Be the Man Who Starts
Be the Man Who Starts
New here?
Start with the post that explains everything:
 How I Changed My Life at 35
It’s the story of how I left my old life behind, rebuilt myself from the ground up, and started this journey.
If you want to understand who I am and what this blog is about, start there, otherwise enjoy the post!
There’s one thing I’ve noticed over and over — in myself first, and then in everyone else.
Starting is rare.
Not dreaming.
Not planning.
Not thinking.
Not “getting ready”.
Starting.
I didn’t always start things.
For a long time, I lived in preparation.
I had ideas.
I had potential.
I had moments where I could feel there was more in me.
But I kept waiting.
Waiting to feel ready.
Waiting to feel confident.
Waiting to feel certain.
Waiting for the right moment.
That moment never came.
What Starting Actually Cost Me
The first real time I started something that mattered, it wasn’t elegant.
I left my country.
I left familiarity.
I left comfort.
I left people.
I left a version of myself that felt safe but stagnant.
I didn’t have clarity.
I didn’t have guarantees.
I didn’t have some heroic surge of confidence.
I just reached a point where not starting felt heavier than starting.
That’s the part nobody talks about.
You don’t start because you feel strong.
You start because staying still starts to feel unbearable.
The Lie About Readiness
Here’s something I learned the hard way:
Readiness is a luxury you don’t get at the beginning.
When I started training seriously, I wasn’t fit.
When I started rebuilding my life, I wasn’t grounded.
When I started writing, I wasn’t polished.
When I started changing, I wasn’t confident.
I was clumsy.
Inconsistent.
Unsure.
Often uncomfortable.
But I was in motion.
And motion changes things in a way thinking never does.
Why Most People Stay Stuck
A lot of people don’t lack discipline.
They lack a starting point.
They want guarantees before they move.
They want reassurance before they act.
They want certainty before they commit.
But life doesn’t work like that.
Clarity comes after action.
Confidence comes after repetition.
Identity comes after commitment.
Not before.
I didn’t become someone different and then move.
I moved — and became someone different because of it.
Starting Changes Your Relationship With Yourself
This is the part that surprised me the most.
The moment I started taking action, imperfect, messy action, something shifted internally.
I stopped negotiating with myself as much.
I stopped overthinking every decision.
I stopped asking for permission.
Not because life got easier,
but because I started trusting myself.
Starting builds self-respect.
Not success.
Not results.
Self-respect.
And once you have that, everything else compounds faster.
What “Starting” Looks Like in Real Life
Starting doesn’t mean burning your life down overnight.
It looks like:
- going to the gym even though you feel out of shape
- writing even though nobody is reading
- cutting distractions before you feel disciplined
- choosing discomfort without knowing the outcome
- committing to a direction before you fully understand it
It’s not dramatic.
It’s quiet.
Often lonely.
But it’s real.
Be the Man Who Starts
Not the man who talks.
Not the man who plans endlessly.
Not the man who waits for the perfect version of himself to arrive.
Be the man who starts,
while scared,
while unsure,
while imperfect.
Because starting is what separates people who feel capable
from people who become capable.
Everything I’m building no,
physically, mentally, creatively,
exists because at some point I stopped waiting and moved.
That decision wasn’t heroic.
It was necessary.
And if this is hitting you right now,
it’s probably because you’re standing at that same edge.
You don’t need permission.
You don’t need confidence.
You don’t need clarity.
You need to start.
Even badly.
Especially badly.
