Someone brings disrespect. You don’t have to wear it.
When you stop accepting emotional gifts you don’t want — You lighten the weight you’ve been carrying.
“Your anger is the gift you’re trying to give me. I don’t accept it.”
There’s a story I share with clients.
A monk is teaching under a tree.
Someone in the crowd stands up — livid —
and starts insulting the monk.
The monk replies, “Your anger is the gift you’re trying to give me. I don’t accept it.”
Emotion isn’t forced on us.
Especially other people’s emotions.
They have to be received and welcomed in.
Someone brings chaos. You don’t have to take it.
@PLBompard Also I'm doing market research & am looking to speak with men that want greatness in their own rite, & are moving along their path.
In exchange for hopping on a quick call with me I can help you identify & process stories that work as roadblocks or refine a future experience.
What’s more important?
Feeling good or being good?
Feeling good is short term and flaky. Not dependable.
Being good is undeniable evidence based on observing the behaviour of your choices.
Your indecision is stopping you from moving smooth and fast.
Indecision is what makes the progress drag slowly—making it seem hard—when really you’re the one making it hard.
When the body and mind are drawn in two directions, you hit a wall.
There is no progress.
There is internal fighting between what you want and what you accept.
Aligned routines don’t just create progress—they create clarity. The more consistent you are, the more ‘luck’ appears.
Opportunity x preparation multiplies through ritual, revealing what was once invisible.
Discipline isn’t restriction. It’s the gateway to freedom.