Courage to do the inside work

“The most fundamental harm we can do to ourselves is to remain ignorant by not having the courage to look at ourselves honestly and gently.” - Pema Chodron

Over the weekend, I read a comment on a Facebook post that really struck me. A friend of mine, commenting on photos of herself a decade apart, wrote that beauty is an inside job.

She has certainly transformed herself physically in the past decade, but it was really her her observation about the inner work that stuck with me.

Last week I wrote a post about thumbing over your scars when you walk into a gym or put yourself out to the world. But in reading her post, and in seeing the above quote from Pema Chodron, I was reminded that scars are an indication of healing.

While I know that we all have scars, I was also reminded that many of us still have some gaping, inflamed, and very painful wounds.

Many of us walk around everyday still carrying tremendous emotional wounds from our youth. Many of us, myself included, still have inside work to do. But sometimes we avoid that work because it’s more convenient to put all of our focus on the external work.

Everyday I meet with clients who are chasing not even happiness, but contentment. I work with people who, whether they realize it or not, are trying to figure out exactly what needs to happen in life so they can feel like they are enough.

We are all trying to be enough - good enough parents - good enough friends - good enough employees and children and members of our community.

When it comes to our physical appearance I think we are all trying to be pretty enough or handsome enough or thin enough.

In some cases, the real work comes when we hit those external goals - we lose the weight - gain the muscle - get the job - find the relationship - and discover that we still do not feel like we are enough. In many other cases, I sit down with clients month after month and we make goals and they don’t hit those goals and eventually it’s time to acknowledge that there is something getting in the way of them making the important changes they want to make in their lives.

If a client is coming up short on their goals, it might be a sign that they have some inner work to do. So much of our behavior as adults is intertwined with emotional experiences we had growing up. As adults, we pack that stuff away and don’t get me wrong, sometimes avoiding is how we cope.

But eventually, we need to acknowledge what’s going on with our inner landscape.

Healing ourselves takes work. Hard work. Persistent work. Frustrating and complicated work. Doing inner work requires finding a way to sit with the discomfort. To sit with pain. Last week I wrote about touching your scars. And while I can’t speak for you, I not only have some scars - but I have some open wounds on the inside that I need to work on healing.

The thing is, it can be easy to avoid that work by focusing on the external stuff. We chase success with our careers, working longer hours and starting more projects and doing more, more, more. We put in 14 hour days so that we never have down time to feel the pain we feel inside.

It is hard….it is so, so, so very hard to stop and take a long look at ourselves. But do it. Stop right now and look at your goals, look at what you’re chasing, look at how you’re spending your time. Look at your goals.

Don’t just look at where you’re trying to go - maybe take a few minutes to see if there is anything you’re avoiding in the process.

And let me remind you that right now, in this moment, you are enough.

When Faced With A Challenge

When faced with a challenge we have two choices…

Forget Everything And Run, or…

Face Everything And Rise.

Some also might call that FEAR.

You decide your own definition of fear.

Anytime a challenge enters your life, and they always will be coming and going, we have to determine which label we’re going to put on our fear.

I’m not saying we should never have the emotion of fear, but we do determine how we respond to that emotion.

The more common label is to Forget Everything And Run.

Anytime we face a challenge we hide, try to pretend it’s not happening, and avoid the situation.

This is true for any challenge.

Are you struggling with your health?

That’s a fear.

You might have a fear of joining a gym or reaching out for help.

It might be that you think you’re going to not fit in or be able to keep up.

Are you struggling in your career or business?

There can be a big fear behind that.

You’re afraid you’re not doing the right thing, or that you’re not growing as much as you should be.

However, the last thing you want to do in those situations is to Forget Everything And Run.

What about an emotional or mental challenge?

Maybe you’re dealing with some personal development struggles, you are down on yourself, and you’re just going through a really tough time.

Our default is to shut down, forget about it, pretend it’s not happening, and attempt to move on.

Today, I challenge you to flip your script anytime you feel the feeling of fear coming on…

You are going to Face Everything And Rise above it.

Face the challenge, don’t try to hide from it or pretend it’s not happening.

Then, make the choice that you will rise above it.

We are all stronger than we think, and we can overcome anything we set our minds to.

We can rise above any fear.

With that choice of rising above it comes the hard work of action, of mental toughness, and pushing through the hard part.

But we always come out the other side a better person.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

Maintain Don't Gain...

That’s the mentality I might suggest you consider as we head into the holiday season.

Maintain, Don’t Gain.

I always chuck it up as a win if I can maintain my weight, body fat percentage, energy levels, etc during this final 5-week stretch of the year.

I want you to enjoy the holiday parties, eat that stuffing on Thanksgiving, and have the brownie for dessert.

However, let’s take a couple things into consideration…

It still takes work to maintain.

Meaning, you’re still going to have to eat “good” 80% of the time, you’re still going to have to keep a frequency of exercise up, and you’re still going to have to pay attention to things, that doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy the tasty treats here and there.

The other thing is changing your expectations.

The expectation is that I’m going to maintain.

It’s going to still be a challenge, but the expectation is not going to be a “copy/paste” of my expectations I’ll have in the new year or the expectations I had for myself in September/October.

We know this, ebb and flows are going to happen, which is why we can’t just carry the same expectations throughout the entire year.

I fully expect your workout frequency to be different in January, your nutrition to be different, and your mindset to be different, but…

That doesn’t mean you just throw in the towel for the rest of the year.

We still have ~35 solid days of progress we can make.

Keep going strong.

Shoot for the “maintain, don’t gain” mentality...

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

A Coach?

I'm a coach. 

We have a team of coaches at the gym. 

But do you know the origin of coaches, and why we call ourselves coaches?

As usual, it has nothing to do with fitness...

The word 'coach' actually comes from the 15th century. 

In Hungary, they built wagons that would take people and supplies from one destination to another, and they called them coaches. 

That's why you now hear things called stagecoaches, motor coaches, etc.

A coach is someone that guides the journey, taking someone from where they are to where they want to be. 

My team happens to do that through the fitness realm, where I tend to focus on the personal and business development side, but it's still all coaching. 

Coaching is about empowering a person to fully live out their calling.

Coaching is about the agenda of a client.

A coach encourages action and change. 

So, at the gym, my team focuses on being great coaches in the fitness realm. 

I aim to be a great coach to them from a leader and personal development side. 

But it's still the same thing. 

Encouraging action, encouraging change, and empowering people to live out their fullest potential. 

So whether it's leadership, fitness, or business, it's the coaching that makes the difference. 

So no, my team at the gym are not trainers, they are coaches. 

We all need coaches. 

We all need people, whether it's in fitness or another area, that helps take us from where we are to where we want to be. 

It's not the tools, it's the coaching. 

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

Touching our scars

When I write, I have to drag the pen across those scars, to write.

