My Long Form Writing

My long-form writing isn’t about teaching people what to do.

It’s about noticing what happens when you stop forcing things.

I write from inside movement, not outside of it — from years of training, racing, adapting, breaking patterns, rebuilding them, and learning what it actually feels like to stay in something for a long time.

Not just sport.
Life.

These pieces aren’t manuals. They aren’t manifestos. They aren’t motivational.

They’re lived.

They come from paying attention to how effort moves through the body, how identity forms around what we do, and what changes when performance is no longer about proving, but about continuing.

Two of these works anchor everything I write.

The Long Way Around

The Long Way Around is about identity, effort, and what it means to grow without rushing. It traces how ambition evolves, how mistakes teach, how patterns repeat until they don’t, and how meaning changes as you do. It isn’t a story about success. It’s a story about staying.

It’s about learning to move through life without collapsing into it or conquering it.

It’s about what remains when you stop chasing.
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Calm Is Fast

Calm Is Fast is a philosophy of effort.
Not as a slogan — but as a lived truth.
It’s about what happens when training stops being a performance and becomes a practice. When strength serves instead of dominates. When readiness matters more than capacity. When calm becomes a skill, not a mood.
It isn’t about doing less.
It’s about doing what lasts.
It’s about building continuity — not just fitness.
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My Writing

Everything I write lives somewhere between those two works.

Between reflection and movement.
Between effort and restraint.
Between who I was and who I’m becoming.

My writing is for people who are still ambitious — but no longer interested in burning themselves to prove it.

For people who care about depth more than speed.

For people who want to stay in the work, not escape it.

If you’re looking for answers, you might not find them here.

But if you’re willing to sit with better questions, you probably will.