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Most people are running outdated code.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?

Sunday Sendoff #44: Cut What Doesn’t Fit

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

Sometimes we try to hold onto things that just aren’t working.

Things that might’ve fit in a past life. Things that worked for a past version of you.

We try to force it. We do mental gymnastics. We rationalize it. We tell ourselves it’ll get better.

But right now?

It’s just weighing you down. Holding you back.

Cut it.

Life’s too short to carry dead weight.

Alignment is everything.

If it doesn’t fit your life, your mission, your direction—

it doesn’t belong.

Over the past couple years, I’ve ended a lot of things.

Things I could’ve held onto. Things I could’ve tried to revive.

But I knew—deep down—it wasn’t right.

I was just dragging it out.

And that costs you.

Time. Energy. Focus.

As Builders, we want to make things work.

We want to fix it. We want to build something solid.

But you can’t build on a shaky foundation.

And you can’t force something into place that doesn’t belong there.

So don’t.

Cut it.

Builder Principle

If it doesn’t fit…cut it.

Something to Ponder

What are you holding onto that isn’t working? What are you forcing? What needs a clean cut?

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 Skyscraper

Sonny the Alien

Earth Log Entry #16: Getting Vertical

Chad and Sonny were on the basketball court at a local park on a Saturday afternoon, locked in during a competitive game of 2-on-2.

Chad dribbled at the top of the circle, breathing heavy, sweat soaking through his headband. “14–12. Us.”

Sonny moved effortlessly around the court. “I am open, at the left corner!” Sonny called.

Chad sent the ball over with a crisp pass.

Sonny caught it, set his feet, and released—perfect form.

Swish.

“Game!” Chad yelled, jogging over for a high five.

They shook hands with the other team and walked back to the bench.

Sonny took a long drink of water. “Who would have thought placing a leather sphere through an iron ring could be so enjoyable.”

He paused. His eyes widened. “…Chad.”

Chad stretched his hamstrings, not looking up. “Yeah?”

Sonny gestured over to the far end of the court. “That human appears to be…vertically enhanced.”

Chad glanced over. Then did a double take. “Oh. Wow. That’s Jellybean Johnson.”

Sonny blinked. “Jelly…bean?”

Chad took a sip of water. “Played for the U back in the day. Then overseas,” Chad said casually. “I heard he shows up here sometimes.”

Sonny stared. “What is his exact height?”

Chad put his water bottle down. “Seven foot. Maybe more.”

At that moment—

BOOM.

Jellybean slammed down a dunk, barely leaving the ground. The rim shook. The ball snapped through the net. A few people nearby cheered.

Sonny did not blink. “…Are we going to play him?”

Chad shrugged. “Yeah. Why not?”

Sonny turned slowly. “Chad, I am exactly 6 feet, 1 inch. You are exactly 5 feet, 10.23 inches.”

Chad sighed. “Thanks for calling attention to that.”

Sonny nodded gravely. “We will be reduced to cosmic dust by a man named Jellybean.”

Chad picked up his water bottle and took another drink. “Probably.”

Sonny pulled out his Earth Log device and began typing.

Jellybean walked over, the basketball looking like a grapefruit in his hand. “Y’all runnin’ 2-on-2?”

Sonny looked up.

…then up more.

…then slightly stepped back to see Jellybean’s whole face.

He turned to Chad. Then back to Jellybean. “It will be a noble battle.”

The Power of Convenience

Anything positive you want to achieve, make it convenient.

The most obvious example is the gym.

You could join the best facility in the world. Top equipment. World-class trainers. Perfect lighting.

But if it’s on the other side of town? It might as well be on the other side of the planet.

Traffic. Weather. Mood. Life.

Friction kills follow-through.

Now flip it.

A gym five minutes from your door? You’ll go without thinking.

Not because you’re disciplined—but because you removed the excuses.

This applies everywhere.

If healthy food is hard to reach, you won’t eat it.

If your work needs attention but your phone is closer, you’ll scroll.

If learning requires a bunch of steps, you’ll skip it.

Convenience isn’t laziness.

It’s leverage.

Don’t rely on willpower. Don’t rely on motivation.

That’s impossible.

Design environments that make the right choice automatic.

Don’t make better habits heroic. Make them unavoidable.

Make necessary things so close you trip over them.

Hate It

Dislike isn’t enough.

We can live with things we don’t like.

Many of us do—day in and day out.

But if you want change?

If you want transformation?

You can’t just dislike it.

You have to hate it with a passion.

Only then will you have the fire to move.

Only then will you stop tolerating and start building.

Only then will you stack the bricks that create something better.

Dislike accepts. Hate ignites.

Hate it.

The Weight of Waiting

Everyone says they’re “waiting for the right time.”

But waiting is a weight.

It builds resistance the longer you hold it.

Every day you delay, the idea grows heavier.

Doubt adds plates.

Fear locks the bar.

The right time doesn’t show up—you build it.

You clear the bench, bear down, and start pressing under imperfect conditions.

Because movement creates momentum, and momentum kills fear.

Waiting feels safe, but it’s just stagnation disguised as strategy.

Don’t wait—lift, build, write, ship, love.

Even when it’s messy. Especially when it’s messy.

The longer you wait, the heavier it gets.

Lift now.

If It’s Not an Enthusiastic Yes, It’s a No

Think how much simpler and better following this little maxim would make your life.

It instantly weeds out the “meh”, the things you’re lukewarm about, and frees up time for things you’re really passionate about.

Of course, it’s not always simple, or easy to know what’s an enthusiastic yes.

And enthusiastic yes’s can turn into “meh”.

And “meh” can turn into enthusiastic yes’s.

Go with your gut.

Hell yeah things could turn into hell no things. Hell no things could turn into hell yeah things. Also, there’s just going to be some hell no things you just have to do. That’s life.

But trying to keeping a good number of hell yeah things front and center in your life is