— Maya Angelou

Recently, I watched the American Experience Documentary about Maya Angelou.

I've been enthralled with Angelou ever since Miss Pauley, my high school English teacher, read one of her essays to the class my sophomore year of high school.

I was so moved by her words that our senior t-shirts from high school carried a stanza from the poem “I Rise” on the back. 

I was fortunate enough to hear Angelou speak in college, and aside from Desmond Tutu, I can’t remember being so mesmerized by the presence of one person.  

In a clip from the American Experience movie, she says “ When I write, I have to drag the pen across those scars.”

The statement struck me, as I envisioned dragging the sharp tip of a pen across a puffy, inflamed scar - over and over again. I think about my own writing here on this site, and the posts that have been most often read and shared. They are the posts of my depression, of my personal battle with my body image, of my personal stories. 

We know for Maya Angelou those scars were being raped at the age of seven, not speaking for five years, and spending a lifetime as part of the civil rights movement.

Many of us, when we decide to make a lifestyle change, are also touching over our own scars. We thumb over the scar of being picked last for teams on the playground. Over the scar of changing in front of others for the first time in gym class, comparing our pale white skin, our undeveloped and overdeveloped bodies to the teenagers across from us as we scurried to put on those awful gym uniforms. 

We touch the scar of inadequacy - perhaps we were the advanced math student or the gifted English student who suddenly found that when we ran to kick that soccer ball, it flew from the side of our foot and trickled only a few feet while others laughed.

We found that we could not do a front handspring on the playground. Some of us, not even a cartwheel. Too clumsy for hopscotch, too uncoordinated for baseball. Too overweight to keep up when we tried out track in seventh grade.

Despite being a good athlete, I despised gym class. And I nearly failed my senior year in high school because I refused to swim - because I couldn't. I was terrified of the deep end, where all of my friends were, and so hung there, in the shallow end with one other girl who couldn’t swim. I dreaded that class and was in danger of failing my senior year in high school if I missed another gym class.

Yet, as a coach who practically lives in the gym - I sometimes forget.

I sometimes forget that there are both men and women who, just by walking through our doors, are touching old scars. Scars of hurtful comments from well-meaning parents who shamed their clothes and their food choices.

Cruel kids in school who whispered behind our backs. And perhaps worst of all, the negative self- talk directed at ourselves. We touch the scars of bathing suits tried on in the glaring harsh light of department stores, of shopping for new clothes and finding none that fit right and too many minutes standing naked in front of a full-length mirror in the morning - pinching our stomachs and cursing our will power and looking longingly at the section of the closet that houses are “skinny” jeans.

We all touch these scars everyday.

But I am also reminded of the rich words and experience that can come from touching those soft and tender places. For a writer like Maya Angelou, her willingness to “drag her pen over those scars” meant that I didn’t just read her words - they touched me - sat with me - changed me. 

For the men and women who find the courage to walk through our doors, for them to say they are willing to thumb over their scars about their bodies and themselves- I try to remind myself as a coach that holding them in that vulnerability is the greatest gift I can offer. 

The One Key To It All

Last night I sat on a cushy leather chair with the ocean just a few feet away from me.

As I could hear the waves crash onto the beach, I sipped on my water, talking with private clients of mine.

I guess one of the perks of doing private coaching and making house calls.

We were doing some lifestyle coaching, personal stuff, business stuff, a nice mix.

However, all of the changes they were trying to make really came down to one habit, without this habit, nothing else happens.

Planning.

Specifically, planning the week on Sunday night, and then reevaluating each night, tweaking the plan for the next day.

There are a lot of people that don’t plan the night before, that don’t write things down, and those are the same people that forget things all the time and live a very scattered life.

You set 90% of your day up for success if you plan the night before.

Sure, I get it, you can’t control all of it…

But, you bet your bottom dollar you can be as proactive as possible and be ready for the day.

Last night we worked on two cornerstone habits…

On Sunday night doing a weekly map of the week.

Block off all your “non-negotiables.”

What does the day look like?

Any scheduled appointments I need to be on time for?

What time do I have to be at work?

Things that can’t be moved.

Then, from there, around that, plug in the rest of the things that need to get done each day.

What time am I scheduled to workout?

When am I going to get my creative time in, my personal development time?

What are the big three things I’m going to get done to make progress?

This is not a to-do list.

This is mapping each day, but here are the two mistakes people make.

One, they put too much in one day.

We overestimate how much we can get done in a day, and underestimate how much we can get done in a year.

Again, this is not a list.

This is a plan, so we need to map it out accordingly, don’t put too much on one day.

The second thing we need to do is use what I call time containers.

For example, you have an appointment from 12-1.

That goes into the plan.

However, assuming a 30-minute commute, the actual container of time is more likely 1115-145, a 45-minute buffer on each side for the 30-minute commute and a 15-minute buffer.

This sounds like a lot, but once it becomes a weekly habit, it doesn’t take more than 5-10 minutes every Sunday night.

Then, each night, acknowledge what you did that day (you did more than you think), have a moment of gratitude, and then adjust the plan for the next day.

And keep it mind, as you map out your day and your week, don’t “copy and paste.”

Meaning, I don’t love the goal, for example, of three workouts a week.

Why?

Every week is different.

Although it’s great that you want to get to the gym every MWF, there will be weeks that’s not possible, because each week presents its own challenges.

Instead, look at maybe a monthly objective, in this case, 12 workouts a month.

You can apply that across all areas.

Don’t just copy and paste each week, each week is different, your plan needs to adjust, your expectations need to adjust (holiday weeks for example), etc.

But the most important thing to do is the plan, spell it out.

I see it all the time…

If my team plans for their day before, if they write down what they are going to do, if they plan for the circumstances that could come up, they have much better days.

If our clients plan the night before, pack their meals, pack their workouts clothes, and plan their day so they can get a workout in, they have much better days.

Now, we still have to execute on that plan, a plan without action is no good, but we must first start with planning.

I think what you’ll find, and what I think my clients from last night will find, is that planning is a cornerstone habit.

Now, because you are executing on planning, so many other things fall into place.

You’re consistent and productive in your work…

Your fitness and nutrition consistency improves because you plan for it..

You block off family time, so your personal life improves.

It all gets better.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

Control The Controllable

I write this at my usual early AM time, a bit more sleep deprived than normal, but still very reflective, and a hot cup of coffee in hand…

We’ll see what comes out.

This morning I’m reminded of a line I tell myself just about every day….

Control the controllable.

There is so much in life we can’t control.

However, we can control how we react to it, our attitude towards it, and how we deal with it.

Personally, it’s been a long year.

Just over a year ago I lost my dad, we’ve had some growing pains in the business this year, and just about a year ago now Megan and I began the journey towards growing our family.

It’s been a long road.

