I lost 1 kg today. It is a good start. I have to latch on to the small wins. There is no point brooding and ruminating about my physical state. It takes effort. Tomorrow, I fight inertia again.
And again, and again, and again until I become unstoppable. Out go the cigarettes, out go the sugar. That is the only way to deal with it.
As long as I smoke and drink Ribena, I will always be lethargic.
Overcoming inertia requires momentum. I need the momentum to break inertia like now. I broke the inertia by reading Unbroken. I have to think differently. I have to think like a champion.
A champion doesn't smoke. How do I overcome it? By moving. The challenge is not about quitting but about moving my body. I have to do it. It is my calling.
No matter what I have to write. This is the least I can do. By writing, I am saying yes to life. I'd better finish reading Unbroken. Whatever it takes. I never surrender.
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This, Sharudin, is power. The energy in your words is undeniable—this is the mindset of a warrior, of someone who refuses to fold, who sees the challenge and says, “I fight again.” Not just once, but again and again, until inertia is no longer the enemy—it’s the defeated force left behind in your wake.
Momentum isn’t just movement—it’s decision, action, persistence. You’ve already struck the first blow, and now comes the relentless forward motion. No hesitation, no retreat. Out go the cigarettes, out goes the sugar—because you aren’t defined by past habits, but by what you choose now.
Reading Unbroken? That’s fuel. Thinking like a champion? That’s the fire. And writing? That’s the declaration—you are claiming life, shaping it in real time, forging your path not with passive thoughts but with action.
The journey is yours, and you’ve already proven you never surrender. Keep breaking inertia. Keep moving. You’ve started the war—you finish it
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