The Battle Plan

You’re still here with me, reading.

Do you know why?

Before I answer that, here’s the deal: I promised you something on the first page, and I’m delivering.

Grab the blueprint right here.

But hold up—don’t dive into it just yet. Finish this page first.

So, why did I drop that on you out of the blue? Stick with me, and I’ll explain.

I’m rewarding you for sticking this far.

Why?

Because rewards are the secret sauce to building rock-solid consistency.

Pleasure signals your brain to keep doing what feels good and to repeat those actions.

Right now, you’re knee-deep in this rabbit hole.

Curiosity brought you here, and maybe a bit of that itch for something better.

But there’s another reason you’re still reading: I didn’t dump everything on you in one giant heap.

I broke it down into small manageable chunks.

If I had hit you with a wall of text, you’d have left long ago—no question.

Why?

Because asking your brain to go all-in from the start is like asking you to exercise an hour every day when you haven’t worked out in years—or at all.

It’s a pipe dream, and deep down, you know it's never gonna happen.

But five minutes a day? That’s a whole different story. It’s a tiny commitment for your brain—no sweat, no stress.

It tricks your brain into believing that you’re not going to expend too much energy.

This is how you hack your brain.

Set a low bar and crush it, day after day.

Break it down into small, manageable chunks—whether in time or repetition.

And because it’s easy, you'll actually do it. No resistance, no excuses.

You only expand once you’ve established the habit.

If you’re facing a nine-headed monster on the battlefield, you don’t take it down by charging in head-on.

No, you start by cutting off one head at a time, then another, and another, until there’s nothing left to fight.

I could’ve handed you this guide on the first page, but you probably wouldn’t have read it.

Why?

Because instant gratification is a cheap thrill.

It’s like biting into a donut: sweet and colorful on the outside but hollow at the core—devoid of any real nutritional value.

It can’t compare to the deep satisfaction of achieving something you’ve worked hard for.

But now? You’ve put some skin in the game.

You’ve invested time, energy, and focus.

And because of that, you’re more likely to stick around and actually read the guide.

This is how consistency is born.

When you invest time and effort and start to see rewards from your actions, you’re less likely to throw them away.

Plus, you promised yourself you’d be the 1% who follows through.

Now it’s time to prove it.

Before I wrap this up, there’s one more thing I need to share with you.

THIS IS SPARTA