Sonny the Alien: The Gala

Sonny, Vanessa, and Chad arrived exactly ten minutes early to the Fighting for Our Youth Annual Charity Gala.

Vanessa checked in at the front table.

Within thirty seconds she had learned the volunteer’s name, complimented her earrings, and asked how long she’d been involved with the organization.

Sonny leaned toward Chad. “Is she interrogating the staff?”

Chad shrugged. “She’s being friendly.”

Vanessa waved them over. “Guys! This is Melissa!”

Melissa smiled. “Welcome, nice to meet you!”

Sonny nodded politely. “…what are your intentions with this event?”

Melissa blinked. “My intentions?”

Vanessa laughed. “Oh my goodness, Sonny.”

Then she smiled at Melissa. “Sorry, he doesn’t get out much.”

Everyone laughed.

Sonny looked at Chad. “…that was a normal question.”

They walked toward the coat check.

Vanessa immediately struck up another conversation. “Oh my gosh I love your tie.”

The coat check attendant lit up. “Oh, thank you! My girlfriend got it for me.”

Sonny whispered to Chad. “She knows his relationship status already.”

Chad chuckled. “Sonny, that’s Firecracker for you. She makes friends faster than anyone I’ve ever met.”

Sonny nodded slowly. “Smart. The coat guardian controls access to the outer garments. This is a strategic alliance.”

Chad started fixing his tie. “It’s a coat check, Sonny.”

Vanessa disappeared into the room, and within minutes she had joined a small group laughing near the bar. Then another group near the stage. Then another group near the dessert table.

Sonny watched her move effortlessly from conversation to conversation. “Chad…she is forming alliances. She may control the room by midnight.”

Chad sipped his drink. “She’s networking.”

Sonny scanned the room. “I count fourteen new friends.”

“Sounds about right.”

Vanessa waved them over again. “Sonny! Come meet Greg!”

Greg shook Sonny’s hand enthusiastically. “Nice to meet you!”

Sonny studied him carefully. “…what are your intentions with Vanessa?”

Greg blinked. “My intentions?”

Vanessa groaned. “He’s joking.”

Sonny turned to Chad. “I am not joking.”

Chad patted his shoulder. “You’ll get used to it.”

Across the room Vanessa was already talking to three more people.

Sonny watched her for a long moment. “Chad…how many friends does one human require?”

Chad shrugged. “Depends on the human.”

Sonny looked at the room.

Then at Vanessa.

Then back at Chad.

After a long pause he sighed. “…I miss the apartment.”

He took out his Earth Log device and began typing.

The Ability to Politely Say No

How much simpler—and better—would life be if you mastered the ability to politely say no?

Life will pull you in every direction if you let it. It’ll hand you other people’s priorities (and problems), disguise distractions as opportunities, and lead you off course before you realize you’ve drifted.

Saying no—politely, clearly, and firmly—is one of the most powerful skills you can develop.

Because every “yes” carries a hidden cost. Every time you say yes to something you don’t care about, you’re saying no to something you do.

When you say no, you’re not being rude. You’re being respectful—to your time, your mission, and the people who actually need your full energy.

You don’t owe the world constant access. You owe yourself focus.

So practice the polite no. It doesn’t burn bridges—it builds boundaries.

The Office

Where do you work?

I’ve worked in a corner of the living room. A hotel desk. An RV dinette.

Now, I use the kitchen table.

None of them are an “office.”

None of that matters.

There are no perfect conditions.

You need quiet. A chair. A surface. A little light. A semblance of comfort.

That’s it.

We love to believe that a better setup will make us more productive. The right desk. The perfect chair. The dream space.

But those are accessories—not essentials.

The lack of an office isn’t what stalls progress.

The lack of mission is.

When the mission is strong, the setting fades. When the purpose is clear, the excuses get quiet.

So stop waiting for the room you don’t have yet.

Build where you are. With what you’ve got.

It’s not the office that makes you.

It’s the work.

Cost Per Use and Benefit

Most people chase the cheapest price.

But the cheapest price rarely delivers the best value.

Value comes from cost per use and the total benefit something gives you over its lifespan.

Take gym equipment.

You buy a budget piece for $200.

You use it 150 times before it breaks and ends up on the curb.

That’s $1.33 per use—and one year of benefit.

Now take the higher-quality version.

It’s $600—triple the price—but it lasts 12 years and sees 1,800 uses.

That’s 33 cents per use and more than a decade of benefit.

So which one was the better investment?

Obviously, the one that cost more up front.

Because the goal isn’t to save money—it’s to get maximum benefit from the things you bring into your life.

That’s why quality matters. That’s why durability matters. That’s why thinking like a Builder matters.

Sure, there are exceptions.

Sometimes cheap things last forever. Sometimes expensive things don’t.

But in general?

Cost per use + total benefit = smart living.

