You Build Abundance by Reducing Friction in Your Life. Friction is anything that makes action harder than it needs to be. It could be unclear routines, disorganized systems, or unnecessary steps in your workflow. Each point of friction slows you down and reduces...
Abundance Requires You to Respect Your Energy. Time is limited, but energy is what determines how effectively you use it. You can have hours available, but if your energy is low or scattered, your output will suffer. This creates frustration—you’re working, but not...
You Miss Abundance When You Avoid Reflection. Action is important, but without reflection, it becomes repetitive rather than progressive. When you don’t pause to think about what you’re doing, you miss opportunities to improve. You repeat the same patterns, even if...
Abundance Becomes Visible When You Track What Matters. Not everything needs to be measured—but some things do. When you track what truly matters, you create visibility. You can see patterns, identify progress, and adjust your approach. Without tracking, growth can...
You Reduce Abundance When You Seek Constant Comfort. Comfort feels safe, predictable, and easy to maintain. But when you prioritize comfort too often, you limit your exposure to growth. Abundance requires expansion. And expansion often involves discomfort—learning...
You Build Abundance by Improving What Already Works. It’s easy to look for new strategies when results feel slow. But often the fastest way forward is to improve what already works. Starting something new resets your progress. Refining something existing builds on it....