I won’t share details, but it’s been emotionally exhausting, for me, and of course, even more so for Megan.

I’ve spent more time in hospitals and doctors’ offices this year than I have in my entire adult life.

Thankfully, we have an awesome team, and most of you would have never even noticed, they don’t miss a beat.

Don’t fret, Mom and Baby are doing fine, and we’re anxiously awaiting the arrival in the next couple of days or weeks.

But, I remind Megan, I remind myself, and I remind you…

We can’t control every situation and its outcome, but we can control our attitude and how we react to it.

The fact is, that is 1% Better.

Doing what you can with what you have, and trying to focus on what you can control.

A client last week asked me…

“Doug, how do you do it?”

Motivated, driven, focused, etc.

The fact is, I’m dealing with the same shit you are.

Crazy days, a busy life, stress, anxiety, you name it.

No one has it all figured out, and if they tell you that, give them a smack because they’re lying.

I think I just aim to focus on what I can control.

I can control thinking positive…

I can control my actions…

I can control what I’m going to do about it TODAY.

And certainly, the last thing I’m going to do about it is nothing.

Whether we’re talking about personal stuff, work stuff, or fitness and lifestyle stuff, we often can’t control the outcome.

What we can do is control the process.

We can take charge of our mental health, we can think more positive…

We can take charge of our schedule and block off some time for self-care…

Trust me, as most of you know, I’m all for having big dreams, and long-term goals, but let’s face it…

Most of life is just showing up this week and saying, “What can I give?”

What can I give for effort?

What can I give to others?

Most importantly, what can I give to myself?

Each week will look different, each day will look different but aim not to worry about that.

We can’t control the future, we can only control our current actions, what we’re thinking, and what we’re doing about it.

For me, that’s the recipe for stress reduction.

Keep that in mind as you head into what is typically a very enjoyable, yet stressful time of year in the holidays and the new year.

Control the controllable.

Ok, time for me to head downstairs and refill the coffee cup :)

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

A Dog(Or Kid) & Their Bones (Or Toys)

There’s a good saying that goes something like this…

“The dog that tries to pick up two bones usually drops both.”

It’s a great line to remember we can’t be focusing on two things at the same time.

It’s also a teaching moment I’ve been working on with Kaden (my two year old).

Quite often when it’s time to clean up his toys he tries to pick them all up at once, and although I appreciate the effort, he always is dropping one as he tries to pick up the one he dropped a second ago.

We also see this when it comes to eating.

When it’s time to eat, there can’t be anything else going on, no toys, no electronics, etc.

Why?

Distraction, of course.

He tries to eat, and he ends up getting distracted with his police car or the dinosaurs on TV.

Now, I’m not saying we need to treat ourselves like a dog or a toddler, but there’s certainly a lesson we can pull away from that.

When a new client joins the gym, we know it can be overwhelming and daunting.

We aim to get them to focus on one thing…

Walk in this door 10 times.

That’s it.

Don’t try to change nutrition, don’t worry about fat loss or strength, don’t worry about anything else other than walking through the door ten times.

What we’re trying to do is build the habit of frequency.

We need frequency as the foundation before we change anything else.

If we try to set goals and go after multiple things like frequency, losing body fat percentage, getting stronger, changing nutrition, all at the same time, we have no focus and typically suffer.

Focus on one thing at time, make it a habit, and then, only then, stack another habit on top of it.

For most, walking through the door, frequency is the first habit they need to build.

Spurling needs to become part of your weekly routine, jus like dropping the kids off at school or going to Sunday Church is.

Once that is a habit (there is no magic number of days, it’s when you feel it’s become second nature), then, and only then, can you start trying to change and go after more like specific goals, nutrition, etc.

The coaches at Spurling are the best of the best, and their happy to sit down with you and break this down in a Strategy Session.

If you’d like to schedule one just reply and let us know…

To wrap, I’m not saying let’s only go after one bone, or let’s only go after one thing, or let’s only pick up one toy, I’m just saying let’s on pick up one at at time.

Then the next one…

And the next one…

And the next one…

Stack em’.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

It's Not What You Know...

Most of these daily posts that I write come from conversations I have with clients, conversations I have with fellow business owners, or…

random thoughts at 2:30am when I can’t shut my brain off.

Today, you’d be happy to know…

it’s from a conversation I had with a client :)

We were chatting about how much information is out there, we can always read something and then find something that literally says the complete opposite.

We can research the best X for anything…

We can spend hours on the “Google.”

But here’s the common theme of success…

Action.

It reminds me of one of my favorite quotes…

“It’s not always what you know, it’s what you bring everyday.”

Read that again.

It’s so important.

Quite often when we think about fitness, or any area of life, we spend so much time worrying about the “how” or the learning component so that we know more.

We want to learn the best exercises for X….

We want to learn about the best diet…

We want to know…

More often than not, it’s not about what you know, it’s about what you bring everyday.

And that’s the balance of good coaching.

Yes, you need to know, but really, what we’re trying to do is get you to bring your best everyday, to take action, and to do more than what you would normally do on your own.

It’s way less about the “how” and much more about ACTION.

I think it’s a good reminder for all of us…

Whether it’s regarding your fitness, your career, your finances, etc…

It’s more about what you do everyday, the action you take, showing up, giving it your best, working hard, and using what you know.

Bringing your best….

Working as hard as you can…

Showing up when you don’t want to…

Being on time…

Staying positive…

Having a growth mindset as opposed to a fixed mindset…

All of those things and more will take you much further than anything I can teach you about the best exercise for your legs.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

43 random thoughts

For the past few years, I’ve done a list of random thoughts right around my birthday. And since everyone already knows that next Monday is my birthday, I’m going to just bust right in with number one: 

1.     I have an alter ego named Worse Case Scenario Wilma. By even writing this, I’m freaking out about whether or not I’ll actually make it to 43. Also, if you’re ever five minutes late for dinner with me, I’m frantically texting you – if you’re ever 15 minutes late, I’m calling you – if we go past a half hour – I’m calling the local hospitals. Which brings me to fact number 2:

2.     I will never, ever answer the phone if you call. And I will never call you back.

3.     The best thing about smart phones is that I don’t have to use them as an actual phone. They are texting devices.  

4.     The next best thing about smart phones is that I don’t even need to listen to voicemails. I just look at the messed up Siri translation and hope to get the general idea.

5.     I used to try to apologize for never answering calls – now I just own it.

6.     The beauty of aging is that I spend more time owning who I am and less time apologizing for who I am.

7.     But….I do still apologize for who I am. I’m a work in progress. But aren’t we all?

8.     If I absolutely have to make a phone call, I don’t, and then spend all of the free time in my head obsessing about it.

9.     I don’t have any free space in my head because I’m already obsessing about all of the things that I’m not doing and hoping that odd pain in my side goes away because instead of calling a doctor, I’m just hoping I don’t die.