A simple framework that pays you back for the rest of your life.

Brickwall’s Baddest Builders: Alan P. Mead, “The Human Anatomy Chart”

Bbbalanpmead

World War I veteran. Amputee. Attorney. Pioneer of physical culture.

There’s something about a man who builds without applause.

Alan P. Mead lost his leg in World War I.

Not in a training accident. Not from a bad lifestyle choice.

In war. Serving his country.

He came home altered.

And the world moved on.

No parades that lasted. No lifetime support system. No social media sympathy.

Just life. And bills. And responsibility.

The World Didn’t Care

Here’s the uncomfortable part.

Veterans came home from World War I to a country that expected them to quietly reintegrate.

There was no modern VA safety net. No honoring service members the way we do now.

You survived?

Good.

Now get back to work.

And he did.

The Decision

He could’ve lived small. He could’ve lived carefully. He could’ve accepted the label.

He didn’t.

Instead, he chose to build.

He trained his body.

Not for competition. Not for clout.

For strength. For presence. For self-respect.

The iconic photos?

Not contest prep.

A statement. A declaration:

“You will not reduce me.”

The Engineer Mindset

This is the part I love most.

He didn’t just train.

He innovated. He developed pulley systems to better target muscles.

He studied mechanics. Leverage. Angles. Tension.

He adapted the gym to fit his structure.

He didn’t wait for perfect equipment.

He engineered around limitation.

That’s pure Builder energy.

The Three Pillars He Built

1. His Body

No gyms. No steroids (they didn’t exist yet). No supplements. Almost no information.

Built anyway.

2. His Family

He raised two daughters—Mary and Elizabeth.

He showed them what resilience looks like in a man.

Not loud.

Steady.

3. His Career

He became a successful attorney.

One leg.

Full responsibility.

No excuses.

Alan P. Mead Was a True Builder

He didn’t let the war consume him. He didn’t back down. He didn’t center his life around what he lost.

He focused on what remained.

That’s rare.

A lot of men today are physically intact—and spiritually fragile.

He was physically altered—and structurally unshakeable.

The Takeaway

Life is full of hardship.

It’s messy. It’s chaotic.

But Builders look right back at life, laugh in its face, and keep building anyway.

Life will take something from you.

Health. Time. Opportunities. People. Status.

You will not leave this thing untouched.

The question is not:

“What did I lose?”

The question is:

“What can I still build?”

Alan P. Mead built with what he had.

And that’s why he’s one of the baddest Builders to ever exist.

You’re the CEO of Your Own Life

Not your mom. Not your dad. Not your boss. Not your girl.

You.

The decisions?

Yours.

The consequences?

Yours.

The wins?

Yours.

The losses?

Also yours.

That’s the job. That’s the chair you sit in.

A lot of people outsource their authority.

Blame the world. Wait for permission. Hand over the steering wheel.

Builders don’t do that. Builders can’t do that.

You call the shots. You set the standard. You build the life.

And at the end of the day—when the weights are racked, the noise quiets, the world stops tugging on your sleeve—you’re the one who has to live with the man you chose to be.

Choose boldly. Choose deliberately.

Choose like a CEO.

Raise the Bar on the Small Stuff

Everyone talks about the big moves. The life-altering decisions. The grand gestures.

Great.

But what about the tiny things?

The way you stand. The way you breathe. What you put on your skin. How you shake a hand or hold eye contact.

Most people dismiss these as trivial.

Hardly.

Small things stack. Small things compound. Small things become momentum, identity, and reputation.

It’s the cycling team that made a hundred micro-improvements—not one massive overhaul—and ended up dominating.

Raise the bar on the little details. Dial in the trivial. Refine the stuff nobody else cares about.

Master the small things…and everything else gets sharper.

Sunday Sendoff #38: The High Cost of Redlining

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

I was burning the candle at both ends. Grinding myself into dust. Pulverizing myself into nothing.

My health suffered (including mental health). My ability to parent suffered. My relationship suffered.

It wasn’t until a hard reset—with some serious rest—that I was able to see how much I had been redlining.

As Builders, we naturally want to build. To grind. To hustle.

It’s hard to keep us still.

Every waking moment feels like it needs to be filled with something productive.

But at a certain point, your body and mind will give out on you.

You’re not a machine.

You need to just be—dare I say—lazy once in a while.

Lay on the couch and do nothing. Lay in bed for the whole morning. Be a slacker for half the day.

And when you come back?

You’ll be as voracious as ever to get back to it.

Rest isn’t weakness.

It’s strength. It’s strategy. It’s necessary.

Builder Principle

Take your rest…or it’ll take you.

Something to Ponder

Why not reset and schedule some time to do absolutely nothing? Set up some couch time. Or chill in bed for the whole morning. Or at the very least, take an hour and do nothing productive.

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