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.

What Tyler Durden from Fight Club Got Right…And Wrong

I recently rewatched Fight Club.

And one thing hit me immediately.

The film understood something about modern men that most people are afraid to say out loud:

A lot of men today are lost. Soft. Sedated by comfort and consumption. Scrolling. Buying things they don’t need. Working soul-sucking jobs. Living lives that feel strangely…empty.

On that point, Tyler Durden was absolutely right.

But his solution?

That’s where he went wrong.

Tyler’s answer was destruction.

Mine is construction.

Burning down the world solves nothing.

But building yourself…

Building your body…

Building your mission…

Building your brotherhood…

That changes everything.

Let’s talk about it.

What Tyler Durden Got Right

1. The Modern World Is Making Men Soft

Comfort has replaced challenge.

We sit more than we move. Consume more than we create. Watch more than we do.

Modern life has removed many of the things that historically forged men:

Struggle. Responsibility. Rites of passage. Brotherhood.

Tyler Durden called this out perfectly.

Men need positive friction. We need constructive resistance. We need something that pushes back (but doesn’t push us over).

That’s why we gravitate toward:

Iron. Combat sports. Hard trails. Difficult challenges.

Because struggle forges strength.

Not comfort.

Modern conveniences are great—we’re not starving in the wilderness anymore.

But too much comfort makes a man soft. And a soft man struggles to build anything meaningful.

2. The Need for Brotherhood

The fight club itself wasn’t really about fighting.

It was about belonging.

Men standing shoulder to shoulder. Testing themselves. Sharing struggle.

In a world where many men feel invisible, that kind of brotherhood is powerful.

The problem?

Their outlet was destruction.

But the instinct behind it was correct.

Men need tribes. Men need brotherhood.

Groups of men who train together. Work together. Push each other. Build together.

The modern fight club isn’t a basement…

It’s wherever men that build gather.

3. Pain Is Part of the Process

Tyler understood something most people spend their lives avoiding:

Pain is unavoidable. And often necessary.

Pain teaches. Pain sharpens. Pain reveals who you are.

But pain by itself isn’t the goal.

Pain is information, and fuel.

It’s your body and mind telling you that something needs to be done. It’s a call to action.

You need to do the reps, the work. Have the conversations. Look inside. Make the changes.

Avoid pain—and you avoid growth.

Run from it…and you stay the same.

Lean into it…and you evolve.

What Tyler Durden Got Wrong

1. Destruction Is Not Transformation

Tyler believed freedom came from burning everything down.

Your job. Your apartment. Your identity.

But destruction alone doesn’t create meaning.

If you demolish a building and never rebuild it, you’re left with rubble. Same with yourself.

Real transformation requires construction.

You tear down what’s false, yes.

Then you build something stronger in its place. Brick by brick.

That’s the Builder path.

2. Rage Without Vision

Tyler’s philosophy was pure rebellion.

Reject the system. Reject consumerism. Reject society.

But then what?

There was no plan. No vision. No blueprint.

Just chaos (and chaos at the expense of innocent people).

Real men don’t just rebel.

They build viable alternatives.

We build strong bodies. Strong minds. Strong families. Strong missions. Strong ecosystems.

Not just saying “no.”

But creating a better yes.

3. Worshipping the Wrong Hero

Here’s the uncomfortable truth.

Tyler Durden looks cool.

He’s charismatic. Confident. Fearless. Fit.

But (spoiler alert) he’s also a hallucination born from a man who is completely broken.

And unfortunately, many young men mistook him for a role model.

Tyler Durden isn’t a blueprint.

He’s a warning.

Uncontrolled rage doesn’t lead to freedom…

It leads to collapse.

So What Now, Brother?

Fight Club got us asking the right questions.

Is this system really serving us? Is this the best way?

But Tyler Durden offered the wrong answers.

You’re not your bank account. You’re not what you drive. You’re not your Yin-Yang coffee table. You’re not your fucking khakis.

