Day 41: Gratitude Sunday — My Church

Round 2, Day 1 Sunday, February 15, 2026

Welcome to Gratitude Sunday.

Today we went to service as a family, and the pastor preached a message about mental health. One of the things he said was that you can be a Christian and still struggle with depression or anxiety — not because you’re not trying to follow God or not trying to be close to Him, but because your life is out of balance.

That message was relevant to me.

Recently, my life was out of balance. I wasn’t getting enough sleep. I wasn’t taking adequate care of myself in some ways. And so today was confirmation that the steps I’ve been taking — these seven habits, this daily discipline — are the right ones. Getting things back in order matters.

But more than the message itself, I’m grateful for the place where I heard it.

I’m grateful to attend a church that meets me where I am. My faith in God and my belief in Jesus are strong. Being able to go to a place that builds that faith and supports that belief is a gift I don’t take for granted.

Tonight’s post is short, but it’s sincere.

I’m thankful for my church. Thankful that my wife, my son, and I attend as a family. Thankful that he’s involved in the youth group. Thankful that they love Jesus and teach God’s word.

Sometimes gratitude doesn’t need a lot of words. It just needs to be said.

See you tomorrow for Day 42.


Day 41 of 280. Round 2 has begun.

Day 41: The Linchpin Question

Round 2, Day 1 Sunday, February 15, 2026

Good morning and welcome to Day 1 of Round 2 of the 7-40 Challenge. It’s a chilly morning in Oklahoma, and I’m out on the road getting my walk in early. Getting back to the challenge. Getting back to work.

Round 1 gave me a lot of forward momentum, and I have no intention of slowing down.

What Is a Linchpin?

I’ve been reading Linchpin by Seth Godin, and it’s challenging my thinking in ways I didn’t expect.

First, the literal definition. A linchpin is a pin passed through the end of an axle to keep a wheel in position. Without it, the wheel comes off and everything falls apart. I actually have a linchpin holding the gate of my trailer up right now. If it weren’t there, the gate would fall down and damage something. Small piece. Critical function.

Seth takes that idea and applies it to people. A linchpin, in his framework, is someone indispensable. Someone who provides value, leadership, and creative thinking without being told what to do. They take risks that pay off because they’ve done the work to be excellent at what they do. They’re rarely caught off guard. They’re often honored. And when it comes down to it, they’re extremely hard to replace.

The Air Gets Thinner

Here’s what hit me. Seth says that people who show up at a job just to be present — that’s easy. People who show up and follow orders — also easy. But people who innovate and create? The air gets a lot thinner up there. There aren’t as many people willing to do that.

From what I’ve seen in my own life, I agree.

It is so easy to go in, get depressed, collect the paycheck, and let the cycle take over. Then one day you lift your head up out of the water and realize you don’t know where you are. You’ve been floating for too long. The whole terrain has changed.

Why This Matters for Round 2

This book is challenging my thinking about the excellence I pour into every day. My need to attack these goals and these habits I’m forming. Because we’ve only got so long in this life. We only have so much time to make a difference. So much time to love those around us. So much time to leave a legacy. So much time to do what matters.

What matters to me? My relationship with God. My family. My friends. Caring for the world around me.

To do that well, I need to become a linchpin. More indispensable. More intentional. More excellent.

And because of that, I practice these habits daily. I put my accountability right here on the blog for you to see.

The Seven Habits for Round 2

  1. Bible Study and Prayer
  2. Exercise (1 hour daily)
  3. Water (100 oz daily)
  4. Calorie Tracking
  5. Gratitude Practice
  6. Reading (30 minutes daily)
  7. Creative Hour

Same seven. Deeper roots. Higher standards.

The Question

How about you? Are you working to be indispensable? Working to give your best and be the best you can be — not because it’s demanded of you, but because you have the opportunity to do so? To make a difference?

I’m going to get through Day 41. We’ll see you tomorrow for Day 42.


Day 41 of 280. Round 2 has begun.

Assessment Week Day 5: Round 2 Starts Tomorrow

Assessment Week – Day 5
Friday, February 14, 2026

I made a decision this morning.

Round 2 starts tomorrow. February 15th. Not the 17th like I originally planned.

Assessment Week has been good. Really good. I’ve evaluated Round 1, worked through the comprehensive questionnaire, got clarity on what worked and what needs building. I’ve rested. I’ve reflected. I’ve processed.

But I’m ready. The momentum is there. The habits are ingrained. And sitting still for two more days feels like resistance disguised as rest.

So tomorrow, we go.

What Round 1 Proved

Forty consecutive days. All seven habits. Perfect execution.