10.  I don’t like any music made after 1989.

11.  Procrastination both gives me immediate relief and long-term anxiety.

12.  If I was responsible for buying my own toilet paper, I’d probably just use leaves because that’s the kind of adult I am.

13.  But I’d always have coffee. Because coffee.

14.  If I could go back in time and meet only one person, it would be Ghandi. Also Lou Gehrig.

15.  If I were marooned on an island and could only have music from three people it would be Frank Sinatra, Chet Baker, and then toss up between my Dad and James Taylor

16.  My favorite Muppets are Statler and Waldorf – the two wise guys in the balcony. But I’m partial to the Swedish Chef.

17.  My version of cooking is buying pre-made meals from Whole Foods. Or eating those flavored packets of tuna that come with a spoon.

18.  Really it’s mostly that. The tuna.

19.  Every time Sheila tries to slow dance with me, I end up breaking out into the White Man’s Overbite mixed with the Church Lady mixed with the Grocery Cart move. While she stands at me, staring. Yes, I did this at our wedding.

20.  If you play Barry Manilow’s “Can’t Smile Without You” I have to sing. It’s a reflex. It can’t not happen.

21.  The inside of my mind could be on an episode of “Extreme Hoarders.” I hoard thoughts. Most of them useless, unproductive ones similar to those in one through five.

22.  Give me a year though, any year, and I can probably tell you who won the World Series.

23.  Which is why I’m never sure where I left my keys.

24.  I also have a cat.

25.  I put hot sauce on Thanksgiving day turkey.

26.  I don’t really like Thanksgiving food.

27.  I was named after a character named Kimberly on the soap opera “As the World Turns”

28.  Don’t ever call me Kimberly.

29.  Ever

30.  Every time I commit to making this list, I wish I was younger.

31.  I was in a sorority in college. Phi Sigma Sigma. Yes I can still do the cheers

32.  I played the drums from fourth grade through my freshman year of high school.

33.  But really, I wish I was younger right now.

34.  I drink bad beer.

35.  No, like really bad beer. Like Miller High Life, which is most certainly NOT the champagne of beers. Unless champagne tastes like urine. Which I don’t think it does…

36.  I know how to make a potato gun.

37.  It requires a lot of Aqua Net Hairspray.

38.  I once used Aqua Net in my hair. It was like wearing a helmet.

39.  Every time I hear an accent, I have to repeat it.

40.  If you’re wondering, this tendency to pick up other people’s behaviors is called the Chameleon Effect.

41.  According to the Google, people who pick up accents easier are nicer people.

42.  I must be really nice, but I’m nervous to spend more than five minutes South of the Mason Dixie Line.

43.  If you’re wondering, and you’re not, the New York Yankees won the world series in 1943.

 

 

Committment

Last week I talked about the 4 C’s for success…

Consistency.

Coaching.

Culture.

Community.

Today, I have a 5th “C” on my mind that I’d like to talk about…

Commitment.

When you look up commitment in the dictionary it reads…

“the state or quality of being dedicated to a cause, activity, etc.”

I’d like to share my definition or interpretation….

Staying loyal to what you said you were going to do, long after the mood you said it in has left you.

It’s executing on the things you said you were going to do, long after the “honeymoon” phase has worn off.

It’s doing the things you know you should do, but maybe don’t want to do in the moment.

We can think of countless examples with commitment.

In relationships, in parenting, in our career, and of course, in fitness.

When we start a new job we’re excited, it’s the new shiny thing in our life.

However, if we look up five years later, are we growing, are we getting better, are we still giving 110% every day?

When we commit to doing something for a friend, we’re trying to help, but then the actual “work” comes in of doing the task, even if you now don’t feel like it.

Following through with your word, following through when you don’t want to.

Pushing through the struggle.

Now I’m not saying you should continue to do something you don’t enjoy, however, if you put a commitment to it, there was an emotion that went behind the commitment, and now the actual work sets in of fulfilling that commitment….

That’s the challenge.

The other thing we know about commitment is it typically takes 10x longer than you think, and we often don’t stick with the commitment long enough to see the result.

You commit to writing a book, you think it’s not going to be too bad, and you look up a year later and you’re still trying to get it done.

That was me with my book, and I know Kim is pushing through that right now.

You commit to being a master of your craft, to being the best in the world at what you do.

That’s a lifelong commitment, it never ends.

I have to chuckle at the trainers I talk to in the industry who tell me they’re a master trainer, they’re ready for the next thing, they think they deserve more, and they’ve been training for 4-5 years.

Just like any field, what do you say to that when you look around and you realize the top people in your industry have been doing it for DECADES, and are still humble enough to know they don’t know everything, are still working hard every day, and aiming to get better every day?

We, of course, see this with fitness all the time.

The ultimate commitment to fitness is a life-long commitment.

We don’t just lose 20lbs, check the box, and close up shop.

It’s a constant daily grind of staying active, finding things you enjoy doing, and constantly trying to get a little better.

The results will come, but they will always take longer than we think, and it will always be harder than we think at the point of commitment.

I was talking to a long-time client last night about her 79-year old dad.

He’ll be starting up with us because he’s ready for the next thing.

He’s been active, going for walks, playing golf, but he’s looking to stay strong, not lose that muscle mass, and help prevent injuries, falls, etc.

That’s commitment.

I’ve committed my life to three things…

  1. To My Family: Megan, Kaden, & my soon to be a daughter. To be a present husband and father, to provide for them, and to show them endless love.

  2. To Our Spurling Community: To recognizing and appreciating our team, to be the best leader possible, to our clients and the experience they have, and to our community at large, to leave it better than I found it, to making a difference.

  3. To Myself: To constantly getting better emotionally and physically, learning from every mistake, constantly have a never-ending pursuit that there is always a better way to do things, and to get 1% Better everyday.

That’s my commitment.

What’s yours?

1% Better.

Dedicated To Your Success,

Doug Spurling

The 4 C's

There are four things you have to work towards in order to get results.

Unfortunately, there is no quick fix, and all too often we spend too much time looking for the fast secret when in reality, it's the regular day in and day out work that gets us closer to our goals.

As I was thinking of what is the "secret to success" I found that it comes down to four things, and they happen to all begin with the letter "C."

Think of this as building a four-sided fence…

1.Consistency 

I've beaten this to the ground, but I feel it's the number one thing for results.

People look for the quick fix; they jump around from this detox to that kick-start.

They workout consistently for three weeks, and then fall off track for two.

They meal prep for a couple of weeks, and then they grab fast food for a couple of weeks. 

In fitness and in life, the tortoise will always win the race.

In fitness and in life, the tortoise will always win the race.

The slow, steady, consistent efforts of every day trying to get 1% better will always win. 

