lever. The learning lever.

Each one has a cost. Each one has a payoff. Each one works best only in the right moment.

Don’t swear allegiance to a single lever.

Develop the awareness to know which one to pull—and when to leave the others alone.

Levers are just tools.

Used intentionally, they compound your strength. Used carelessly, they throw your life out of alignment.

So don’t ask which lever is best.

Ask which lever this moment demands.

Then pull it—deliberately.

Every Headstone Has a Story…And Yours Ain’t Finished

Every Headstone Has a Story...And Yours Ain’t Finished

Most people don’t even notice graveyards.

They’re just a blur of stones behind a fence. Another patch of land between errands and distractions.

But I see them.

I feel them.

Every time I pass one, I think of an uncomfortable truth:

The clock is ticking.

The Cold Truth

Every man buried in that ground thought he had more time.

More reps to hit. More love to give. More truth to speak. More life to live.

But now?

They’re names in stone. Dates chiseled into granite. Bones beneath the earth.

Some of them wasted it. Some of them used it. But none of them got a second chance.

You’re Not Dead Yet

That’s what the graveyard reminds me.

I’m not in there yet. You’re not in there yet.

We’ve still got breath in our lungs. Weight to move. Things to build.

But the reaper doesn’t make appointments. He doesn’t care about your plans. He’s coming.

So what are you waiting for?

The “right time”? The “perfect setup”? Some magical day when you “finally feel ready”?

Wake up.

You’ve already been given the greatest gift a man can have: Time.

You still have some time.

This Is the Moment

If you’re reading this, it means you’re still above the dirt.

And that means you still have a choice.

You can play small. Play scared. Waste more time. Let weakness keep winning.

Or you can lock in, grab the wheel, press the accelerator, and GO.

Build your body. Build your mind. Build your systems. Build your legacy.

Brick by brick.

Because one day, that graveyard will be your address. And when that day comes, the only thing that’ll matter is what you built.

Bottom Line

As soon as you can, go by a graveyard.

Maybe stop and sit for a bit. Look at all the headstones. Think about the people there.

Let it slap you in the face. Let it shake the softness out of you. Let it beat the procrastination out of you.

Let it remind you:

You are not immortal.

But your work can outlive you.

Your impact can outlive you.

Your legacy can outlive you.

You’re not dead yet.

And that’s your warning.

Go build something that survives you.

Get Dumb (Sometimes)

There’s a problem with being a “smart” guy: you think too much.

You analyze everything. You look at every angle. You run every scenario.

You want the clean plan. The optimized path. The perfect move.

And because of that…you don’t move.

You sit there running mental reps while real life passes you by.

I’ve done this more times than I’d like to admit.

Thinking about the business. Thinking about the job. Thinking about the next step.

Refining it. Tweaking it. Reworking it.

Convincing myself I’m “making progress.”

But I wasn’t.

I was just hiding in thought.

There’s a point where intelligence becomes a liability.

Where thinking turns into hesitation. Where preparation turns into avoidance. Where you know so much…that you stop doing anything.

This is why sometimes you just gotta get dumb.

Not actually dumb.

But decisively less analytical.

Start before you’re ready. Move before it’s perfect. Act before you’ve mapped the entire terrain.

Walk into things a little ignorant. A little underprepared. A little unsure.

Because here’s the truth—

You don’t figure it out by thinking it to death.

You figure it out by doing.

By getting punched in the face a few times. By adjusting on the fly. By learning mid-rep.

“Smart guys” want certainty, but here’s the truth: nothing is certain.

That’s why we operate in motion, and we sharpen after we start.

So if you’ve been stuck…

If you’ve been circling the same idea for weeks…

If you’ve been “planning” but not executing…

Get dumb.

Hit send. Take the job. Start the program. Walk into the room.

Stop overthinking.

Start building.

All Good Things

They say all good things must come to an end.

They’re right.

So enjoy every last second while it’s here.

And when the end arrives?

Don’t sulk. Don’t cling. Don’t try to wish it back into existence.

Be grateful it happened. Learn what it taught you. Use the momentum to build something even better.

Good things aren’t meant to last forever.

We only get hurt when we pretend they will.

So ride the wave fully.

Smile when it breaks.

Step off stronger than you stepped on.

Good things end.

But there’s something better just ahead.

Human Firmware

You update your phone without thinking twice.

You patch your software, upgrade your tools, optimize your systems.

But when was the last time you upgraded you?

Humans have firmware too—beliefs, habits, mental loops.

Most people are running outdated code.

They keep executing the same fear routines, the same comfort patterns, the same excuse—then wonder why nothing changes.

Rewrite the code.

Install new standards, delete bad loops, and debug the lies that hold you back.

That’s how growth works—not by adding more apps, but by rebuilding the core operating system.

If the system’s clean, everything runs faster.

If it’s corrupted, even the best tools fail.

So before chasing another hack, upgrade the source code: your mind.

The 2,630th Rep

Everyone celebrates the first rep.

The start. The spark. The moment of motivation.

But the first rep is easy.

It’s fueled by excitement, novelty, and maybe a little caffeine.

The 2,630th rep?

(Just a random number—to make a point.)

That’s where identity shows up.

That’s what decides who you really are.

Whether this is a one-off burst…or a long-term pattern.

Whether you’re the person who tries something…or the person who becomes something.

Progress doesn’t come from one good rep.

No, it comes from coming back tomorrow.

And the day after that.

And the day after that.

Ad infinitum.

Reps stack.

Quietly. Steadily. Inevitably.

The first rep is fun.

High reps are defining.

Can you keep going when no one’s clapping, when the music fades, when it’s just you and the work?