The Power of Laying on Flat, Hard Ground

The Power of Laying on Flat, Hard Ground

One of the most powerful recovery tools I’ve ever used costs $0.

No equipment. No mobility routine. No stretching flow. No fancy breathwork protocol.

Just lay on the floor.

Flat. On your back. On hard ground.

And do nothing.

It sounds almost stupid.

Until you try it.

All day your spine is under load.

Standing. Sitting. Driving. Training. Looking down at screens.

Your vertebrae are gently compressed from the moment you wake up until the moment you go to bed. Your paraspinal muscles never really shut off. Your posture never really resets. Your nervous system never really stands down.

You are in a low-grade “go mode” for hours and hours.

Then you go sit on a couch. Or lay in a soft bed.

Which just keeps you in the same positions.

But the floor is different.

The floor doesn’t let you sink into bad posture. The floor doesn’t accommodate you. The floor forces you into neutral.

Your shoulders fall back. Your chest opens. Your pelvis settles. Your neck realigns.

Not because you’re trying. Because physics does it for you.

Then something else happens.

You start breathing differently.

You can feel your ribs expand into the ground. Your breaths get slower. Deeper. More diaphragmatic without you even thinking about it.

This sends a very old signal to your nervous system:

We’re safe. You can stand down.

Heart rate drops. Jaw unclenches. Lower back tension melts. Your mind quiets.

Within 3–5 minutes you feel it.

Within 10 minutes you feel like a different person.

This is passive spinal decompression without hanging from a bar. This is posture correction without drills. This is nervous system down-regulation without meditation.

This is ancestral recovery in its simplest form.

Because before couches, recliners, memory foam, and ergonomic chairs…

Humans rested on the ground.

Your body still recognizes it.

Stand up after ten minutes and you’ll notice:

You feel taller. Looser. Calmer. Clearer.

Like your whole system just exhaled.

Give it a try today.

Lay flat on the floor for 10 minutes.

No phone. No stretching. No “routine.” No trying to optimize it.

Just lay there.

And feel what happens.

No One’s Going to Give You Permission

No one’s going to show up and tell you it’s go time.

No one’s going to step out of the shadows and declare you ready.

No one’s coming to bark at you to take action.

Wait for that…and you’ll be waiting forever.

Get out there.

Start before you’re qualified.

Move before you’re confident.

Build before you’re ready.

The only permission you need is your own.

You’ve been holding the key to your own cage this whole time.

The Difference Between Good Sleep and Bad Sleep Is Astounding

It’s a difference you can feel.

Good sleep? You wake up ready to take on the world.

Bad sleep? You groan and think, here we go again.

Sleep blankets (pun intended) every area of life:

Training. Relationships. Parenting. Business. Hobbies.

After good sleep:

You don’t need motivation. You just move.

After bad sleep:

You need willpower just to act like yourself. Everything feels like a chore.

You start thinking something is wrong with your life.

There isn’t.

Something is wrong with your sleep.

Sleep is the force multiplier for everything you’re trying to build:

Muscle. Mood. Discipline. Patience. Creativity. Presence.

Fix your sleep and watch half your problems disappear.

Sleep isn’t for the weak.

It’s for the strong.

It’s not simply rest.

It’s construction.

Get your shut-eye.

Panning for Gold

A lot of life is like being a 49er back in the day—standing in the river, sifting through the mud.

Most of what you scoop up isn’t gold. It’s rocks. Sediment. Noise.

But with patience and persistence, every now and then—you hit pay dirt.

Life works the same way.

The right people. The right work. The right pursuits.

You won’t find them in every pan.

Most of it won’t fit you. Most of it won’t build you.

But keep sifting.

Because when you find the gold, it changes everything.

Sunday Sendoff #33: The Things You’re Avoiding Are the Things You Need to Do

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

There’s always something.

A decision. A conversation. An action.

You know it’s there.

You think about it in the shower. While driving. While trying to fall asleep.

And yet…you don’t do it.

You scroll. You clean. You organize. You find anything else to do.

Because it feels uncomfortable.

Heavy. Inconvenient. Scary even.

But here’s the tell:

The things that would move your life forward the most…are usually the things you feel the most resistance toward.

We avoid what matters.

Not because we’re lazy. But because we know it will change something. We know it’ll shake things up.

It might change a relationship. A routine. A situation you’ve gotten used to.

Avoidance is often a compass pointing directly at the work.

The workout you keep pushing off. The conversation you don’t want to have. The decision you’ve been “thinking about” for weeks.

That’s the thing.

Go handle it.

Builder Principle

Avoidance illuminates the path toward growth.

Something to Ponder

What’s something tough that you’ve been avoiding? Why not grab it head on and handle it?

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 Restaurant Check

Sonny and Chad sat in the booth waiting for their food.

Sonny was vibrating with excitement. “I have ordered optimally for muscle growth, Chad.”

Chad nodded. “Nice.”

A burger. Extra patty. Side of fries. Cheese curds. Dessert. Two waters.

Chad ordered a sandwich and a beer.

The food arrived and Sonny went to work like a construction crew demolishing a building.

Ten minutes later, nothing remained but crumbs and satisfaction.

Sonny leaned back. “That was outstanding. I feel prepared to lift a vehicle.”

The waitress dropped the check.

Chad picked it up. Paused. “…huh.”

Sonny tilted his head. “Is there an issue?”

Chad turned the check around.

$93.47

Sonny blinked.

“Chad.”

“Yeah.” Chad reached for his wallet.

“This paper says we have purchased an entire week of groceries.”

Chad shrugged. “Yeah, restaurants are kinda pricey now.”

Sonny pointed. “What is this ‘side of fries’ charge? The fries did not accompany the burger?”

“Nope.”

“And this ‘credit card surcharge’…they are charging us…for paying them?”

“Yep.”

“And we must also give them additional money because they carried the food ten feet to this table?”

“Uh huh.”

Sonny stared at the check like it had insulted his family.

“So the process is this,” Sonny said slowly. “They source and cook the food for less than we pay. We pay extra for parts of the food. We pay extra for using money. We pay extra for them to walk it to us. And then we leave.”

Chad nodded. “Pretty much.”

Sonny leaned back.

“Chad…this establishment is a scam.”

Chad laughed. “You still wanna come back?”

Sonny thought for a long time.

“…only if we are celebrating something very important. Like surviving a small war.”

Sonny took out his Earth Log device and began typing.

Dues are Paid Every Day

Very few things in life are set and forget.

Most require an active investment.

Training. Relationships. Business. Education.

Stop watering them and they wither.

Stop engaging and they atrophy.

We know this. That’s why we commit—not to perfection, but to action.

Some days you go big. Some days you go small.

What matters is that you pay.

Because dues aren’t monthly. They aren’t yearly.

They’re daily.

Big steps or baby steps—it doesn’t matter.

Never stop stepping.

Friction

Friction isn’t the enemy.

It’s a tool.

Remove it, and things get easier.

Add it, and things get harder.

Use it deliberately.

Want to train more? Put your shoes by the door. Keep the kettlebell in sight. Make the gym the closest option. Remove friction.

Want to scroll less? Log out of the apps. Put the phone in another room. Make distraction inconvenient. Add friction.

Most people rely on willpower.

We design environments.

We don’t ask ourselves to be stronger. We make the right action easier—and the wrong action harder.

Friction shapes behavior whether you notice it or not.

So stop fighting it.

Start using it.

Remove friction from what builds you.

Add friction to what breaks you.