This Excuse Is The One Holding You Back
Real strength can return once you make this change.

Let me tell you why most comebacks fail before they ever start.
It’s not a lack of effort, age, or a lack of time.
It’s the excuse you keep pretending doesn’t matter.
The one you allow because it sounds reasonable.
The one you use to stay comfortable with inconsistency.
The one that quietly teaches your body and your family that your word is flexible.
Before you add a single pound to the bar, that excuse has to go.
Not tomorrow.
Not “when life slows down.”
Right now.
Because strength doesn’t return to men who are simply trying harder.
It returns to men who stop giving themselves exits.
That’s the move, and everything else comes after.
Where I Kept Getting This Wrong
For a long time, I thought comebacks were supposed to look impressive.
New program.
Fresh notebook.
Big first week.
I skipped the small stuff because it felt pointless.
Ten minutes didn’t feel like training.
A warm-up didn’t feel like progress.
Showing up tired didn’t feel “worth it.”
So I waited for better days.
And guess what. They didn’t come. Shocker
What I didn’t realize then was simple:
I wasn’t failing because I lacked effort. I was failing because I kept giving myself an out.
Most Fathers Misunderstand Where Returns Actually Begin
You think the return starts with the program you’re going to run.
A new split.
A tighter schedule.
Fresh gym gear.
The best supplements
A surge of motivation.
But that comes later.
None of that works until something more basic is fixed.
The real return starts with one mental rep.
One decision you keep
when it’s inconvenient
when no one’s watching
when the effort feels low
That’s the foundation.
Without it, everything else is noise.
This Is An Old Rule, Not A New One
Before gyms.
Before programs.
Before optimization.
Men understood something simple:
You needed to touch the tool every day and work on your craft.
Blacksmiths didn’t wait to feel inspired to pick up the hammer.
Farmers didn’t wait for motivation to grab the shovel.
Craftsmen didn’t negotiate whether they’d show up to the bench.
They didn’t go hard every day.
They went consistently.
The tool was touched. The standard was kept. The identity stayed intact.
Load came later.
That’s how skill was built.
That’s how strength was kept honest.
The barbell is no different.
Picture This With Me
It’s the end of the day.
You feel that specific kind of tired only fathers know.
You’re not wiped out, but you’re worn down enough to negotiate.
I’ve stood in that garage negotiating more times than I want to admit.
Barbell calling to be used.
Plenty of time for something.
Not a thing in the world forcing my hand.
I’d stare at the bar and think, “I should do more.”
Then do nothing.
That’s where most men stall.
The return doesn’t start by doing more.
It starts by deciding you won’t debate yourself anymore.
Here’s The Rule That Changed Everything
Pick one daily non-negotiable tied to training.
Not five.
Not a full overhaul.
One.
Something so clear you can’t pretend you misunderstood it.
Not a big task. Something repeatable.
For me, it started embarrassingly small.
I went into work 10 minutes early each day no matter what.
Most days I’d do a barbell circuit.
Other days I’d do a mobility circuit.
But I showed up.
And my mindset changed.
Those 10 minutes have lead to me finding more time throughout my day.
I still do my morning 10 minutes to wake my body up.
But I’ve made time to get complet training sessions in.
No excuses.
This wasn’t about crushing myself.
It was about showing up when desire is low and excuses feel reasonable.
Because desire isn’t the real problem.
Follow through is.
What Drift Actually Steals
If we’re being honest, most men don’t trust themselves anymore.
They’ve heard their own explanations too many times.
They’ve believed them.
Then they’ve paid for them.
I did the same.
Every broken promise cost me something.
Not muscle.
Not conditioning.
Self-trust.
That’s what drift takes first.
Consistency Is How You Take It Back
Not intensity. Not motivation.
Consistency.
One kept promise starts shifting identity.
This isn’t theory.
It’s a fact.
One small action each morning triggers your mind to make hundreds of decisions that either move you toward your goal, or away from it.
When you wake up to train, you feel it in a simple way:
I said I would and I did.
That’s the return beginning.
This Is The Rep That Matters Most
The return doesn’t start when you’re fired up.
It starts at 4am after your kids woke you up twice during the night.
It starts at 5pm after a long day at work, playing catch-up for your coworkers.
It starts at 9pm after getting your kids to finally fall asleep.
No inspiration. No excitement.
Tired.
That’s the rep that counts.
That’s the rep your mind remembers.
That’s the rep that teaches your body who’s in charge again.
The return doesn’t start “when I’m not tired.”
That day never comes.
This Is The Identity You’re Stepping Into
Say it plainly.
“I am a man who shows up.”
Not someday.
Not when life calms down.
Today.
Run this rule for a week before you touch a full program.
Touch the tool.
Remove the excuse.
Show up.
Tomorrow, paid subscribers will learn how to end negtotiating with themselves for good using The Iron Mind Protocol.
You’ll want to upgrade to a paid subscription so you don’t want to miss out on that!
For less than the cost of your morning coffee, paid subscribers receive:
Full protocols, frameworks, and systems delivered to their inbox every Thursday to help you rebuild strength, regain respect, and reclaim your legacy
Deep dives and further teaching of those protocols, frameworks, and systems every Friday
Early access to all future products
Invites to beta test all future products and programs
If you aren’t sold on it yet, check out:
And
Grow Stronger,
- Josh
P.S.
If this hit, don’t keep it to yourself.
There’s another man you know who’s still negotiating with himself.
Still promising “tomorrow.”
Still losing trust quietly.
Restack this for him to interrupt his drift.
Strong men don’t hoard clarity. They pass it forward.





Consistency is golden standard. With it you can literally accomplish anything you want. Of course patience plays a part in it.
Tomorrow is the most dangerous word in the English language.