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What I Hoped Readers Would Notice Between the Lines
When I wrote Doing What You Know, I knew most readers would focus on the ideas on the page. That’s natural. But what I really hoped they would notice lives between the lines. The pauses. The questions that linger. The moments where the words feel uncomfortably familiar. The book wasn’t written to impress or overwhelm. It was written to create recognition. Recognition of patterns you’ve lived with for years. Recognition of the ways you talk yourself out of progress. Recognition of how identity quietly shapes behavior long before motivation ever enters the picture. Those realizations don’t always happen while reading. They happen afterward, when real life tests what you just…
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Your Weekly Check-In: What Did You Actually Follow Through On?
Saturday isn’t about motivation. It’s about truth. This is the day you stop telling yourself stories about how the week went and look at what actually happened. Not to judge yourself. To understand yourself. Progress doesn’t come from good intentions. It comes from honest review. Ask yourself a few direct questions today. What did you commit to this week? What did you complete? What did you delay? Where did you follow through without drama? Where did you negotiate with yourself and back off? These answers matter more than any new strategy you could chase next week. The purpose of the Challenge isn’t to pressure you. It’s to wake you up…
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Why Waiting to Feel Ready Keeps You Stuck
A lot of people believe they’ll take action once they feel ready. Once the fear settles down. Once the confidence shows up. Once they feel more certain. The problem is that readiness rarely comes before action. It usually comes after. The invisible barrier uses this misunderstanding to keep people frozen. It tells you to wait until things feel safer. It convinces you that hesitation is wisdom. It frames delay as preparation. But while you’re waiting to feel ready, nothing changes. The same patterns stay in place. The same habits run the show. Growth requires movement first. Confidence follows repetition. Clarity follows commitment. The people who make progress aren’t braver or…
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The Breakthrough That Happens When You Stop Arguing With Reality
One of the fastest ways to stay stuck is to argue with reality. You insist things should be easier. You tell yourself you should be further along. You replay old decisions and wish they had gone differently. You keep fighting the way things are instead of accepting the truth long enough to change it. The invisible barrier feeds off that argument. It keeps you focused on what you can’t control. It distracts you from the actions you can take. It convinces you that frustration is progress, when all it really does is drain the energy you need to move forward. A breakthrough begins the moment you stop resisting what’s in…
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When a Reader Realizes Their Goal Was Never the Problem
Every so often a message comes through that is worth pausing for. A reader reached out this week and said something that captures the heart of the journey perfectly. “The goal wasn’t the issue. My belief about myself was.” That realization is a breakthrough most people never reach. It’s not the strategy. It’s not the timing. It’s not the economy or the opportunity. It’s the quiet belief system running underneath every decision. The invisible barrier doesn’t block your dream. It blocks your identity. If you don’t see yourself as the person who can achieve it, you’ll sabotage it without calling it sabotage. This week’s spotlight goes to the readers who…
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The Unexpected Place the Book Truly Began
People sometimes assume the book started the day I opened my laptop and typed the first sentence. The truth is, the book began long before that. It started in the quiet moments when I was forced to confront the gap between what I knew and what I consistently did. That tension, that frustration, that invisible barrier was writing the first chapter before I ever put it on paper. The real beginning came from lived experience. The book was born in the moments where I knew exactly what decision would move me forward, yet something pulled me back. It grew out of conversations with people who carried the same silent struggle.…
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The Breakthrough That Comes From Telling Yourself the Truth
There is a moment that changes everything, and it doesn’t come from a strategy. It comes from honesty. Real, uncomfortable honesty. The kind that cuts through excuses, stories, and carefully crafted explanations. The kind that forces you to face the difference between what you say you want and what your actions prove. Most people never get there because they’re afraid of what they’ll find. They’re afraid to admit they’ve been holding themselves back more than circumstances have. They’re afraid to acknowledge how many opportunities they’ve talked themselves out of. The invisible barrier thrives in places where we refuse to tell the truth to ourselves. A breakthrough begins when honesty becomes…
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Why I Chose to Write a Book Instead of Just Teaching the Concepts Live
Long before Doing What You Know was a manuscript, the ideas were being shared in conversations, coaching sessions, small groups, and late night phone calls with people who were tired of being stuck. I could have kept it that way. I could have continued teaching the concepts live and never written a single chapter. But I knew something would be missing. Live teaching inspires people. It creates energy. It sparks excitement in the moment. The problem is what happens after the moment passes. Without something tangible to return to, most people slip back into their patterns. They remember pieces, but not the process. They remember inspiration, but not the steps.…
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Did This Week Match What You Say You Want?
Saturday is not just another day on the calendar. It is your weekly audit. By now, the stories you told yourself on Monday have either turned into action or faded into background noise. The point of this check-in is simple. Did this week match what you say you want, or did it match your old patterns? Most people avoid this kind of honest look. They prefer to remember their intentions instead of their actions. They focus on what they meant to do instead of what they actually did. That is how the invisible barrier stays in place. It keeps you living in the gap between knowing and doing, and it…
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The Confidence You’re Seeking Comes After the Action, Not Before It
Most people wait to feel confident before they take action. They want assurance before they risk it. They want belief before they move. But confidence doesn’t show up at the beginning of the journey. Confidence is the reward for doing the thing you were unsure about. The invisible barrier convinces you that lack of confidence is a sign to wait. It whispers that you should prepare more, think longer, gather more information. That approach feels responsible, but it creates a loop where you stay stuck in preparation instead of stepping into progress. Confidence is built the moment you take action without it. When you move despite uncertainty, you send a…