What Choice Will You Make Today
that You Will Anniversary-ize in the Future?

The 5 AM Miracle Podcast with Jeff Sanders
The 5 AM Miracle Podcast with Jeff Sanders

In this week’s episode of The 5 AM Miracle Podcast I discuss how to make significant choices today that you will want to remember tomorrow — the kinds of choices you celebrate and want to repeat.

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The 5 AM Miracle Podcast, hosted by Jeff Sanders

Episode #580: What Choice Will You Make Today that You Will Anniversary-ize in the Future?

Jeff Sanders
What do you celebrate every year?

What stands out as your best accomplishments or life decisions?

In the name of goal achievements, making bigger, bolder, and grander choices can add up to new dates on the calendar you get to celebrate over and over again.

This is the 5 a.m. Miracle, episode number 580.

What choice will you make today that you will anniversary eyes in the future?

Good morning and welcome to the 5 a.m. Miracle.

I am Jeff Sanders and this is the podcast dedicated to dominating your day before breakfast.

My goal is to help you bounce out of bed with enthusiasm, create powerful, lifelong habits, and tackle your grandest goals with extraordinary energy.

In the episode this week, I'll break down a few of the events and life decisions that I celebrate every year, why I think you need to be.

need more of these dates for yourself and how to set future grand goals that

allow for more celebration down the road. Let's dig in.

Last week on the podcast, I told you about my major life decision to stop drinking

alcohol. And one of the first things that I did back then was note the date.

October 25th, 2024.

for. That was my first sober day, and that date is now on my calendar, along with

many others as anniversaries to celebrate. This week, we're going to break down

what constitutes a day worth celebrating, and then craft a life where you can

celebrate even more. So let's discuss, first of all, the word that I made up,

I think I made it up, anniversary eyes, I love this term now. I'm going to use this all

the time. If you want to anniversary eyes a date on the calendar, take anything

that you've done, anything that is significant, that is worthy of celebration,

and anniversaryize it.

Make it something you can put on the calendar and see it again and again every year

because it matters that much to you.

Let's start with that concept.

What actually constitutes a day worth anniversary icing?

When I was thinking about these major life choices that I've made literally

in the last six to 12 months, I feel as though I've gone through a,

another massive personal growth season, and I'm still in one now, similar to what

happened to me in my 20s when I was going through all kinds of personal experiments

and lots of revelations took place, and a few of those I'll discuss in just a minute.

But essentially, my 20s was a massive season of personal growth.

My 30s was just a lot of difficult work, honestly.

And my 40s, now that that started less than a year ago, I get the sense that my 40s

is a repeat of my 20s, that I'm going to have a lot of personal growth and a lot of

amazing change. That's how the last year has gone for me, and that's what I want

to see going forward. And part of why I believe the last year has gone so well

is because of a few significant choices that I've made that I honestly want to

celebrate again next year when those dates roll around. So when I ask myself this question

of what do I want to celebrate, what actually constitutes a day worth anniversary?

The very first thing I think of are big life pivots.

In other words, yesterday you were a different person than you are today.

Something changed.

Something changed that was so dramatic, so significant that you literally view your life as having been your old self and your new self.

Something changed that stopped everything.

Even for just a moment for you to realize, I am new now.

something is so amazingly different, this has to be dramatic.

This has to be something I'm going to look back on and just love this choice that I made.

And I do want to underline the fact that when I'm talking about these days to celebrate, that these are choices you've made.

These are not things that happened to you.

These are things you did for your life.

Choices you made, goals that you set and accomplished, major life pivots that were your, let's say, responsibility.

perhaps, but your ownership.

This is you, your life, your choices, your future.

And because of what you did, you get to celebrate those past choices again and again every year,

which then hopefully reinforce the kind of obviousness of having more of those down the road.

So when I think about major life pivots, I'm talking about those big decisions of things like possibly marriage or buying a home or moving or graduating or changing a major life.

habit like no more alcohol, doing something of significance that says, I am

pushing myself forward. I'm going to go through a list now, a few that I wrote

down for myself. These are things that I actually have on my calendar that I look back

on every year. Some of them I celebrate more than others, but all of them are there,

at the very least, as a reminder of big things that I've done in the past.

The very first one, we'll go back to when I began this process, was when I graduated

that was May 5th of 2007.

And that date stood out to me because that was the most significant achievement that I had in my life up to that point.

Yes, I had done lots of fun things in high school and in college itself, but the actual graduation was a significant marker for me.