  • 12.4 pounds lost (exceeded the 8-12 lb target)
  • Two complete manuscripts (Project Overwatch revised, The Light Bearer written AND revised in the final two weeks)
  • 50,000 views on BiblePictures365 (535 followers gained)
  • Three books read and applied (Made to StickYour Best Year EverTalk Like TED)
  • Daily blog posts for 40 straight days
  • Social media system operational

The 7-40 Challenge works. The structure holds. The habits compound. Voice-to-text unlocks productivity I didn’t know I had. Collaboration with AI turns raw thoughts into polished content. The creative hour produces actual finished work, not just ideas.

I proved the system. Round 1 wasn’t theory. It was execution.

What Round 2 Builds

Primary Focus: KDP research and publishing. Getting both novels formatted and launched on Amazon.

I have two complete manuscripts sitting on my hard drive. Project Overwatch has been through beta readers (Marixa and my son both gave feedback). The Light Bearer just finished its first revision pass. Both need formatting. Both need covers. Both need to exist in the world instead of just on my computer.

Round 2 is about turning creative output into published work.

Secondary Systems:

  • Revenue tracking (even if it starts at $0, I need the baseline)
  • Email list setup (building audience beyond social media)
  • Blog-to-video workflow (leveraging OpusClip more consistently)
  • Assessment Week frameworks (documenting the tools for others to use)

The Reading: Linchpin by Seth Godin. Becoming indispensable in both my day job and my side business. Learning to distinguish between factory work (following instructions) and linchpin work (solving problems nobody assigned).

The Habits: Same seven. Proven. Working.

  1. Bible Study & Prayer
  2. Exercise (1 hour daily – resuming Greek God Program lifting next week when hand is fully healed)
  3. Water (100oz)
  4. Calorie Tracking (3000 calories/day)
  5. Gratitude (daily practice + weekly Thank You Campaign)
  6. Reading (30 min daily – Linchpin starts tomorrow)
  7. Creative Hour (9-10 PM – now focused on KDP research and manuscript formatting)

Why Two Days Early?

Because Assessment Week did what it was supposed to do. I evaluated. I rested. I got clarity.

Sitting for two more days doesn’t add value. It just delays momentum.

The 7-40 Challenge isn’t about rigid adherence to arbitrary calendars. It’s about intentional transformation. And right now, the most intentional choice is to start when I’m ready—not when the schedule says I should be ready.

Assessment Week was five days. That’s enough.

Tomorrow, Round 2 begins.

What’s Different This Time

I’m not starting from scratch. I’m building on foundation.

Round 1 proved I can execute. Round 2 proves I can produce. Not just create—actually put work into the world where people can access it, respond to it, potentially pay for it.

The creative breakthrough happened in Round 1. The business breakthrough happens in Round 2.

I’m ready.

The habits are set. The momentum is real. The work is waiting.

Let’s go.


Assessment Week: Complete
Round 2: Starts February 15, 2026

Forty more days. Same seven habits. New focus.

See you tomorrow for Round 2, Day 1.

The Creativity Conversation: Assessment Week Day 4

Assessment Week – Day 4
Friday, February 13, 2026

The opportunity to get to be creative every day has been one of the best parts of Round 1.

I was telling my son a few days ago—he read a copy of the book I had revised, the one I’m very eager to get out either through self-publishing or to see if I can get traditionally published this year.

And we were talking about the plot points. He was giving me feedback on what he liked and what he didn’t.

What I Told Him

I smiled at him and said, “Man, you gotta understand—I have not felt this creative or alive in any time that I can remember.”

That’s the truth.

I am purposely attacking creativity every day, and ideas are showing up. I’m able to make room for what I need to do. And it’s been just so fantastic. It’s been so, so good.

What Changed

Here’s the thing: I’ve always wanted to write a book. I’ve always wanted to be creative. I’ve always wanted to pursue these projects.

But I never did. Not really. Not with this kind of consistency and follow-through.

What changed?

I set my mind to it. I got after it. And I started using the tools at my disposal.

Voice-to-text for capturing thoughts. Daily creative hour on the calendar. OpusClip for video distribution. AI for Bible images.

The tools were always there. I just wasn’t using them strategically.

And the moment I committed to one hour of creative time every single day—not when I felt like it, not when inspiration struck, but DAILY—everything unlocked.

The novel got revised. The Light Bearer got outlined. Blog posts got written. Bible images got created and distributed to 50,000 people.

All because I stopped waiting for the perfect conditions and started using what I had.

The Conversation Validated the Journey

Talking with my son about the book I wrote—hearing his feedback, discussing plot points, seeing him engaged with the story—that validated everything.