2.Coaching 

When your car needs a tune-up you call a mechanic.

When you're sick you see a doctor.

When you need to get your taxes done you meet with your accountant.

Why do you see these people?

You see them because your strength is not in that area, and although you may be able to do it yourself, you're willing to invest money to save your greatest asset...time.

You probably could learn how to change your own oil. However, by the time you learn how to do it, get all the equipment needed to do it, and finally complete the task, you could have paid your mechanic to do it and saved your most precious things...time and money.

Finding a good coach will save you lots of headaches.

Sure you can google workouts on your own.

Are you doing things properly?

What weight should you use?

Do you need someone to check-in with to keep you on track?

Do you need a shoulder to lean on? 

If you find the right coach, all of that can be achieved, and more. A good coach will get you to your goals faster, safer, and you'll build life-long habits that will keep the results coming. 

3.Community

Everything is easier when you have others around you.

When you don't feel like going to the gym, if you have a community of people waiting for you, you won't want to let them down.

If you need an extra push, or a friend to go to the game with, a community solves that. 

A strong community builds you up. 

4.Culture

This is the secret sauce.

This is the magic.

A strong gym culture can change your life.

That's our biggest differentiator at Spurling.

You can copy our workouts, you can copy our equipment, you can copy our services, but you can't recreate our culture.

Why?

You can't buy culture, you can't copy it, it's an intangible.

A good gym culture, where everybody knows each other, everybody supports each other, the staff love each other, and the energy is contagious, that is the secret sauce. 

We've created a 3rd place at Spurling. You have your family, you have your work, and then you have your "happy place."

We're our client's 3rd place, we just happen to be a gym. 

We are in the customer loving industry, we just happen to deliver it through fitness.

Our goal at Spurling is the hour you spend with us is the best hour of your day.

You get to go to the gym, you don't have to go to the gym. 

If you can find a strong culture, you'll no longer dread going to the gym, you'll no longer look for the quick fix, you'll create a bond that can't be broken. 

My challenge to you is to stop looking for the quick fixes, you may find it, but then three months later you'll be back to where you started.

Stop trying to hit a home run, and instead hit single, after single, after single, after single.

If you can find any of these 4 C's you'll be ahead of 90% of people. T

he best part?

If you find all four, you'll no longer make "going to the gym" a chore, or something that's just on your to-do list, it will become your 3rd place, your happy place. 

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

Let's pretend it's opposite day

I took my mug of coffee and sank into the chair by the window.

It’s my morning routine to sit in my dining room, with its exposed wood beams and wood stove, and watch the early morning fog rise in the meadow behind my house. This morning, I looked out with dismay at the rainy drizzle coming down on yet another cold and wet October day.

I don’t mind the rain. I lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico for a while - long enough to learn that I didn’t love the constant blast of sunshine (it’s like someone who smiles all of the time - it makes me suspicious) that I preferred the change of seasons, and that a few rainy days help you appreciate the sunny ones.

But this morning, as I sipped my coffee, the rain seemed to reflect the dismal mood I’ve been carrying these past few days. It’s hard for me to tell sometimes, whether my mood is low because of the darkness and poor weather, or if that’s how I was already feeling and the rain just exacerbates it.

This time of year is difficult for many people, and I suppose I’m no different. I manage my depression year-round, but sunshine decline as one client recently called it, often leaves me with a little less energy, a little less enthusiasm, and a little less cheer in my heart. And it’s days like today that I try to remember the best advice I’ve ever received in the face of feeling blah.

Act against it.

Or, as I seem to remember doing as a kid, make it opposite day.

Meaning that if you don’t feel like going to the gym, you need to go to the gym. If you don’t feel like spending time with friends, then you need to spend time with friends. If all you want to do is curl up and sleep on the couch then go for a walk, call a friend, or play Jeopardy with Alexa (no, it’s really a thing…).

But whatever you do, don’t give in to the downward pull.

I know. That’s easier said than done.

To be sure, there are varying degrees of Seasonal Affect Disorder, and I’m not suggesting that everyone could manage their mood by just doing the opposite of what they feel like doing.

Many people use light therapy, medication, and psychotherapy to cope with the mood struggles during this time of year. But sometimes, even with these treatments, you can still get lost in the struggle.

So what I am suggesting is knowing yourself. Knowing how you tick; and if you know that climbing into your jammies and onto the couch at 5:30 at night only makes the suffering worse, then do your best to act against that desire.

Enlist the help of a friend, enroll in a class or join a book group.

As difficult as it can be to manage this time of year, do your best to act against it. And if we, as coaches, can help keep you accountable to better taking care of yourself, let us know how we can help.

Biggest Takeaways From My 75 Day Challenge

If you follow me on social media or read these e-mails, you know that Friday was the last day of my 75 Day Challenge.

For those who haven’t been following along, I embarked on a challenge that consisted of doing the following five things for 75 straight days, and if you miss a day, you start over.

It’s 75 straight days of:

  1. Two workouts every day, at least 45 minutes, at least one has to be outside

  2. Follow calorie limit, track all food, no cheats, no sweets, no alcohol

  3. Drink a gallon of water every day

  4. Read 10 pages of a personal development book every day

  5. Take a progress pic every day

Well, happy to report, that on Friday I completed the challenge!

My reason for deciding to do this challenge was a single answer…

Sprint.

Since my son was born about 2.5 years ago, I was crushing the small daily wins, I was consistent, but I hadn’t really pushed myself.

I had gained some weight as a new dad, but more so, I just didn’t have the bandwidth to really dial in and focus.

I was running the gym, consulting for over 20+ other businesses, trying to figure out what being a dad was, and trying to be a halfway decent partner.

There was, is still is, no balance.

I was finally ready for a sprint.

I talk often about the sprint vs jog mentality.

Most of the year we’re jogging, we’re trying to do good work, show up, work hard, but we’re not hyper-focused.

I believe that a lot of our biggest progress is made when we decide to sprint, go all in.

However, we can’t sprint all the time, we’ll burn out.

That’s what was so great about the challenge, it had a deadline, 75 days.

When I say sprint, I mean hyper-focused on the physical stuff (workouts, nutrition, etc), but also the mental stuff (mindfulness, gratitude, productivity, presentness, personal/business development, etc).

So, it was a physical challenge, yes, but it was more so a mental challenge.

So, what were my biggest takeaways?

Let’s get the physical stuff out of the way…

I lost about 6% body fat and about 15 pounds.

My expectations on this front were a bit higher, but it was a great reminder for how much work/time it really takes to see results.

I tracked all my food, did two workouts per day, for 75 straight days, and lost 15 pounds.

It’s good, don’t get me wrong, but it’s also a great reminder for those thoughts we have where we think we can lose 20 pounds in 6 weeks by working out 3x per week and eating “pretty good.”