I then viewed myself from that date forward as a college graduate.

And that identity marker was a big deal.

It was back then.

It still is valuable to me today.

but especially at that moment in time.

When that day occurred, I was very proud of myself because I knew how much work I had put in.

I knew that I had two degrees and four years and studying abroad and all these lots of things built into it.

It was such a significant marker for me to draw a line in the sand and say, yesterday was old Jeff and today is new Jeff.

And I loved it.

I really truly reveled in this idea that not only did I finish it, but I got the

this diploma so I could hang out on the wall if I wanted to, which I did for a small

amount of time. But I have this marker, this milestone to be very clear about

that this is something that is now true about me and will be true for the rest of my

life. And let's hold on to that for just a second. One of the things that I like to do

is criteria for what constitutes an anniversaryized moment is that you're able to say

for the rest of my life, I am now different. From here on out, I have grown,

I have developed, I have evolved, I am a new person forever. Permanent change and

evolution. Yes, the identity, of course, of saying I'm a college graduate, but more so

than that, being able to acknowledge that I did something of value that I personally

care about and can carry with me as maybe a badge of honor, or maybe at the very least,

just a marker of my own life trajectory that I am new from here on out.

So this was my first big one.

Finishing college really mattered to me at the time.

And then just one year later, on May 4th of 2008, I completed my first marathon.

If you know me, you know this podcast fairly well, you know that I talk about running marathons a lot.

I do so for two reasons.

The first is I love marathons and rent a lot of them.

But also, a marathon is a phenomenal metaphor for everything.

I just use it constantly.

But one of the things that I recognized when I ran my first marathon,

just one year after college graduation,

was that I was also forever changed.

From here on out,

I can always say I, Jeff Sanders,

ran a full marathon.

That honestly is all I wanted.

That was the entire goal.

Yeah, they gave me a medal.

That's cool.

Yes, I traveled to Rhode Island to do the race.

That was also great.

But really, it was I could forever say that I finished.

I fully ran a full marathon.

I did it.

It happened in the same way that I skydived one time when I was 29 years old.

Like I've gone skydiving, therefore I could always forever say it happened.

I feel as though there's something really powerful about acknowledging that there was a thing in your life that you played up, that you really thought highly of, and then at some point you actually achieved it.

Like imagine something, whether it's a college degree, whether it's a marathon, whether it's some sort of.

grand career achievements. There's a thing in your life that you have looked forward

to longingly, perhaps. And then one day you actually achieve it for yourself.

It becomes real for you. That's a bizarre moment. It's incredibly amazing in so many

ways. And to be able to acknowledge that and put that in the calendar and say,

I really dreamed about this moment for such a long time. And then it happened.

That's meaningful. Now, running my second marathon, my third.

my fifth, my tenth.

Those didn't matter as much, right?

Like, I did them.

I love running marathons.

It's phenomenal.

But the first one is the one.

And my time was terrible.

I did a very, very bad job at that race.

I barely survived.

I was in more pain in that race that I've ever been in, but I did it.

And now I can celebrate from here on out the anniversary of that date, which as of today,

I'm recording the episode today in early May.

And so we're very close to that date.

right now. And that means a lot to me. It still means a lot to me so many years later

because that's something that was a before and after moment. There was Jeff Sanders

before May 4th, 2008, who really wanted to run a full 26.2 miles. And then the Jeff

Sanders after that date, who did. And I love that. Yes, I'll brag about that. Yes,

I'll talk about that to the end of the earth. But I'll do so because I value that level

of achievement. I value the significance of that, even though I've run much

farther since then, I don't really care about those moments nearly as much.

I've had better races, I've had more fun races, but once again, the first one

is everything. And opens the floodgates to all the other possibilities.

It opens the door for you to be able to say, now I can do, and just sky's the

limit. Open that up and here you go. Those moments in life, those pivot points are absolutely

life-changing. And it's those moments we want more of.

All right, third life moment for me was one year later, a year and a half later,

getting married. On the 5th of September 2009, I married Tessa. And Tessa is awesome.

still to this day she is. She's been on this podcast many times. One of the absolute

most recommended and requested guests. But anyway, I digress. My wife is

amazing. And one thing that's true about Tesla and I is that we met very early on.

I actually think I officially met her in first grade. We became friends somewhere around

middle school and then started dating at the end of junior high, early high school years,

and then dated on and off throughout high school and college. And then we got married.

after college. Now, all of that to say that for years, we had this phenomenal

relationship as we were developing and growing into the adults who became.

