rich roll
Dad Athlete Author 📗Finding Ultra👂Rich Roll Podcast✌🏼 I like talking to people & running far🌱

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r

To celebrate the 1yr anniversary of my spinal fusion surgery, I decided to see if I could ‘run’ 1 mile very slowly—something my surgeon said was an unlikely possibility. Running, he urged, is one thing best considered permanently retired.
Perhaps he’s right. But I believe in possibility—bullheaded, I need to find out for myself. To set up for success (and avoid recklessness), I prepared for this moment by rigorously devoting the last 130 days to relearning proper posture, and by rebuilding my strength, mobility, stability, and flexibility—all while being careful to not cause undue compression on my lower spine.
By dint of inhabiting the patient and plodding tortoise as my precious spirit animal, by the time my 1-year surgery birthday rolled around, I believed myself prepared to test whether a return to running might be even remotely possible.
To ‘run’ this science experiment, I recruited my little brother from Down Under to our shared DUMBO laboratory, because @dan_churchill is positively one of the most positive and encouraging people I’m privileged to know.
The goal was simple. Run a single mile. As slowly as possible.
Success. Not because I completed the mile (I knew I could), but because I woke up the next am w/o pain, which is a joy & a relief.
Nonetheless, the significance is symbolic. It doesn’t mean my relationship with running will be what it once was. It won’t. No problem. I don’t need nor even wantthat. What I do want is new relationship with running, a different affair with my favorite aerobic activity. One that isn’t about being hard, but instead about joy. About service. About connection & community.
Today I’m hopeful, a tortoise telling myself that it’s not about fast, it’s about moving forward slowly without the hare giving me care.
I say this because my surgery taught me the value of slowing down. How the answers I seek are only available when I am—which means doubling down on being present.
Transformation is the prize for moving forward undeterred—knowing all the while that life isn’t a race. It’s an experience to be shared not a competition to win.
Thx for the memories Dan & @colebradley25 for the brilliant 📸‼️
✌🏼🐢 ❤️ -r
BOREDOM!
Follow: @drchatterjee X @richroll and head to Episode 412 of Dr. Chatterjee’s ‘Feel Better, Live More’ podcast.
On this week’s SPECIAL mindset compilation episode, we hear from the inspirational author and podcast host, @richroll. During our conversation, Rich talks about the importance of having time alone with our thoughts and why we need discomfort in order to grow.
He also shares his thoughts about technology and the lack of downtime in our modern world, as well as why we struggle with boredom and how we can find creative ways to entertain ourselves.
Leave a YES below if you’ll be listening to this one👇🏾
You can find episode 412 of my ‘Feel Better, Live More’ podcast by clicking on the link in the @drchatterjee bio above or by searching for ‘Dr Chatterjee Mindset Compilation’ in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or enjoy wherever you get your podcasts.
#drchatterjee #richroll #feelbetterlivemore
Today marks the 4-year anniversary of this viral tweet, which—according to Instagram’s terms of service—requires me to now share it as a Reel😂
Joke aside, if you are stuck or struggling, expand your timeline, embrace a more patient, long view, and double down on the things that make you feel alive. In time, you just might amaze yourself.
Now on the cusp of 56, I still feel like I’m just getting started. And a life that once felt empty is now one that wakes me up every day enthusiastic about possibility and infused with purpose.
I believe in this possibility for you—so stop waiting. Stop asking for permission. And get into action.
✌🏼🌱 -Rich

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25

Good morning. Good to be back home. Good to get up early. Good to feel good from the other day. Good to feel grateful. Good to be alive. Have a great day.
✌🏼🌱🐢 -r
NYC 📸 by @colebradley25
There is always more right with us than wrong. We just have to be willing to look.
Today on the pod, Dr. Paul Conti returns to flip the script on modern psychiatry and ask a more generative question: what's going right?
Watch it on YouTube and listen everywhere you find your podcasts.
Last thing: I've got 5 copies of Paul's new book "What's Going Right" looking for good homes. Giveaway link is in my bio.
Women’s performance has been understudied, underfunded, and misunderstood for too long, and @drstacysims is doing something about it. We had the privilege of joining her and @richroll at his podcast studio for a live conversation covering the science behind how women train, recover, and thrive across every phase of life.
The day started with a morning hike, moved into an outdoor yoga class, and was fueled by a menu featuring Momentous products.
We were grateful to be surrounded by partners and people who are just as invested in this conversation as we are.
The full podcast is live now on YouTube. Link in bio.
How can we not only live longer, but live better? Rich Roll shares how he uses WHOOP as a tool to stay consistent for a longer, stronger life.
Three words that rearrange how you live if you let them: Mood. Follows. Action.
Solo riff on the podcast this week.
Now available on YT and everywhere you listen to the Rich Roll pod. Link in my bio.
We've chased more our whole lives. More options, more freedom, more control.
@davidepstein returns with a new argument: that limits, boundaries, and constraints are the engine of creativity, productivity, and happiness. Not the enemy of them.
New today on the podcast. Listen in all the pod places + watch it on YouTube.

