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2800git.sayndone.ru
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  • Johanna Durkin
  • 2800git.sayndone.ru
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Created Oct 07, 2025 by Johanna Durkin@johannadurkinMaintainer

They All Do It, Im Just Honest: Frank Grillo Says Most Hollywood Physiques Involve Steroids, And Reveals Exactly How He Trains, Eats, And Stays Ripped At 60

They All Do It, Im Just Honest: Frank Grillo Says Most Hollywood Physiques Involve Steroids, And Reveals Exactly How He Trains, Eats, And Stays Ripped At 60 🚀 Find Your Why, Fuel Your Body, and Join a Movement

> A quick guide to unlocking purpose, staying consistent, and living your best life.

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1️⃣ The Power of Purpose Why we do it matters:

  • Goal‑setting without meaning = a treadmill that never stops.

    - A clear "why" turns everyday workouts into stepping stones toward the life you want.
    Quick test – Ask yourself: What problem do I want to solve? How will this change my day, my health, or my relationships? Who else benefits if I succeed?

If your answer isn’t exciting enough, tweak the goal until it feels like a personal mission.

  1. The Habit‑Building Blueprint

StepWhat to DoWhy It Works a. Start smallChoose one tiny action (e.g., 5‑minute walk).Low commitment → higher success rate. b. Use a triggerLink the habit to an existing cue (after brushing teeth, do your stretch).Triggers automate the decision process. c. Track progress visiblyCheck off each day on a calendar or app.Visual evidence fuels motivation and accountability. d. Reward immediatelyGive yourself a small treat or brag to a friend after completion.Positive reinforcement strengthens neural pathways.
> Pro tip: The "Two‑Minute Rule" from Atomic Habits says: if an action takes less than two minutes, git.sayndone.ru do it right away. This lowers the barrier to start and often leads to longer sessions.

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5️⃣ Quick Habit‑Building Routine (for any goal)

TimeActivityPurpose 00:00–00:05Set a single, clear objective (e.g., "Read 10 pages of Atomic Habits").Focuses attention. 00:05–00:07Perform the action immediately.Capitalizes on momentum. 00:07–00:08Record completion in your journal or app.Creates evidence of success. 00:08–00:10Reflect briefly (What worked? What could improve?)Reinforces learning and adaptation.
> If you skip step 3, the habit is less likely to stick because it lacks a tangible marker of progress.

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4. Tools for Tracking

Physical Planner

  • Pros: tactile satisfaction, no battery needed.

    - Cons: limited flexibility; can't sync across devices.

Digital App (e.g., Notion, Todoist) - Pros: reminders, easy editing, cloud backup.

- Cons: requires device and internet for full functionality.

Recommendation: Start with a simple checklist format in either medium. If you find yourself needing more complexity (like tagging or recurring tasks), upgrade to a dedicated habit‑tracking app.

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5. Common Pitfalls & How to Avoid Them

PitfallWhy It HappensFix Overloading the listTrying to track everything at oncePrioritize 3–5 key habits; add others later Lack of remindersForgetting to check off tasksSet calendar alerts or use a habit‑app notification No accountabilityNo external feedbackShare your list with a friend or join a community group Skipping entriesFeeling discouraged after a slipUse "partial" marks instead of leaving blank; treat slips as data


Putting It All Together

Choose Your Format

  • If you’re into journaling, start with a bullet journal page and color‑code habits.

    - If you prefer digital, set up an Excel sheet or use Habitica for gamification.

Define Your Habits - Write them down in one line each: "Drink 8 cups water" → "Water intake (8 cups)".

Add Tracking Columns

  • Date | Water Intake | Exercise | Sleep | Mood | Notes

Review Weekly

  • At the end of each week, add a simple bar chart showing progress or a "Success Rate %".

Iterate

  • Every month, adjust habits based on your success/failure rates and add new ones.

Quick‑Start Example (Google Sheets)

DateWater IntakeExercise (mins)Sleep (hrs)Mood 2024‑09‑012.5 L307😊 2024‑09‑023.0 L456😐 ...............

Add a Chart → Insert > Chart → choose Line chart. Format the y‑axis to show "Liters" or "Minutes". Use conditional formatting (Format > Conditional format) on the Mood column to color cells green/red.

Once you set this up, every time you log a new entry it automatically updates. Let me know if you'd like help with any specific part of this!

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