It’s February 6, and if we’re being real, the New Year glow has probably dimmed for a lot of us. Goals that felt exciting on January 1 now feel heavy. Energy’s low, motivation’s spotty, and the couch is winning more battles than it should.

I’ve been there. But here’s the truth I’ve learned the hard way: You can have the best mindset, the clearest Why, the perfect plan—but if your body is running on empty, none of it sticks. Productivity isn’t just about your calendar or your head. It starts with the body God gave you.

A few years back, my mom’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis (and her passing in 2022) hit me like a freight train. Then a beloved aunt passed in December 2024. Those losses woke me up: I don’t want to wait until sickness forces change. I want to steward my health now—so I can serve longer, love better, and show up fully for the people who need me.

That’s why my morning starts brutal and simple: Within 90 seconds of waking, I’m in a cold shower—30 to 90 seconds, no negotiation. Then I step outside (barefoot, even when it’s 30 degrees in Texas, rare but it happens), and do my 4-minute squats while grounding. My body used to scream on day two. Now, after almost 700 days, people see me drop low and ask, “How old are you again?” I’m 60. And I feel better than I did at 40.

I’ve run over 3,060 days straight. Not because I’m special—because I started with day one, laced up, and did the next. I rebound on the mini-trampoline my wife got me for our anniversary. During coaching calls, I pace or walk. Every hour, I get up for 2-3 minutes. Legs are for moving, not just sitting behind a screen.

Here’s the hard truth: No successful person I’ve studied got there by making excuses. “I’m too old,” “It’s too cold,” “I can’t.” Most of the time, “I can’t” really means “I don’t want to.” Call it what it is. Steve Harvey said it best: If you want success, get comfortable being uncomfortable.

And yes, this has a spiritual anchor. Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19-20). Honoring Him with it isn’t legalism—it’s gratitude. He knows our frame (Psalm 103:14) and gives grace when we stumble, but faithfulness in small things builds the strength to do the big ones.

Today is National Wear Red Day—heart health awareness. Let’s use it as a reminder: Take care of the heart (physical and spiritual) so you can keep loving, leading, serving. (And hey, it’s also National Frozen Yogurt Day—grab a simple treat as grace, not junk. Balance, not perfection.)

Your Body-First Reset for February:

  1. Cold shower challenge: Start tomorrow—30 seconds. Build from there. It wakes you up, builds resilience.
  2. One daily move: 4-minute squat/ground, 10-minute walk, or rebound. Do it no matter what.
  3. Ditch one excuse: Pick the thing you keep saying “I can’t” about. Replace it with “I choose to.”
  4. Grace daily: Miss a day? Okay. Get back tomorrow. Thank God for the body that can move, even imperfectly.

Quick Questions for You:

  • Where are you still making excuses with your body (sleep, movement, food)?
  • What small discomfort could you lean into this week to build real energy?
  • How might caring for your body better help you live out the purpose God has for you?

Productivity without physical energy is like a car with no gas—looks good, goes nowhere. Treat your body well, and it treats you back. You’ll have more clarity, focus, and capacity to serve the people God puts in your path.

I’m in this with you—one faithful, uncomfortable step at a time.