Also, it was a good reminder for keeping strength training as your “main dish.”

Sometimes we’re all guilty of thinking that we need to do a bunch of cardio, get super sweaty, and if we’re not sore we must not have had a great workout.

However, what’s typically happening in that above scenario is we’re losing a bunch fo water weight and muscle, and maintaining the same, if not increasing, body fat percentage.

It was important with my volume of workouts to keep the strength training as the “main dish” so I could maintain my muscle mass while doing “side” workouts like hiking, trail walks, and other outdoor workouts.

I also saw great benefits from drinking the gallon of water every day (aside from having to pee every 45 minutes).

It’s amazing what it feels like to be truly hydrated.

Now, my favorite part…

The mental side of it.

This is by far my favorite part of any of these challenges.

The discipline it takes, the planning, the thoughts that run through your head.

Almost every day there were things I wouldn’t have done if it weren’t for the challenge, like working out when it’s cold and dark out or saying no to that sweet or cold beer.

Watching myself do things I wouldn’t normally do was very hard in the moment, but the most fulfilling after the fact.

I became even more relentless with my planning.

I didn’t fall behind with any of my work, in fact, I would say I got more done because of how focused I had to be with my time.

A great reminder for how much time we “waste” on social media, TV, or checking e-mails.

In fact, both of my businesses, the gym and the consulting, had their best months to date while I was on this challenge, I don’t think that’s a coincidence.

It was hard, there’s no denying it.

But that’s why they call it a challenge.

It’s supposed to be challenging.

If my behaviors didn’t have to change, if my choices didn’t have to change, if I adjusted it to fit my existing lifestyle is it really a challenge?

I would argue no.

Now, for some parting thoughts…

I’ve had some people start the challenge because of my posts, which is pretty cool.

But note, you have to do it for you…

I posted publically about this as one form of accountability, but this challenge is what I needed.

You have to make sure it’s what you need, what is right for you.

It might be, it might not be, and that’s okay.

You have to have doubters and supporters.

Well, at least I did.

I communicated with Megan prior to starting the challenge.

Unless I was traveling, she took every progress picture.

In fact, I crawled into bed at 12:30 am after landing from a trip to Kentucky, on the last day of the challenge, she woke up, groggy and tired, and the first thing she said…

“Did you take your picture?”

Now that’s support.

We did a lot of the outdoor workouts as a family, she was supportive of my eating habits, and time away from the family to get my workouts in.

I had many people throughout the process message me with words of encouragement.

Selfishly, the most motivating comments were the people that said…

“Good for you Doug, I could never do it.”

Why?

What limiting belief do you have?

We can do anything we put our minds to…

Will it be easy?

Heck no.

But you CAN do anything you want to do if you’re willing to have a growth mindset, a positive outlook, a relentless amount of discipline and hard work, and a supportive network around you.

Maybe it’s not this challenge…

Maybe it’s something else you've thought about doing.

I try every day to lead by example…

Lead by example in my work ethic, my discipline, my integrity, and my positivity…

I’m not perfect, far from it, I have a lot of crap I’m working through, but I do know one thing…

I can do it.

You can do it.

You first just have to decide you can.

As for what’s next.

I’m approaching the rest of the year with a “maintain, not gain” mentality.

I still have yet to have a sweet or alcohol or miss a day of reading, but enjoyed my first day in 76 days without a workout yesterday watching football with the family.

I’ll try to keep the habits I built as long as I can.

I’m sure I’ll splurge at some point, but I like how I feel right now.

Right now, I’m aiming to be the best leader I can be, the best dad I can be, and to be there for Megan as she painfully deals with the final weeks of pregnancy in prep for Baby Girl Spurling coming in late November/early December.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

What are your pillars of happiness?

Last week at the gym I walked in on a discussion amongst clients about their five pillars of happiness.

Immediately after that conversation, the song "Love Will Keep us Together" by Captain and Tennille came on.

As is often the case when I hear a song that I've forgotten about, I can't contain myself. Before I knew it, I was letting the dance moves fly to one of the hokiest duos from the seventies.

Yes, I said. Yes. Captain and Tennille is a pillar of my happiness.

My co-worker and clients were staring. If you only get five, they asked, is this really one of them?

So it got me thinking, I mean really thinking, about what my five pillars of happiness are. And why it's important to even have some pillars of happiness. Because knowing and understanding what makes you happy can better help you make decisions about what you do with your time.

And maybe, what not to do with our time.

So with that in mind, here are my five pillars of happiness:

Family & Community

The past two years have been filled with loss and the inevitable shrinking of my family. I made a decision to live far away from my immediate family, but it doesn’t mean family is any less important to me. (If you ever want to know who hung the moon I’ll save you time. It was my dad.) I’m fortunate that I’ve got f-ramily (friends who are family), and I’m fortunate to have good relationships with many family members. I’m also immensely fortunate to have a person in Sheila who understands me, loves me unconditionally, and puts up with my ever-increasing collection of shoes and hats…and shoes…

Creativity and being ridiculous

Happiness is creating. Whether it’s horrible car karaoke videos singing Englebert Humperdink (I usually reserve these for Sheila), writing blog posts, or making up songs on my guitar, I am happiest when I carve out some space to be creative. (Also wearing inflatable unicorn costumes and dancing the conga whenever the mood strikes.)

Music

If you’ve ever been in the gym when a really good song comes on (or my version of that) well, then you know what that looks like. I get my groove on like it’s my job.

I have a vinyl collection that I love because vinyl, but also because it reminds so much of my folks. Music has been a big part of my life ever since I can remember. My mom was always listening to our giant Zenith floor stereo when I was a kid, and my dad was forever quizzing us about songs on the radio when we were in the car. And when we weren't listening to music, my dad was often playing it on his guitar, a hobby that I adopted for myself in college. Playing it, listening to it, talking about it - music is a happy place for me.

Which might make this next one seem odd….

Quiet and solitude

I’m an introvert. No matter how extroverted I can be for my job, and no matter how much I do, indeed, love music - I absolutely, unequivocally, on a daily basis, need quiet and time to myself. The most liberating insight I’ve had as an adult was taking the Meyers Briggs Test in college and understanding where my energy comes from, and what I need to recharge myself on a daily and weekly basis.

Animals

Specifically, yes, Rooney. I don't think I need to go on and on about how my basset hound is pretty much the best dog ever and how he is my entertainment, my comfort, and my companion when I do things and nothing. If you've been following my work for any length of time, then you know he's my logo, he's my buddy, and he's my heart.

But it's not just Rooney. I love most any dogs (bassets are best), cats who act like dogs and also, though I seldom have talked about it, fish. I used to have an aquarium when I was in my teens, and I loved to just watch them swim. Because, you know - quiet.