And to be able to propose to her and then get married was such a defining,

obvious moment for me. I say obvious meaning that I knew it was coming.

For a long time, this was built up in my brain. There was no way we were not

going to get married in my head. This was going to happen.

but then when it did it had this sense of almost a letdown it was one of those moments of

I had built it up so much that when it happened it was just like okay next like I really

even though I loved it it was a phenomenal wedding day phenomenal marriage nothing bad at all

to say about that but there was this sense of when you achieve some goals you don't have

that sense of success or fulfillment it almost was just like a okay I did it

all right, great. But that wasn't really the point for me. The point was Tessa.

The point was not the wedding. The point was not the certificate of marriage.

The point was not the party. The point was her. And I already had her. So I wasn't as

concerned about the actual wedding itself. Now, that may be me as the man speaking.

I'm sure she has a different perspective on that. She's not here to defend herself here.

But I will say that there is something interesting about goals we play up in our minds as being something.

And then when they happen, we don't have that thing we thought we would have.

That feeling of, I expected to feel different here.

I thought there'd be a before and after that was more dramatic.

Because in my mind, Tessa and I had basically been married for years.

And so I didn't have a huge shift.

However, that anniversary still matters to me.

It's still symbolic.

It's still necessary.

It still is very meaningful.

But it is interesting that goals are different and how we feel about them can change.

And so what I'm looking for are, yes, those pivot points, but also the recognition of what I'm personally wanting to get out of that experience.

And so once again, to wrap this up, I love my wife.

And we have a great marriage.

I'm not going to knock anything here.

All right.

Number four is going to vegan.

I've discussed my plant-based lifestyle for, I don't know, 15 years.

Most of the entirety of this podcast, I've discussed this.

And mostly because from July 19th, 2010 onward, I made the decision that I would eat a vegan diet.

And that was it.

Permanent life decision on that date.

And I've discussed in a lot more detail on the show what led up to that moment and then my kind of experimentation afterwards.

But at the end of the day, that date on the calendar is a signifier.

It's a lie in the sand that says before that date, I kind of cared about health.

I was running some marathons and doing well, but I didn't have a definition of what my diet meant to me.

That date, everything changed.

Now, in this instance, what happened was I saw a documentary called Earthlings that radically opened my mind.

it opened my eyes to a whole new world.

I knew nothing about and shocked me into change.

And because of that, every other life decision when it came to the food that I bought,

the clothes that I wear, the life that I live was kind of through that lens.

And there's definitely a before and after from that date.

The Jeff Sanders before, the Jeff Sanders after July 19th of 2010, I can clearly see that distinction.

I know that difference.

and it is still 15 years later very meaningful to me.

And so I just, I need to kind of harp on this reality that there are some moments

that change our lives in ways we just can't imagine.

In the moment, we know it means something, but you don't truly understand the impact

until enough time has progressed.

And this is one of those compounding effects over time where I can look back at

all the healthy choices that I've made, the foods that I've made, the foods that I've,

I've eaten, the clothes that I have worn, the life that I've lived since that

date, and I know that I am better for it.

And I love that.

I love the fact that that's true.

And of course, I want more of those dates, more of those experiences, more of

those life pivots that change everything.

All right, life pivot point number five is launching this podcast.

That's right.

July 1st of 2013 was when episode one of this podcast went live, and it fundamentally

changed everything about my career. It led to book deals, coaching clients,

speaking engagements, me being a full-time entrepreneur, all of this and more,

was all possible because of this show. I have talked at length about how I love this

podcast and what it means to me, so I'm not going to do that right now, but I will

say that there is something dramatic about having a launch date. If you have been

preparing for something, I don't care what it is. It could be a personal goal, professional

career-related, whatever it is.

If you have a launch date of saying on this date on the calendar that's coming

up in three months, I'm going to execute this mission.

It's going to happen.

I will do whatever I have to do to guarantee that date, but everything will

change when this date hits.

I emphasize this because if you don't have a date, if you're slowly tinkering with

an idea and you're trying something, you're like, oh, I've got this podcast idea,

this business idea.

I'm considering applying for grad school, considering this new job.

Well, when's it going to happen?

When is this thing going to take off?

Like, when?

Put it on the calendar, set a date, and see to it.

I did not do that for a while.

In fact, I intentionally held off in the launch of this podcast for months because I just didn't feel ready.

And the really funny thing is, when I launched, I definitely did not feel ready either.

