You've started over a hundred times. Here's what finally makes it stick.
You know the pattern. You go all in on Monday. You're perfect for a week. Then one slip, one missed workout, one bad night, and the whole thing falls apart, and you're back to square one by February. Again.
The problem was never your willpower. It was the method. All-or-nothing plans are built to shatter the first time real life touches them.
The Measured Man is built differently. It runs your life in ten-day cycles and asks for ninety percent, not perfection. One allowed bad day in ten, built in on purpose. Short enough to plan around a sick kid or a Friday dinner. Forgiving enough to survive a hard week. Strong enough to actually change you.
This isn't theory. It's one ordinary man's documented year, a full-time job, a houseful of kids, no spare hours, who used these ten-day cycles to lose the weight he'd carried for years, run his fastest race, hold the hard lines, grow closer to his family and his faith, and become a man his people can depend on.
If you're done starting over, start here.
Ten days. Then ten more.