I would list self-knowledge as a pillar of happiness, but I think that self-knowledge and self-reflection and self-understanding are amongst are a pillar of happiness, but then that would be six, and nothing comes in sixes.

But the more time you spend getting to know yourself, the better equipped you’ll be to make choices that are in line what what’s important to you. And one of the best things you can to help motivate yourself is make sure that the activities you are doing are in line with those pillars of happiness.

Actually baseball belongs on this list, but you’ve got work you’re ignoring while I read this, so…get back to it.

Home Stretch...

As of this writing, I have five days left in my #75Hard Challenge.

For those who haven’t been following along, 70 days ago I embarked on a challenge that consisted of doing the following five things for 75 straight days, and if you miss a day, you start over.

It’s 75 straight days of:

  1. Two workouts every day, at least 45 minutes, at least one has to be outside

  2. Follow calorie limit, track all food, no cheats, no sweets, no alcohol

  3. Drink a gallon of water every day

  4. Read 10 pages of a personal development book every day

  5. Take a progress pic every day

I’ve shared bi-weeklyish updates on the journey, and I’ll do a final recap next week after I complete the challenge.

Right now, I’m hyper focused on not missing a little detail like forgetting to take a progress picture, or missing a bottle of water toward my gallon.

The last thing I’d want to do is miss something on day 71 or 72 and have to go back to day 1 :)

In fact, yesterday we had a family day at my in-laws, a lot of Megan’s family (herself included) have October birthdays, so we celebrated all of them together.

Everybody was sipping on a beverage, and of course there was cake and ice cream after dinner.

My Mother-In-Law, being nice, said, “Doug, can’t you just do a 70 day challenge and have a piece of cake.”

I know she was joking, but I’d be dammed if I’m going to break this challenge at this point for a piece of cake.

I’ll share most of my takeaways for my recap last week, but here are a few big ones…

First, results are always harder than we think.

We think we can just “eat good” and see dramatic results.

The fact is, I’ve seen some decent results (about 15 pounds and 5% body fat), but think of what I’ve been doing?

Can we really expect 20lbs in 6 weeks if we’re still having a daily glass of wine, and working out 3x per week?

Now, don’t get me wrong, I think that’s great balance, and that’s where most of us hang out in maintenance mode, but the fact is, if you want dramatic results, you need to make some dramatic changes.

And just like your house projects, or anything else in life, it’s going to take at least twice as long as you think it is.

Second, I was big on not modifying this challenge for me.

Note, the keywords there….for me.

I know Kim has written about modifying this challenge to fit you, and I like that, but for me, if I modified it, I wouldn’t have lasted.

You see, I believe, for me, if I allow 1% in, just that cheat day on Sunday, just that one beer, just that one day of only one workout, it doesn’t sound like much, but for me, that doesn’t build the pig-headed discipline, it doesn’t allow me to go deep enough into the habit build.

I guess I’m self-aware enough to realize one thing about myself…

I don’t do well with moderation.

I’m either all-in or all out.

So, for this challenge, I was going to do the challenge, I was going to do it exactly as it was laid out by the creator, and I wasn’t going to make excuses.

I’m not saying everyone should take that advice, in fact, I don’t want to position it as advice, I want to position as being self-aware about how you tick, how you function.

Finally, the last thing I’ll add today, as I like things in three, is that I already have a plan for what’s next.

I’m staying focused on these final five days, but I needed to have a plan for what’s next.

I’ll pull back a little, I love the habit I’ve created of doing something, even just a walk everyday.

Will I do two workouts a day?

No.

But I’m going to keep the habit of doing some type of movement, anything, every single day.

I’ve set some lighter goals to finish out the rest of the year, essentially “maintain, don’t gain” during the holidays, and then I’m planning on doing phase two in January.

Those are my big three for this week.

The final five days are tough.

I spend two of them traveling, and two of them in all day meetings.

But I’ll get it in.

You reading this is a big part of why I won’t miss it.

I’ll be damned if I don’t report back on Monday having completed the challenge.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

The Yips

It’s a play I’d made hundreds of times in my career as a softball pitcher.

Field a ground ball, fire a strike to first base.

As with many sports, I’d taken hundreds of thousands of ground ball reps over the years so that during games, the play was made from muscle memory. Catch, turn, throw.

Routine.

Until one day during my junior year of high school when I fielded a ground ball, turned towards first base, and fired the ball 10 feet over the first basemen’s head.

I was not nervous, I was not anxious, I was not injured.

But from that point forward, something inexplicable happened to me every time I fielded a ground ball on the mound.

I had developed a case of the yips.

The yips, for those of you who don’t follow baseball or golf (though it happens in other sports) is defined as the sudden and unexplained loss of fine motor skills in athletes. Perhaps the most famous case in history is that of Steve Blass, a former pitcher for my beloved Pittsburgh Pirates. After a very successful 10 year career in the major leagues, he developed a case of the yips that was so severe, he was out of baseball within two years after his first wild pitch.

He was 32 years old. (Now when this happens to a pitcher, they call it Steve Blass disease).

In 2000, I was watching a playoff game between the Atlanta Braves and the Saint Louis Cardinals when Rick Ankiel, a phenom drafted by the Cardinals only one year before, threw a pitch in the dirt.

And he never recovered his pitching career.

Even though my experience with the yips wasn’t life altering, it was by far one of the strangest phenomenons I ever experienced. I could no longer trust my body, or trust my skills.

Field a ball and throw it home? Sure. Turn to throw it to first base, and my arm would suddenly feel almost disconnected from my body and I couldn’t predict the result. I no longer had control over something that I had always had control over.

As I recently listened to an interview with Ankiel, I was struck at the sheer terror he must have felt at his body and mind’s inexplicable betrayal of his gift. And I was thinking of how often that happens to so many of us - outside of the sports arena.

I think of the mental health struggles - the crippling anxiety that keeps a lonely person from meeting new people. The devastating depression that hijacks your belief system about your talents, your skills, and your worth.

I think of the physical deterioration of our bodies that leave us standing in a pile of “used to’s” instead of focusing on our “can do’s.”

Many of us have our own yips on this journey in life. We don’t get a say in our genetics that leave us in need of new knees and hips before we turn 60.

But we do get a say in how our story goes.

Rick Ankiel, the phenom that he was, set out to write the story of a successful major league pitcher, with all of the accolades that go with it. Instead, he wrote a different tale.

Ankiel spent the better part of six years trying to solve his pitching woes. But in 2006, when he threw only three strikes in 20 pitches during a spring training game, he re-invented himself. And in 2007 he returned to the major leagues as a right fielder, and is the only player besides Babe Ruth to have homered as both a pitcher and a position player.

He went on to play another seven years in the pros as an outfielder.

It wasn’t the story he set out to write. But I’m not sure he would have actually written the book that he did write (called The Phenomenon), if not for that one pitch that changed his life forever.