But I did it anyway.

And then I improved and I tinkered and I pivot.

and I continue to do that over and over again, and I'm still doing that today.

I'm still tinkering, still trying new things.

This podcast is still fresh and new to me 11 and a half years later.

Isn't that amazing?

Almost 12 years now.

We're very close to the 12 year anniversary, and I'm looking forward to that.

That's the amazing part about having something on the calendar that you can build up to,

and then, of course, grow and learn from afterwards.

A launch date forces you into action.

It prevents procrastination.

It guarantees success on a certain level.

And if you need a date, if you've been holding off on something,

maybe you're holding off on a proposal or a marriage,

holding off on a business launch, holding off on quitting your job,

I don't care what the thing is.

Set a date.

See to it.

Make it real.

Because if you don't, it will drag out and it will ruin you.

It will just eat away your soul bit by bit as this thing.

just never gets resolved.

In fact, right now, as I say that, there is a project that I've been putting

off in the back of my mind, which I'll share more about later, once I actually

do it, that I know that when I get this thing off the ground, I'm going to feel

emotionally better.

It's going to absolutely be this release I've been looking for, but I can't have

that moment unless I do the work.

And you can't have that moment unless the date is on the calendar and you guarantee

its success. So whatever the thing is, you probably know what it is in your brain

right now. Write it down, give it a date, make it happen. Okay, number six and

seven correlate to the births of both of my daughters. The first one on June 25th,

2018, and the second December 16th of 2021. Now, this is pretty common, right? I've mentioned

things like graduating college, getting married, now the births of my children. These are very

common things to have as anniversaries, as celebrations, as actual birthdays.

I didn't actually expect to care as much as I do now about my kids,

which is kind of sounds so weird.

But the reality is that I had this kind of very vague perception of me as a dad,

this very kind of fuzzy view.

Most of the things in my life that I set out to pursue, the goals that I set,

I'm pretty clear about.

I have this expectation.

I've mapped it out.

I know what it's going to look like.

I didn't know what being a dad for me was going to look like.

It was really bizarre to kind of walk into a new experience and just go,

I don't know.

We'll just kind of see what happens.

That's how it's felt for the last seven years.

I'm much better today than I was back then.

I feel much more confident now about my role as a parent in this house.

But at the same time, the birth dates on the calendar for each of my

daughters represents massive growth for me as a person. There was Jeff

before I had kids and Jeff afterwards. There was Jeff when I had just one kid

and Jeff when we, Tessa and I, have two kids. I keep saying I. There's two of us

here, I swear. Definitely two of us. But after the birth of each of my daughters,

I, we all changed. Massive growth, massive evolution, a whole new world. Right. It represents

sense something of value, not just in the sense that my daughters are now one year

older, but the evolution of Tessa and I as parents, it's a big deal and really

shows something that I did not see coming.

I did not, once again, I did not picture myself very far out as a dad, so I couldn't

really envision my own growth in this area.

There's been a lot of surprises, a lot of amazing moments and these kind of epiphanies,

these ahas of, wow, I get to experience something.

that I didn't really picture before, but now that it's happening, it is life-changing.

It is dramatic.

It is significant.

It is worthy of a date on the calendar.

And once again, not just because they're older, but because of what it means for

Tessa and I to grow as adults and as individuals.

And so I view all these dates as adding up to things that mean so much to me because

I made a choice.

For every one of these, I made a choice to say, I'm going to go to school.

school. I'm going to run a marathon. I'm going to pursue getting married.

I'm going to change my diet, launch a podcast, have kids, and yes, then most recently

choose to go sober. All of these dates have this real significance to me.

And the funny thing is for most of these, I kind of hoped they would happen.

I planned for some of them. I was much more intentional about some than others.

But all of them in the lead up to these goals and a lead up to these dates, there was a lot

of apprehension, a lot of fear, uncertainty, confusion, and the only thing that allowed

me to get the date to actually exist, the only thing that led to the goal being

accomplished was persistence. It was this willingness to commit to the process,

to saying, I don't care how hard it is, I don't care how difficult, confusing,

complex it may be, I'm going to commit to the process. And if I do, there will be a date

that in the future I can celebrate.

There's going to be a moment where I can look back in hindsight and say,

wow, that was worth it.

But you don't know that in the moment.

One of the really weird things about goals is that when you're working on them,

the finish line feels so far away most of the time.

It even feels like you won't ever reach it.

It just seems far, far, far away.