This isn’t just me working in isolation anymore. This is real creative output that real people are reading and responding to.

And the fact that my own son is one of those readers? That makes it even better.

What I Want You to Hear

If you’ve been waiting to start something creative—waiting for the right time, the right tools, the right level of skill—stop waiting.

Set your mind to it. Get after it. Use the tools at your disposal.

You don’t need fancy equipment. You don’t need perfect conditions. You don’t need to feel inspired every day.

You just need to show up daily and do the work.

Train yourself in the essentials so that when opportunities come along, you’re prepared.

Because here’s what I’ve learned over 40 days: When you create space for creativity every single day, ideas show up. Projects get finished. Goals get achieved.

And one day, you get to have a conversation with someone you love about the thing you created.

And you realize: This is what being alive feels like.


Assessment Week – Day 4: Complete

I have not felt this creative or alive in any time I can remember.

And it’s because I finally stopped waiting and started doing.

See you tomorrow for Day 5.

I Can Finally Answer Yes: Assessment Week Day 3

Assessment Week – Day 3
Thursday, February 12, 2026

I’m still continuing with Assessment Week. I’ve been thinking hard about what I want to get done, where I’m at, what I’ve been doing.

The amount I’ve accomplished versus the level of effort I put in versus what I could have put in.

The Nagging Voice

I think I’m like everybody else. I have this nagging voice in the back of my head that always asks me if I’m doing enough.

The one that rarely goes quiet. Doesn’t want to give me any peace.

That just says: Are you performing? Are you doing what you said you would do?

And for the first time in a long time—maybe ever—I can actually answer that question with a resounding YES.

I am doing what I’m supposed to do.

I have been doing everything I can to leverage these seven habits into better daily decisions, into goal pursuit, into finally accomplishing things I’ve been trying to accomplish for a long time.

And it has been rewarding and frustrating and inspiring and so many other things.

But it’s been so needed.

The Level of Effort

I’m simply saying I know the level of effort I’m putting in now. And I have not done this maybe ever. At least in a very long time.

This is one of the breakthroughs of Assessment Week: My desire to accomplish is growing, not diminishing.

That’s what makes this different from every other time I’ve tried to change something.

Usually, momentum fades. Usually, the initial excitement wears off and the habit dies.

Not this time.

Round 1 proved the system works. And instead of being satisfied and coasting, I’m more eager to get after Round 2 than I was to start Round 1.

The Seven Habits Are Working

There’s a reason I start my day with my Bible. There’s a reason I want to ground myself in Scripture every day. I’m a follower of Jesus. I have to stay grounded to His word. I have to stay in the Scripture. Or I spin out of control.

I have to exercise every day. Even in Assessment Week, I’ve been averaging 45 minutes a day—not quite the hour, but as soon as we start next week, I’ll pop back up to my hour a day.

It’s a way that I keep myself in check and make sure I’m doing the right things. Because if I’m exercising, I’m also not as tempted to overeat or eat things I shouldn’t. My calorie counting and water intake prove that exercise, eating, and hydration all work in tandem with each other. They work really, really well.

I have been pleasantly surprised with reading my books every day. While I’ve taken a couple of days off during Assessment Week because I’ve been doing other things, I’m also looking forward to getting back to that every day as well.

The idea that we are only six weeks into the new year and I’ve already finished three books and started a fourth makes me very happy. And that doesn’t include the times I’ve read my own book that I’ve been writing—which I’ve read at least a couple of times as well.

I have read more and consumed more in the last six weeks than I have in quite some time. And I’m very pleased.

I’ve also done my very best to stay grateful every day. I’ve had gratitude listed as one of my daily habits, and upon reflection, I feel like I’m doing well because gratitude is one of those centering things.

By reading my Bible, by knowing where I am with God, by pursuing a relationship with Him, I stay in a constant state of gratitude because I know that He takes such exquisite care of me and my family. That He loves me dearly.

So that’s enough to be grateful for every day all in itself. But also all the people He puts in my path, the opportunities He gives me, just the opportunity to take my next breath because life is so very precious.

I am just grateful.

The Central Message

I say all this to say: It’s better to pursue something. It’s better to set your eyes on a prize out in front of you and go after it.

It’s better to have these daily things that you make yourself do so that you can get to do other things aside from it.

To train yourself in the essentials so that when opportunities come along, you’re prepared.

The 7-40 Challenge is working.

I am so entirely grateful.

And I cannot wait to get started on Round 2.


Assessment Week – Day 3: Complete

For the first time in a long time, I can answer YES to “Am I doing enough?”

And that feels so good.

See you tomorrow for Day 4.