Sometimes we have to stop fighting what we want to do and start doing what we were meant to do.

Your Main Dish

There are six human needs we all have to have in life.

I’ve done posts about them in the past, but today I want to focus on the first two..

  1. Certainty

  2. Variety

They are opposites, but compliment each other.

There are certain aspects of our life we want to be certain about.

Food on the table, roof over our head, money in the bank, etc…

But even on a smaller level, certain experiences you need certainty in.

For example, there is a certain expectation you have when you walk into Spurling every single time…

You want a warm greeting, great coaching, a welcoming community, etc.

You need to be certain that happens every single time.

There’s a certain expectation of food quality at your favorite restaurant.

If you walked into Starbucks and ordered your favorite drink you get every week and all of the sudden it had all different ingredients thrown in for variety, that would definitely throw off your need of certainty.

On the flip side, you need some variety.

If it never changes, if it’s never different, you get bored.

It doesn’t matter what we’re talking about…

If your work day is the same thing every single day, you’d get bored….

If your fitness routine was the same every single day, you’d get bored…

If you ate the same food every single day, you’d get bored…

You need variety for the spice of life, and we know that when we get bored with something (fitness or otherwise) the success rate of completing it goes way down.

I like to think of all of this like a three-course meal.

You have your main dish, your entree.

That’s your certainty.

In fitness, that may be your 3x per week of full body strength training workout at Spurling.

It’s your foundation, and if you only eat the main dish, you get all the “needs” met.

Just like at home, you very rarely make yourself an appetizer on a typical night, you just eat your main dish.

Then for variety, you have your appetizer and your dessert.

You can’t just do these things as they they don’t cover all your needs, but they cover the variety or the “spice” of life.

In fitness, that could be things like supplementing your three workouts in the gym with outdoor workouts or yoga.

You can’t just do those things as you’re missing a big chunk of the needs, but it certainly may fulfill the need for variety.

That’s part of the reason why at Spurling we offer what we internally call “specialty programs.”

These are short term programs/workshops offered by our coaching staff outside of their salaried role or by outside experts in other areas like educational workshops, nutrition, yoga, recovery, etc.

You see this right now with Kim’s workshops that she’s doing, Trent’s nutrition program, and Judy’s restoration program.

It gives them a platform to grow, but it also fulfills the human need for variety for both them and the participants.

So I know we’re mainly focused on fitness, but you can apply these two human needs to any aspect of life.

Your job is your main dish, but maybe a special project or new responsibility might be the appetizer or dessert.

Your week to week at home is your main dish, that needs certainty, but maybe a couple times a year you go on vacation or away for a long weekend, or even a date night.

That’s your appetizer or dessert.

You can’t do that everyday, but here and there is awesome.

Keep the main dish, but if you’re craving it, add in the appetizer and dessert every once in awhile.

Certainty and variety.

Which one do you need more of right now?

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

Two Good Questions...

There are really two questions that drive everything…

If you want good answers you have to ask good questions. 

The first question...

If we were sitting down and having a conversation 1 year from today, and you were looking back over that year, what has to have happened for you to feel happy, for you to have your “dream come true” result?

The important thing with the above question is you think about what success looks like. 

Too many of us are working towards improving things but we don't ever step back and look at what success actually looks like. 

Ask yourself the above question, write it down, and tack it somewhere where you'll see it every day. 

Two things are going to happen...

You now have a clear picture of what success looks like so you'll be more focused on what you need to do to accomplish it.

And...

As humans, we are terrible at gratitude to ourselves.

It's never good enough and we could always do more, right?

Well, if today you write down what success looks at the end of this year, I can all but guarantee when the end of the year comes around, if you didn't write it down you may have accomplished all that you were going after, but you'll see it as it's not good enough because you'll want more and not realize how much you actually accomplished. 

The second question...

What do YOU need to change to make that happen?

This is where the results are made. 

Action.

Execution. 

However you want to think about it, it's going to take you changing something. 

We can help you come up with answers, but ultimately, you need to discover the answer yourself.

We know a self-selected answer to this question has a significantly higher success rate compared to advice.

Advice is great in the short-term, but doesn’t stick long-term.

So...

Get super clear on what success looks like and then figure out what you need to change to make that happen. 

It doesn’t matter what aspect of your life we’re talking about, the answer to these two questions drive everything.

It sounds simple, but only a few take the time to map this out. 

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling

Muck

I was chatting with one of my private coaching clients a few weeks back and she dropped a line that was something along the lines of…

“Everything is just muck. I’m just trying to get through the muck.”

Arguably, she’s probably too hard on herself, who isn’t, she actually has a pretty strong operation.

Anyway, this past week I thought of that line as I was trudging through some “muck” of my own…

It’s hard to complain, because what really is “muck” is about 1% of life, but that’s what we tend to focus on, right?

I never really have a desire to “go away” or go on “vacation.”

I’m pretty fortunate that I don’t really separate work and life.

To me, it’s just one thing, I have my purpose, my values, and I’m just trying to make an impact, we just use the business to do that.

There are pros and cons to living life that way, and there is never true separation.

I never track my hours, I don’t watch the clock, and am arguably terrible at trying to separate the two.

But I digress….

I was looking forward to going away (Quebec City) for a week with Megan and Kaden.

It was a trip we had canceled last year as my dad passed away the night before we were supposed to leave.

The trip itself was okay, a beautiful city, very cool history, cool architecture, etc.

But I just kept bringing the saying back…

“I feel like I’m just walking through the muck.”

Nothing was easy.

We had some stuff going on at the gym, nothing crazy, projects, couple client issues, etc that just were not going as planned, thus I was devoting a lot of mental time to those…

We had our off-site quarterly team meeting the day before I left, so I had all of those conversations and thoughts in my head…

Mel sent out a quarterly survey and I choose to read them (people get really honest behind a keyboard, which is cool) while in Quebec.

On the personal side, the Quebec hills didn’t treat Megan too well.

Apparently going to a city built upon a fort (super cool) while almost 8 months pregnant is not a good idea.

She was in back pain the entire time.

Kaden was a typical two-year-old.

Tantrums, not eating, off his routine.

A parking ticket.

A GI bug for both us to put things over the edge.

You get it.

I feel like I’m using this to vent, but whatever.

Just muck.

Nothing bad, nothing life-altering, overall it was actually not a bad week at all, I just felt like my feet were in the muck.

So, my lesson to you?

Sometimes you feel like you’re just walking through the muck.

It doesn’t matter whether we’re talking about progress in fitness, how work is feeling, family, life, etc.

Do you know the best way to get out of the muck?

Keep walking.

Standing in it isn’t going to do anything.

Keep walking, keep giving it your best, keep moving forward.

1% Better.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Doug Spurling