The simplicity is the whole reason this sticks. Every time I've over-engineered something like this I quietly abandoned it within a month. Stripping it to one clear step is underrated. Do you have a fallback for the days you just don't feel like it?
Dom Russo· 2 weeks ago
This lines up with what I've seen, but the part that took me longest was knowing when to stop tweaking and just commit. I burned months optimizing before I'd validated the basics. Did it click early for you, or was there a stretch you almost bailed?
Worth saying this works way better once the fundamentals are in place. I jumped straight here as a beginner and it didn't click until I'd put in the boring reps first. Would you tell a total beginner to start here, or build up to it?
Strong agree, though I'd add it depends a lot on where you're starting. A total beginner might need one step before this even applies.
Yuki Vale· 1 week ago
Strong take, and the timing point is underrated — I think when you start matters as much as what you do. Did you wait for the 'right time' or just start messy and adjust?
This held up when I tested it, with the caveat that it works best if you're honest with yourself about the numbers. Self-delusion is the silent killer here. What do you track to keep yourself honest?
The simplicity is the whole reason this sticks. Every time I've over-engineered something like this I quietly abandoned it within a month. Stripping it to one clear step is underrated. Do you have a fallback for the days you just don't feel like it?
This lines up with what I've seen, but the part that took me longest was knowing when to stop tweaking and just commit. I burned months optimizing before I'd validated the basics. Did it click early for you, or was there a stretch you almost bailed?
Worth saying this works way better once the fundamentals are in place. I jumped straight here as a beginner and it didn't click until I'd put in the boring reps first. Would you tell a total beginner to start here, or build up to it?
Strong agree, though I'd add it depends a lot on where you're starting. A total beginner might need one step before this even applies.
Strong take, and the timing point is underrated — I think when you start matters as much as what you do. Did you wait for the 'right time' or just start messy and adjust?
This held up when I tested it, with the caveat that it works best if you're honest with yourself about the numbers. Self-delusion is the silent killer here. What do you track to keep yourself honest?