Days 412–413 out of 1,095: How to Unlock Explosive Energy During Peak Overload

Days 412–413 out of 1,095: How to Unlock Explosive Energy During Peak Overload

The last 48 hours were brutal.

Days 412–413 of my journey. A journey that includes building a trauma-tech startup. Serving in the reserves. And living through a real war.

Somewhere between 4:45 a.m. wake-ups and midnight wrap-ups — toggling between field calls and founder calls — I hit what should’ve been a wall.

But it wasn’t.

Because I’ve been here before. And each time, I’ve learned: there’s a difference between being in overload and being consumed by it.

So when the pressure peaks, I go back to the core tools that not only keep me functional — they light a fire.

Here are 10 rules I follow to stay energized under extreme pressure:

  1. Bookend the day with meditation. Morning and night. 10 minutes. No compromise.

  2. Lock in time with people I love. If it's not in the calendar, it doesn't happen.

  3. Cut low-impact activities fast. Urgent ≠ important.

  4. Move more. I walk during calls, between events, in hallways. Motion equals clarity.

  5. Breathe like it’s your job. Three deep breaths. Reset the brain.

  6. Journal gratitude. Every night. It turns pressure into perspective.

  7. Recognize the mission. I'm not just building a startup — I'm building a tool that helps emergency forces reclaim their lives after trauma.

  8. Say “no” without guilt. Every yes costs energy. Spend it wisely.

  9. Laugh when I can. Sometimes the only way out is a good, dry joke.

  10. Write it down. Because reflection turns chaos into clarity.

The truth? It's crazy out here. Startup life. Reserve duty. War. And a world that feels like it's running faster than ever.

But I’ve learned to breathe it in, not fight it off. And to feel lucky — yes, lucky — to be in the middle of this mission.

Helping heroes recover their identity. Helping myself stay grounded while doing it.


So I’ll ask you this: What do you rely on when life gets loud and the stakes are high? Let’s share tools, not just goals.

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