And the amount of work you have to do to get there just seems insurmountable at times.

the late nights and the early mornings and the difficult days and the stress and the chaos, it's hard to see the bigger picture when you're in the crunch, in the moment, doing the work.

But the thing that's really helped me the most in this process is taking a big step back.

I've been able to say in order to have more of these dates, to have more of these big moments, I need to intentionally pause and reflect on the value of my past accomplishments and the value of the work I've put in so far in the current project.

because that step back gives me a breather.

It gives me a chance to recognize and be grateful for what has happened so far

and then to make those smaller pivots in the middle of project

to then be able to more intelligently utilize strategies that are more effective

to push me forward in a better way.

It's why I love my review process every week.

It's why I love my calendars and my to-do list

because I get the chance to literally do a daily review every single day

and make smarter choices every single day,

as I recognize the next big milestone,

the next big anniversary on the calendar.

Not every goal will make this list.

In fact, I only listed off eight things just now in the episode.

eight big moments in my life.

I left off thousands of accomplishments,

thousands of little wins and medium-sized wins and big wins.

I left off so many.

Because the point of this list is that these are the cream of the crop,

the top 10, the best of the best,

the ones that you want to look back on and say,

I cannot believe what growth I got from that moment.

So no, not every goal will make this list.

Most of them will not. By definition, only the top few will. And that's okay,

because that's the point of the list. I want to know for me personally that I have

a handful of moments that were life changing. And then the next 10, 15, 20 years,

a handful more. And my only question then is how do I build my life up to reach those

moments? Now, another kind of interesting nuance here is that even looking back today

at my life so far. Some of these goals I actually worked up to on purpose,

and some of them kind of snuck in and found me. And I say that from the perspective

of some things you'll actually notice only in hindsight. Some goals are just

combinations of so many little tiny choices that there was no actual finish line.

There was just a lot of little growth that eventually evolved and compounded

into a new version of you. But there was no actual moment. There was

was no medal, there was no certificate of any kind. You just used to be an

old version of you and then many years later, you're a different person. And along the

way was just a lot of stuff. And I feel that way a lot, that my life is a jumbled

mess of things. One thing I love to do with my life is put things in the little boxes.

If I can consolidate various things I've done and call it a project, just assign it

of value, give it something, put some boundaries around it and say, you know,

at this point in time, I started, sort of, and later on I finished, sort of.

You put it all together, you can see growth.

It's only in hindsight this happens.

It's not really in the moment.

My point here is that sometimes we have to almost arbitrarily acknowledge our own

success and be able to pinpoint, I was an old version here, I'm a new version here.

Growth took place and I'm proud of that.

And I think that that's also worthy of these lists.

Not every goal is going to fit in that category or be described in that way.

But it is really interesting to look back at your life and see patterns.

Looking forward, these kinds of things are harder to do.

But the hindsight gives you that clarity to see your own evolution, to see how windy the path for success happens to be.

It's not linear.

We're not just going from A to B directly.

I wish that were the case, but that never is the case.

Just never.

life is too complex for that.

It's too much fun for that, right?

So really, the question is just simply,

what things in your life up to this point

have been this significant for a pivot?

And then the big question.

How do you set goals in the future

to have more celebrations,

more dates on the calendar you can anniversary eyes?

To answer that question,

I want you to imagine the biggest goals in your life being accomplished.

Your bucket list, right?

The things that you have yet to accomplish

that you would love to do. I have found that my bucket list is a vision caster. It's a way to point me in the right direction, even if I never actually achieve the actual thing on the list. A simple example of that. I've said before that I've wanted to run the ultramarathon in Leadville, Colorado. It is an extraordinary race, one that I would love to do, but I honestly don't personally care if I ever do that race. What I care about is I live a life that could at a up.

to that, that I am pursuing this sense of endurance and fitness and ambition

and the lifestyle of me being outdoors more.

Like, that's what I want is the lifestyle of someone who is pursuing something

grand.

Whether or not the actual finish line ever happens or not is a moot point.

I want to live the life of someone who could potentially pursue that.

That's it.

That is going to lead to so many breakthroughs and so many potential aha moments and

epiphanies and celebrations on its own, that you don't, in many cases, need the

finish line. You need the pursuit, the journey, the day-to-day, just ambition to say,

I'm up again at 5 a.m., let's go. That's what I want. I want to bounce out of bed

with enthusiasm each and every day. And whether or not I get a diploma for that effort

or not, I don't really care. Let's just make sure the lifestyle is the one that I want.

