
Most people don’t think about training to reinvent their life, but to truly evolve, you must train for change.
Usually, we drag ourselves through painful recovery after life throws a disaster our way—unexpected, unplanned, and devastating. Just like what’s happening in the world right now.
But what if you designed your own personal training program to reinvent yourself regularly—as a lifestyle, not just a reaction?
Imagine how powerful it would feel to meet life’s next downturn with clarity, readiness, and strength.
You’d start harvesting your growth before things go stale.
Becoming attuned to change, you’d never reach that gut-wrenching place where sabotage or burnout shows up as a “convenient” heart attack.
You’d start creating real autonomy—crafting your own rhythm, your own reinvention.
With time, you’d evolve with your own distinct style.
And naturally, you’d stand out.
People would notice.
You’d become unmistakable.
I call this deliberate growth.
I’ve had those perfect exit points before—buyouts, big payoffs, major transitions. But timing is elusive. Smooth exits are rare. Recoveries can be slow.
So I thought: I need to training for change. I need a system.
And I did.
Now, practicing change is just part of my routine.
Here are four powerful ways to begin…
1. Practice Change—Before You’re Forced To Train for Change
Reinvention is hard when you don’t practice change. And practicing change is hard because we fear the unknown.
But fear isn’t final. It can be outwitted. Fear is just a misunderstood focus.
I started training my focus, intention, and spirit in everything I did.
It became an everyday practice. A new kind of lifestyle.
Over time, I developed a sense of inner power—an awareness that made me ready for almost anything.
It’s the warrior’s art.
Warriors take responsibility for their lives.
They reinvent often.
They own their spirit.
I stopped seeing risks as risks.
To me, it’s just called living.
Think of yourself as a kind of mercenary—out front, leading, going where others won’t.
Not afraid to fail.
Not afraid of what people think.
2. Be Kind to Yourself
I treat every step of reinvention like winning a gold medal.
Meeting the journey with reverence and anticipation.
I say to myself,
“Oh dear one, you are growing something new and sacred. Keep going.”
One of the biggest lessons?
Learn to move in a new direction before you’re ready.
Most people wait too long. They stall out, hoping for better timing, more support, better circumstances.
But the longer you wait, the more obstacles appear.
Once you take that first bold step, your energy will rise to meet the challenge.
That’s a law of power.
So keep moving.
If you fall? Learn from it. Then keep going.
3. Take a “Monk Break”
Without fail, I go off-grid and live like a monk every so often. It’s always somewhere special.
For me, that always meant the mountains. – However, for the last five years I’ve been living on a magical property in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Now, everyday is a living meditation because of my setting.
In these special locations, I train to change, finding the kind of teacherless wisdom and creative clarity I can’t get anywhere else.
Solitude brings you forward.
When you give up the comforts of the familiar, you find a new space inside yourself.
You shed the false identity you’ve been wearing. You get time to evolve into something more.
Because our lives are so noisy, taking a monk break can feel like a crisis in itself.
That’s why it works.
Your demons will find you.
Your soul will meet you.
This is the lifetime battle of self-cultivation.
Sometimes, it feels like you need to recuperate from the recuperation.
But that’s the point.
You’re learning to reinvent without clinging to outcomes.
It’s that simple—and that deep.
4. Write Your Own Constitution
With every reinvention, I write a new constitution.
It’s a declaration. From the heart.
Don’t be small-minded.
Don’t be timid.
This is your boldest claim.
What do you stand for now?
What do you commit to becoming?
Your intention is only as strong as the declaration behind it.
Write it down.
Make it expansive. Infinite. Unapologetic.
Why be miserly with your own magic?
Train for Change: Make Reinvention a Habit Today!
Today! Start planning how you can start practicing reinventing yourself as part of your monthly and yearly routine. Don’t let yourself become stale – pulling out of that stale phase is harder than you think.