But the answer isn’t destruction.

The answer is building a life so strong you don’t want to burn it down.

Train your body. Build your mind. Choose your mission. Find your brothers.

Step into the arena…

And start building.

Build a Better World

Everyone says they want a better world.

Very few actually want to build one.

Because building costs something.

A better world doesn’t just arrive.

It’s assembled—brick by brick—by those willing to carry weight.

It starts by constructing yourself. Then those around you.

By outgrowing the world instead of wanting to destroy it.

Discipline over destruction. Restraint over reaction. Contribution over commentary.

It starts closer than you think.

With you. With your thoughts. With your daily actions. With fighting your fight, day in and day out.

Ask the hard question:

What are you building that outlives your mood?

And further:

What are you building that’ll outlast you?

Build the human. Build the world. Better.

Pressure, Not Poison

If you talked to a friend the way you talk to yourself, would they still be your friend?

We let ourselves hear things we would never say to another human being.

Lazy. Stupid. Too slow. Always behind. Not good enough.

You don’t forge through contempt.

You forge through honest pressure paired with respect.

You can hold yourself accountable without treating yourself like the enemy.

Apply gentle pressure respectfully. Don’t poison the well.

The Real Lesson of St. Patrick’s Day

St. Patrick’s Day isn’t about green beer and bars.

It’s about a man.

Saint Patrick wasn’t born in Ireland. He was kidnapped as a teenager and taken there as a slave.

While enslaved, he didn’t give up. He didn’t give in.

No—he used the time to develop spiritually. It was during this hardship that his life took a turn.

Years later he escaped.

Then something strange happened.

He went back to Ireland.

Not with an army. Not with revenge.

With a mission.

He spent the rest of his life building—faith, community, and culture.

Today many use the holiday as an excuse to wear green and get drunk.

But we look to it for a lesson:

Take hardship…and turn it into a mission.

Sonny the Alien: The Day of St. Patrick

Sonny sat at the kitchen table, sipping his tea and reading the newspaper.

Chad walked in. Green shirt. Green hat. Green beads.

Sonny looked up. “…why are you dressed as the color of Earth vegetation?”

Chad looked down at his outfit. “It’s St. Patrick’s Day, dude.”

Sonny nodded slowly. “…and that requires you to resemble plant life?”

Chad started making coffee. “It’s tradition.”

Sonny considered this. “…what is the purpose of the tradition?”

Chad shrugged. “People wear green and go to bars to drink.”

“…why?”

Chad paused. “…honestly, I’m not totally sure.”

Sonny thought about this. “So the ritual involves dressing in a chlorophyll-like manner and becoming intoxicated.”

“Pretty much.”

Sonny nodded thoughtfully. “Did Saint Patrick do these things?”

Chad grabbed a mug from the cupboard. “I doubt it.”

Sonny put the paper down. “Then it seems the humans have misunderstood the assignment.”

Chad looked over. “I guess so. You gonna come out tonight?”

Sonny clasped his hands and put them to his mouth. “Will there be intoxicated plant-like humans?”

Chad smirked. “Oh yeah.”

Sonny looked over at Chad and nodded. “Then yes. This I must observe.”

He took out his Earth Log device and started typing.

In a Hurry

We’re always in a rush.

Hurry to work. Hurry through the workout. Hurry dinner. Hurry the kids. Hurry the code. Hurry the conversation.

But hurry leaves nothing behind.

There’s a quiet strength in patience—and a strange truth most people miss: Moving slower often gets you there faster.

Shortcuts don’t save time. They create debt.

When you rush, you make mistakes. When you make mistakes, you revisit work that should’ve been done once.

Hurry feels productive. It isn’t.

It creates a lot of wasted motion.

So the next time you feel the urge to sprint through things, don’t.

Slow your breathing. Feel the weight. Finish the rep.

Because the paradox is real:

Hurrying doesn’t make you early.

It makes you late.