Start Where Things Actually Start

Most people try to fix life at the surface.

Change the routine.

Change the job.

Change the habits.

Change the outcomes.

They go straight for the symptoms.

But everything downstream is just an echo of what’s upstream.

If your thoughts are frantic, your actions will wobble.

If your words are careless, your results will be too.

If your inner voice is undecided, your life won’t know where to go.

Real change begins earlier than you think.

Not with the habit. Not with the plan. Not with the action.

It begins with the moment before the moment—the thought you choose, the frame you set, the story you tell yourself before the world ever sees a thing.

The play is to shape the upstream.

Steady your thoughts.

Speak with clarity.

Choose actions that match who you’re becoming.

Let your habits follow automatically.

Build…quietly at first, then all at once.

A small upstream correction can reroute an entire life.

Start where things actually start.

Buckets of Water

If you took one bucket of water from a small pond, it really wouldn’t make that much of a difference.

But hundreds or even thousands of buckets?

Now you’ll be making a difference.

Likewise:

One bad performance doesn’t erase many good performances.

Missing something once doesn’t erase being there every other time.

Being undisciplined once doesn’t erase being disciplined every other time.

If you’re consistent most of the time, these blips just won’t matter. They won’t happen often enough to even matter.

The key is that they’re infrequent, though.

If these little blips become regular, well then now it’s going to start to matter.

Keep them infrequent and you’re fine when they do happen.

Presence Over Perfection

Your kids don’t need the perfect version of you.

They need you. Imperfect you.

They don’t need Super Dad. They don’t need big trips to theme parks or gifts for every occasion.

They need your time. They need your attention. They need your love.

Presence outperforms perfection every time.

Every rep counts. Every time you show up counts. Every hug, kiss, and I love you counts.

You don’t need all the bells and whistles to build legacy.

You just need to show up as Dad.

Every day.

Getting Older? No, Getting Better

38

Today is my 38th birthday.

They say age is just a number.

That’s partially true.

There are realities to aging.

Recovery takes longer. You feel things you didn’t used to. You can’t get away with what you did in your 20s.

But here’s where most people get it wrong…

They accept it—and start coasting.

That’s not the move.

You double down.

You train smarter. You recover better. You dial in your habits. You become more disciplined, more intentional, more dangerous.

You don’t decline.

You evolve.

At 38, I’m not trying to hold on to who I used to be.

I’m building someone better.

Stronger. Leaner. Sharper. More experienced.

A man my younger self couldn’t touch.

You’re not getting older…

You’re getting better.

Now, do I hope we crack the code on aging someday?

Of course.

But until then?

I’m embracing every year.

Because every year I get older…

is another year I’ve been building.

There Is No Final Form

There is no finished version of you.

No end state. No last upgrade. No moment where the work is complete.

You are in motion or you are in decay. Nothing else exists.

Your body either adapts or atrophies. Your mind either sharpens or dulls. Your business either evolves or gets replaced. Your relationships either deepen or drift.

Stasis is a story people tell themselves when growth feels inconvenient.

You don’t have to chase perfection.

But you do need to pursue progress.

Learn new skills. Rework old systems. Discard habits that once worked but no longer serve.

If you look back at the past year and can’t clearly see how you’ve changed, that year didn’t build you.

It consumed you.

There is no final form waiting at the finish line.

There is only the version of you who shows up today and decides to evolve again.

Build, or be built over.

Sunday Sendoff #40: The Grass Isn’t Always Greener…But Sometimes It Is

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

You’ve heard the phrase:

“The grass isn’t always greener on the other side of the fence.”

It’s true…

Sometimes.

A lot of life comes down to discernment.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently.

What’s working for me? What’s not? What should stay? What needs to go?

The hard part is knowing when to throttle down and keep pushing…

…and when it’s time to walk away and try something new.

Sometimes the grass is greener on the side you’re standing on.

Sometimes it’s greener on the other side.

And sometimes…

there’s a patch of grass somewhere you’re not even looking that’s the greenest of all.

It’s your call. You’re the CEO of your own life.

And here’s the truth:

Deep down—really deep down—you already know what the right call is.

You might be held back by fear. You might be held back by comfort. You might be held back by circumstances.

But you can feel it.

And usually…

your first reaction is the truest.

It behooves you to listen.

Because you’re the one who has to live with the consequences. You’re the one who has to live that life.

No one else does.

Builder Principle

Make the call. Then own it.

Something to Ponder

Is there something you’ve been sitting on the fence about? Maybe it’s time to choose.

See You In the Arena

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

Brick by brick.

-Brickwall

Sonny the Alien: The Madness of March

Sonny sat at the kitchen table with a laptop open, several sheets of paper spread around him, and a pencil tucked behind his ear.

Chad walked in and stopped. “What are you doing…and why is our kitchen table covered in paper?”

Sonny looked up. “I took a special subbing assignment in home economics today. The students would not stop discussing this ‘March Madness.’ I am studying it.”

Chad nodded slowly. “Okay. Respect.”

Sonny looked back at his laptop. “At first I thought it was a mental disorder caused by the shifting of the clock.”

Chad reached into the fridge. “Naturally.”

Sonny continued. “But then I learned it is a single elimination tournament for the sport of intercollegiate basketball.”

Chad grabbed a bottle of chocolate milk. “Yeah…technically speaking.”

Sonny took the pencil from his ear and pointed it at the screen. “I have reviewed team records, strength of schedule, offensive efficiency, defensive efficiency, injury reports, coaching tendencies, rebounding rates, turnover percentages, and historical upset patterns.”

Chad sat down. “Uhh…okay.”

Sonny reached out and picked up one of the pieces of paper from the table. “I have also created a weighted prediction model…I am prepared to dominate the bracket.”

Chad leaned back. “It’s that serious, huh?”

Sonny looked over. “What data did you use to pick your bracket?”

Chad took a drink of his chocolate milk. “Vibes.”

Sonny stared at him.

Chad shrugged. “And mascots.”

Sonny’s face tightened. “…mascots?”

Chad grabbed a sports magazine and flipped it open. “Yeah. Like, if it’s a tiger versus a bird, I usually go tiger. Predator energy.”

Sonny slowly turned his laptop toward him. “I have spent three hours building a predictive framework.”

Chad nodded. “And I spent four minutes becoming spiritually aligned with the bracket.”

Sonny sat back in his chair. “That is not a method.”

Chad didn’t look up. “That’s where you’re wrong, dude. That is the method.”

Sonny frowned. “Humans claim to value reason. Yet you decide things based on ‘vibes’.”

Chad smirked. “Got us this far.”

Chad picked up his phone and started scrolling. “Whoa…High Point took down Wisconsin.”

Sonny snapped his head over and threw up his hands. “…vibes!”

Chad grinned. “Vibes.”

Sonny grabbed his Earth Log device and began typing.

Prune Mercilessly. Regularly.

If it’s not serving you, it’s gone.

Life grows wild if you let it—full of old habits, toxic people, stale routines, and unnecessary noise.

Like a fast-growing plant, you’ve got to prune mercilessly. Regularly.

Don’t let dead foliage hang on.

It doesn’t just look bad—it drains life from what’s still growing.

Every useless commitment, every “maybe,” every person or project you’ve outgrown steals energy from what matters.

Cut ’em.

At first, it feels harsh.

But the more you prune, the more you see what’s worth keeping—and what was holding you back.

Don’t get sentimental about decay. Clear it so the strong roots can thrive.

Because the goal isn’t to keep everything alive—it’s to keep yourself alive, strong, and growing.