Now, another strategy is to study the lives of others.

So one thing that has really driven me in the past is by literally being jealous.

The more jealous I am of someone else, the more that speaks to something that I probably want for myself, whether that's more health, more wealth, career success, a bigger house, whatever the thing happens to be.

There are moments in time where you can pinpoint jealousy that is shallow, just kind of nonsensical, by a space,

sports car or something versus jealousy that is specific and targeted.

You know, there's this person who's in my industry and he has achieved this

certain moniker that I want.

And if I could get that, that's going to be very meaningful to my career and

my story.

There's a difference in that level of jealousy, right?

One is very shallow and very arbitrary.

But the other really speaks to what you're drawn to.

And so when I look at the lives of others and things they've accomplished, I'm asking

that question, what would that mean for me?

if I accomplish the same thing or something similar.

And honestly, I use that level of criteria to decide which projects to pursue many

times.

At the end of the day, most of the goals I pursue are driven by things that I know

I personally want, but you can use the lives of others as input, as information

and criteria to really make a more robust decision.

Another way to view this is to ask the question, what goals did you fail at

or have not yet completed that you still would like to complete and you could

resurrect a past goal and get it done now.

I have friends who didn't finish college, the time frame that they wanted,

and they went back to school later on and got their degree.

I know people who have tried to be an entrepreneur, they failed at it,

they got a day job again, they quit that day job and launched another business, right?

We try and we fail.

We have things that don't go well.

We try again.

Life is a series of these types of attempts.

And so if you're looking for that next big pivot moment, maybe the last

attempt that you had didn't work.

That's okay.

Most of these attempts will not.

We're looking for the next one that will.

I'm not afraid of failure.

I'm not afraid of things not going well.

I'm afraid of not trying.

I'm afraid of procrastination endlessly.

I'm afraid that I'm going to sit on my butt and not do anything.

That's my biggest fear, right?

The rest of it is easy.

If I'm up early and I'm doing things and making things happen,

success will come, but you've got to get in the game.

And so you're asking that question, what in the past didn't work,

though I could then bring back to my current reality to a new future goal

and make that my next big win.

And the final consideration for this pursuit of your next big win

is to ask the question, what major shift in your identity do you want to change?

Now, identity here could include lots of things,

everything from your job title, your marital status, your fitness level,

however you define your identity, your personal drivers, your hunger for success

in summer arena, what major shift in your identity do you want to experience?

I know that I have a big shift in my identity based upon my diet,

based upon my level of fitness, based upon the current project that I'm pursuing.

I get really wrapped up in whatever I'm doing.

Just recently on the podcast, I've talked a lot about painting,

and drywall work that I've done to my house.

I got really obsessed with that for a while.

Like very, like I'm just the kind of guy that when I get into something,

I am full in.

And so the last two and a half, three months of my life have been nothing but that.

And I've loved it.

It's fantastic.

I'm now phasing out of it, which is a good thing.

But for that time period, for that season, that was my identity.

That was what I did.

And I got really good at it, had a great time doing it, but that season's now ending.

And what I love about goals is that reality that we can change and shift our identity to match whatever we're pursuing.

And if you choose the right goals, you can craft your identity around that and really wrap yourself up in the work that you're doing.

And in a good way, there are bad versions of this description and good ones.

What I'm looking for are the things I can get obsessed with.

I'm magnetized toward something.

I just have to be in it.

And the more that I am, the better I am for it.

That level of intensity and obsession, I think has a lot of potential for long-term success and growth.

I think it's the best and fastest path to success because it's so comprehensive.

You're immersed in it in the best possible way.

So if you want to shift your identity in some way and achieve a new goal, immersion is one of the absolute most effective strategies out there.

So how do you apply that strategy to your current objective?

When that shift takes place, watch out.

You're going to be unstoppable.

And for the action step this week.

Choose your next grand goal that you plan to celebrate every year.

Will you run a marathon, launch a business, finish school, get married, pay off debt?

You get to choose.

But something significant needs a place on your calendar.

And once it's there, you get to remember and celebrate that glow.

glorious choice year after year. Now, of course, be sure to subscribe to

this podcast and your favorite podcast app or go to 5am Miracle Premium.com

to become a VIP member and get exclusive bonus episodes, ad free versions

of the show, and so much more. All right, that's all I've got for you here on the 5

A.m. Miracle podcast this week. Until next time, you have the power to change your

life, and all that fun begins bright and early.

---

© 5 AM Miracle Media, LLC

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