The TFL take on January
January loves big speeches. New diet. New split. New you.
Cool—until week three, when work explodes, the kids get sick, and your plan needs a personal assistant.
We don’t do speeches. We build systems that survive Tuesdays.
Momentum > motivation
Motivation is loud, then gone.
Momentum is quiet, then unstoppable.
You don’t “find” motivation. You lower the cost of starting, take one action, and let your brain update the math: “Oh—we’re doing this.” That tiny win unlocks the next one. By the time motivation shows up, you’re already moving.
Sticky sentence: motivation is the receipt you get after you pay with action.
Starter cues: make “begin” dumb-easy
Not hacks. Not aesthetics. These are tripwires for action.
- Shoes where you’ll literally step on them.
- Workout already open in the app the night before.
- 10-minute timer on your home screen.
- Protein visible: eggs front row, Greek yogurt eye level.
- Water bottle on the desk, not in the cabinet.
When the entry fee is $0.02, you stop negotiating with yourself.
The smallest units that move mountains
We’re not chasing heroics. We’re stacking layups.
- Training: “Two honest sets, most days.” If you’re cooked, it’s one set. Still counts.
- Food: “Protein wins breakfast.” The rest of the day gets easier—fewer crashes, fewer ‘snackidents.’
- Sleep: “Lamps, not stadium lights, after dinner.” Your nervous system reads the room.
- Stress: “Three long exhales before email.” Heart rate drops; brain stops sprinting indoors.
Simple. Repeatable. It compounds.
Dodge the January crash (no 30-day gauntlet)
Challenges feel exciting because they’re loud on day one and forget you exist on day 19. We don’t ghost you.
- One behavior per lane: move, eat, sleep. That’s it.
- Build the “worst-day version.” Ten minutes. One default breakfast. Lights down an hour before bed.
- Track streaks, not maxes. Checks > PRs for the first month.
- Bad day? Shrink the unit, don’t skip the rep. Half the walk. One set. One minute of breath. Keep the chain unbroken.
A day that actually happens
You step outside with coffee for 90 seconds. Cold air, real daylight. First win.
You scramble eggs instead of inhaling a pastry. Second win.
You walk your 2 p.m. call. Third win.
At 5:30 you’re not summoning demons; you’re doing two sets because that’s the deal. Surprise: set two becomes set three because momentum did the heavy lifting.
“But I’m already overwhelmed”
Good. Then make it easier.
Pick one starter cue for seven days. Shoes by the door. Timer on the phone. Protein at breakfast. Nothing else. When that’s automatic, add the next. You’re building a system that survives February, not a stunt for January.
What you’ll feel by week two
You start sooner.
You argue with yourself less.
Cravings drop because breakfast carried weight.
Bedtime lands cleaner because the lights were lower.
Workouts feel available on “meh” days—aka most days.
TFL take-home
Stop hunting motivation. Make beginning cheap.
Install starter cues. Keep the reps small and honest.
Let momentum do what motivation can’t: show up again tomorrow.
New year, same you—just built for the long game. Strong starts here.
.jpg)