Today, I turn 43. And with this new year of life, I have made a decision.
For too long, procrastination and fear of failure have been my quiet companions. They didn't shout, they whispered—telling me "you can start tomorrow," or "what if you fail?" Those whispers stalled dreams, delayed progress, and left me carrying the weight of untapped potential.
But today, I draw a line in the sand.
Every Sunday morning, from now on, I will sit with a blank sheet of paper for exactly 90 Minutes. This single ritual will do more for my future than the other 40 hours of work in the week combined. It will be my antidote to procrastination, my counterattack against fear.
On that page, I will face my ideas, my progress, my excuses, and my next steps with courage and clarity.
This decision was born from a story that haunted me. Years ago, I met a friend—smart, driven, with a clear dream of becoming an Influencer in his Sector. When I met him at 27, he was working toward it. At 42, he was still in exactly the same place. Same dream. Same plan. Same distance from achieving it.
My friend wasn't lazy. He was busy. He was consistent. But he lacked deliberate focus—dedicated time to move the needle.
I realized I was drifting dangerously close to the same trap. Working hard, but not always working forward.