You said this year would be different. You made promises, wrote goals, maybe even bought a $29.99 planner with motivational quotes on every page. You announced it on Instagram. You read atomic habits, watched the morning routines of billionaires, nodded your head through TED talks. But here you are. Again.
Same life. Same complaints. Same weak results.
Let's not sugarcoat this: you are not tired-you're undisciplined. You're not unlucky. You're not cursed. You're comfortable. Too comfortable talking about the life you want, and too allergic to doing what it takes to get it.
Everybody wants to be something. Few want to become someone. That's the difference.
"You are what you do, not what you say you'll do." - Carl Jung
You don't get points for planning. You don't grow by dreaming. You grow by moving. By doing the reps. By being consistent when nobody is clapping for you. And let's be honest, you've been addicted to applause more than results.
You've been rewarded for your potential your entire life. You said, "I want to start a business," and your friends said, "Yesss, queen." You said, "I'm thinking about writing a book," and people called you inspiring. You told someone you were starting a podcast, and they reposted it with a fire emoji. But when it came time to sit down, shut up, and do the work, you disappeared.
You ghosted your own goals.
Look, no one's coming to save you. No coach. No course. No six-week challenge. No podcast host with a raspy voice and affirmations. If you're waiting for motivation, you'll be waiting forever. If you think discipline is a personality trait, you've already lost. Discipline is a decision. You don't need to be talented. You don't need to be motivated. You just need to stop breaking promises to yourself.
You say you're tired of being broke. Tired of being behind. But you're still scrolling six hours a day and still bingeingon content about success instead of building it. Still downloading budgeting apps you never open. You don't need another app. You need a standard.
This book isn't a morning routine guide. This isn't about sipping lemon water or cold plunging your way into focus. This book is for people who are done lying to themselves.
Because that's what most people are doing: lying with confidence. Wearing ambition like an outfit. Saying all the right things. Retweeting wisdom. Nodding at discipline quotes. But their actions? Weak. Untrained. Excuse-ridden.
"We suffer more often in imagination than in reality." - Seneca