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r

CONSTRAINTS MAKE US BETTER. In honor of @davidepstein returning to the pod today, I thought I’d share thoughts on the thesis of David’s new book INSIDE THE BOX (get it!): limits drive breakthroughs.
As you may know, 1 yr + 4 days ago, I underwent 360 spinal fusion surgery, a 6hr ordeal to resolve a decade of debilitating lower back pain.
The operation was successful. But for the 1st 7 mos, my recovery was limited to walking, testing my patience & mental health while my waistline expanded.
Only at 8 months did I begin to feel stable enough to start a gentle regimen of PT—a 15-minute habit that weeks later expanded to include some light pedaling on my indoor trainer, then the most modest resistance training routine imaginable.
From that day to today (100+ days later), I haven’t missed a day, dropping nearly 40lbs from 207 to 170 while simultaneously building muscle mass along the way.
To hold myself accountable, I decided that every morning I would post a photo of the LED clock in my home gym (h/t Jocko Willink) on IG Stories—with 1 added rule: no 2 photos could be the same.
Having imposed this CONSTRAINT, I assumed I would soon run out of options. Instead, I kept finding new ways to capture this banal moment. My pictures got better and better. Along the way, I rediscovered my love for photography.
On some level, it’s silly. But it mirrors David Epstein’s thesis, which I think is profound—great work demands guardrails as mandatory bedfellows.
Here are some of those images, beginning with my favorite—then back to the beginning to underscore the progression (+ how I improvise on the road).
✌🏽🌱 📸 -r
Today I’ve got @drstacysims on the podcast to discuss perimenopause, heavy lifting, and fueling female physiology.
Recorded live with a studio audience, we challenge the conventional wisdom around fasting, cardio, and calorie restriction.
Listen now on the Rich Roll Podcast + watch it go down on YouTube. LINK IN MY BIO.
Saturday afternoon MANGER mood—live at the Dan
‘To Be in Love’ is the latest from @srimati’s music moniker Manger—check her IG bio for link to full vid on YT + song streaming on all the music platforms.
directed by @fathertrapper (on drums) & _jacob_butler at Dynamic Arts
Plus:
@tylerpiatt @ericjackowitz @careyfrankmusic @visitorcoffeela @dynamicartsnorth @emily_rosenfield @dekeshipp
#mangermusician #mangertheband #americana #tobeinlove
Der Instagram Story Viewer ist ein einfaches Tool, mit dem Sie Instagram Stories, Videos, Fotos oder IGTV heimlich ansehen und speichern können. Mit diesem Service können Sie Inhalte herunterladen und offline genießen, wann immer Sie möchten. Wenn Sie etwas Interessantes auf Instagram finden, das Sie später überprüfen möchten, oder Stories anonym ansehen möchten, ist unser Viewer ideal für Sie. Anonstories bietet eine ausgezeichnete Lösung, um Ihre Identität zu schützen. Instagram hat die Stories-Funktion erstmals im August 2023 eingeführt, die schnell auch von anderen Plattformen übernommen wurde, dank ihres fesselnden, zeitlich begrenzten Formats. Stories ermöglichen es Nutzern, schnelle Updates zu teilen, sei es Fotos, Videos oder Selfies, ergänzt durch Text, Emojis oder Filter, und sind nur 24 Stunden lang sichtbar. Dieser begrenzte Zeitrahmen sorgt für eine hohe Interaktion im Vergleich zu regulären Posts. Heutzutage sind Stories eine der beliebtesten Methoden, um sich in sozialen Medien zu verbinden und zu kommunizieren. Wenn Sie jedoch eine Story ansehen, kann der Ersteller Ihren Namen in seiner Viewer-Liste sehen, was ein Problem für die Privatsphäre sein kann. Was ist, wenn Sie Stories durchsuchen möchten, ohne bemerkt zu werden? Hier wird Anonstories nützlich. Es ermöglicht Ihnen, öffentliche Instagram-Inhalte anzusehen, ohne Ihre Identität preiszugeben. Geben Sie einfach den Benutzernamen des Profils ein, das Sie interessiert, und das Tool zeigt dessen neueste Stories an. Funktionen des Anonstories Viewers: - Anonymes Browsen: Sehen Sie Stories, ohne in der Viewer-Liste zu erscheinen. - Kein Konto erforderlich: Sehen Sie öffentliche Inhalte, ohne ein Instagram-Konto zu erstellen. - Inhalte herunterladen: Speichern Sie beliebige Story-Inhalte direkt auf Ihrem Gerät für die Offline-Nutzung. - Highlights anzeigen: Greifen Sie auf Instagram-Highlights zu, auch über das 24-Stunden-Fenster hinaus. - Repost-Überwachung: Verfolgen Sie Reposts oder Interaktionen bei Stories für persönliche Profile. Einschränkungen: - Dieses Tool funktioniert nur mit öffentlichen Accounts; private Accounts bleiben unzugänglich. Vorteile: - Datenschutzfreundlich: Sehen Sie sich beliebige Instagram-Inhalte an, ohne bemerkt zu werden. - Einfach und unkompliziert: Keine App-Installation oder Registrierung erforderlich. - Exklusive Tools: Laden Sie Inhalte herunter und verwalten Sie sie auf eine Weise, die Instagram nicht bietet.
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