December 7, 2022
Often, as a coach, I have people come to me for change. Most of the people that we see are looking for major life changes. What I found in my experience is that you can start putting all of your discipline and energy into the minor changes you need to make from day to day first. What’s my reasoning behind that, you ask? Let’s go over this in three parts. There is no task small enough for you to tackle. Fall in love with the small tasks first. Practice as much as you can, and discipline the 24 hours in a day first before trying to take on the years. Focusing on the small things you do every day adds up. For example, "I want to start strength training for my health and longevity" instead of taking on this monumental task, saying that you’re going to strength train every day, focus on what you can do and manage for the week and start from there. If it’s one day a week, start there; if it’s two days a week, start there, etc., etc. Practice does not equal perfection. Practice makes progress. The longer you take to improve, the more likely you are to make it a lifestyle change. The more practice you have, the better. Every published study I've read claims that people who changed their daily habits first and focused small saw the best long-term sustainable and significant results. Measurements are probably the most critical of all the steps and oftentimes the hardest to look at out of fear of failure. We have had the pleasure of working with many clients, and we always make sure we do one thing well, and that's making measurable progress. Some examples In body scale, measuring lean body mass and body fat Training logs and programs from day one (strength increases) Body measurements Bloodwork (we recommend) Overall, how the person is feeling Whatever you're trying to accomplish, make sure you measure and track it. It’s important for you to look back and see the progress and the fruits of your labor. Minor > major turns into minor, making major changes in the life you would like to see for yourself in the most manageable way. The more practice you get today, the more practice you have doing the smallest tasks well. It becomes a domino effect. The question is: What type of domino effect do you want in your life? Do you want a domino effect of incomplete tasks, not taking care of your health, not sleeping well, and looking for every excuse? Do you want a domino effect of treating the small tasks with pride and doing them well, making sure you’re dedicating the time and conquering tasks that you can actually do? I’ll leave that up to you to decide what type of person you’d like to become in 1 to 3 years.