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The Page I Didn’t Want to Write
There was one page in this book I didn’t want to write. Not because I didn’t believe in it—but because I wasn’t fully living it yet. It was a moment of truth: either avoid the subject entirely, or write it anyway and grow into the message myself. I chose the latter. That decision—writing the uncomfortable truth—shaped everything that came after. The process of doing what you know doesn’t begin once the book is done. It begins the moment you stop editing yourself to stay comfortable. That one page turned out to be one of the most powerful. Not because it was polished, but because it was real. You never know…
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Why I Wrote This Book (And Why I Almost Didn’t)
The truth is, this book almost never got written. I sat with the idea for years, literally. Not because I didn’t believe in it, but because I doubted myself. I questioned whether anyone needed to hear what I had to say. Whether my experiences and insights were enough. Whether I was enough. But the more I talked with people, the more I saw the same struggle over and over again. People weren’t lacking knowledge; they were stuck behind invisible walls they couldn’t name. That’s when I knew this book wasn’t optional. It was necessary. Writing “Doing What You Know” was uncomfortable. Vulnerable. Exhausting. But it was also healing. And if…
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The Day the Book Was Never Meant to Be
There was a point when this book almost never got written. Not because I didn’t want to write it.Not because I didn’t believe it mattered.But because I almost let resistance win. The voice that said, “Who do you think you are?”The thought that whispered, “This has all been said before.”The weight of everything else that felt more urgent. But here’s the thing: The message wouldn’t let go.And the truth is, if it won’t leave you alone it’s probably not just for you. This book was born out of a wrestle.Every chapter fought for.Every insight tested in the real world. It wasn’t written to impress anyone.It was written to free someone.…
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What I Didn’t Expect Writing This Book
When I first sat down to write Doing What You Know, I thought it would be a straight line. But here’s what no one tells you:Writing a book about breaking through your own invisible barriers makes you face every single one of them again. Midway through the draft, I hit a wall — not because I didn’t know what to write, but because what I was writing was asking more of me. I had to stop and do the work again.I had to face the voices.I had to choose action over delay — again. The truth is, the process of writing the book forced me to live it.And that’s why…
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This Was Never Just About a Book
When I first started writing Doing What You Know, I wasn’t thinking about a movement.I was thinking about my own invisible barrier. I’d spent years in personal development. I’d read the books. Listened to the audios.I knew what to do — and still found myself stuck. That was the real wake-up call:Knowledge isn’t enough. What I needed was transformation. And that doesn’t come from more information.It comes from alignment — mindset, identity, faith, and action all working together. That’s why I wrote the book the way I did. Not as a step-by-step system, but as a mirror.A challenge. A breakthrough in print. And that’s why the 100K Reader Challenge exists.…
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The Only Reason This Book Got Finished
I didn’t write this book because I had more time.Or because I finally found the “perfect” writing process.Or because everything in my life lined up just right. I wrote this book because I did something I hadn’t done before: I stopped negotiating with my calling. That’s it.That’s the shift. I stopped asking for signs.I stopped looking for outside validation.I stopped telling myself, “Once things slow down…” or “Once I have more clarity…” And I just decided to do what I knew. If that sounds simple — it is. But simple doesn’t mean easy. The easy thing would’ve been to keep tweaking.To stay in the idea phase.To let fear keep dressing…
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I Almost Didn’t Publish This Book
Let me tell you the truth: I almost didn’t publish Doing What You Know. Not because the content wasn’t ready.Not because I didn’t believe in the message.But because of what finishing it would mean. It would mean I could be seen.I could be misunderstood.I could be criticized. But more than that…Publishing this book meant I had no more excuses left. Because now I had to live the words.I had to keep doing what I know — even when it’s inconvenient, uncomfortable, or scary. And that’s the moment I realized:This book wasn’t just for the reader. It was for me, too. Writing this book exposed things in me. Fear.Doubt.Imposter syndrome.Moments where…
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What Writing This Book Took Out of Me
People often ask what it was like to write Doing What You Know. Truth? It wasn’t easy.It wasn’t clean.And it definitely wasn’t just “sit down and type.” This book didn’t come from a place of theory.It came from a place of wrestling — with myself. I had to stare down the same resistance I was writing about.I had to face the gap between what I knew and what I was actually doing.And that meant pulling back the curtain on years of starts and stops, fear and self-sabotage, breakthroughs and breakdowns. It cost me my comfort.But it gave me my voice back. Writing it wasn’t the hardest part. Finishing it was.…
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The Cost of Waiting to Start
This book sat inside me for years before I wrote it. Not because I didn’t have something to say.Not because I didn’t know how to say it. But because I waited. I waited for more clarity.I waited to feel qualified.I waited for the perfect timing that never came. Looking back, I wasn’t just waiting —I was stalling. That’s the part I don’t like admitting.But it’s also the part that someone reading this needs to hear. Here’s what I’ve learned: Waiting costs more than action ever will. It costs energy.It costs confidence.It costs momentum.It costs impact — not just for you, but for the people you’re meant to help. Writing this…