It’s December 2025. You’ve got one month left

Be honest with yourself for a second:

Are you really in a different place than you were in January…
or did this year just kind of happen to you?

I’m not here to pat you on the head and say, “That’s okay, next year will be better.”
Next year will not magically be better.

Next year will be a carbon copy of this one unless you do something different now.

This is your last 30-day window before 2026.
You can coast into the new year the way most people do…
or you can use this month as a launch ramp and walk into January already in motion.

This is what TASRConsulting is about:
Take Action. See Results.
Not someday. Not “when things calm down.”
Now.

So let’s build a 30-day reset that actually changes something.

Step 1: Cut the Crap and Pick One Outcome

Most people live like a browser with 47 tabs open.
Everything running. Nothing getting done.

So here’s Rule #1 for the next 30 days:

One primary outcome. Two supporting habits. Everything else is a distraction.

Ask yourself:

“If I could only fix one thing in the next 30 days that would change my energy about my life… what would it be?”

  • Pay off a specific chunk of debt?

  • Finally get consistent with your health?

  • Get your side hustle out of your head and into reality?

  • Fix your chaotic schedule so you’re not constantly behind?

Pick one.

Then:

  • Choose two simple habits that feed that goal.

    • Better shape? → Walk or work out daily + stop eating like every day is a holiday.

    • More money? → 30 minutes of skill-building daily + 30 minutes of outreach or offers.

    • Better marriage/kids/family time? → Phone-free hour each night + weekly check-in or date.

And here’s the hard part:

If it doesn’t support that outcome, it’s a no.

Not “maybe when I have time.”
Not “I’ll squeeze it in.”

If it’s not a hell yes to your main goal, it’s a hell no for the next 30 days.

This is how you stop living the same year on repeat.

Step 2: Use “Separation Season” to Pull Away from the Pack

There are two seasons when the world goes soft:

  • Summer

  • December

People coast. They drift. They eat, drink, scroll, and “I’ll get serious in January” themselves into another average year.

You? You’re going to do the opposite.

Think of this month as Separation Season.

Like driving on the highway at 2 a.m.
No traffic. No distractions. Just you and the road.

That’s what December can be if you decide it is.

For the next 30 days:

  1. First 90 minutes = deep work on your #1 outcome.
    Before email. Before social. Before everybody else’s drama.

    • Money problem? First 90 minutes: skills, sales, offers, or job search.

    • Health problem? First 90 minutes: training, meal prep, or planning your food/movement.

    • Relationship problem? First 90 minutes: communication, planning, writing, learning.

  2. Skip the pointless late-night crap.
    Stop sacrificing your mornings to Netflix, TikTok, and “one more episode.”
    Go to bed like someone who actually respects tomorrow.

  3. Pick one weekend day to double down.
    Saturday or Sunday: double your key habit.

    • Double the workout.

    • Double the outreach.

    • Double the time with your kids fully present.

Weekdays are for getting things done.
Weekends are for getting better.

That’s how you quietly create a gap between you and everyone who’s “starting fresh in January.”

Step 3: Daily Non-Negotiables (Zero Days Off)

Non-negotiable means: you do it whether you feel like it or not.

For this 30-day run, keep it simple.
We’re locking in three key areas:

1. Body (You don’t get a replacement)

  • Move your body every day. Walk, train, stretch.

  • Eat like you respect yourself most of the time (not perfect, just intentional).

“A body in motion stays in motion” isn’t just physics. It’s psychology.
You move → you feel better → you make better choices.

2. Mind (Stop letting your brain live on junk food)

  • Read something that sharpens you every day (10 pages, not 200).

  • Or journal. Or meditate. Or sit in silence without a screen for 10–15 minutes.

You’re mining for ideas, awareness, and clarity you can actually use.
No more letting your mind run whatever random program social media feeds it.

3. Work / Business / Money

Ask: “What are one or two habits that would move my income or career forward if I did them daily?”

  • Daily outreach.

  • Daily follow-up.

  • Daily content that builds your brand.

  • Daily time improving the skills you get paid for.

For salespeople and business owners, that might look like:

  • 5 follow-ups per day.

  • 1 post or 3 quick stories about what you do and how you help.

  • 30 minutes per day improving your craft.

Body. Mind. Money.
Hit all three every day for 30 days. No “days off because it’s Wednesday.”

You’re building rhythm. Momentum. Identity.

Step 4: Stop Letting Excuses Sound Smart

Let’s be real:
Most excuses sound reasonable. That’s why they work.

  • “I don’t have the money.”

  • “I don’t have the time.”

  • “I don’t know where to start.”

  • “I’ll start Monday / after the holidays / next year.”

All of that is comfort dressed up as logic.

You don’t need a perfect runway to start.
You can start a diet halfway through a bag of chips.
You can start getting out of debt while you still owe money.
You can start getting in shape while you’re out of shape.

For the next 30 days:

  1. Call your excuse out.
    Write it down. Name it. Make it a character if you have to.
    “This is my ‘No Time’ excuse. This is my ‘Someday’ excuse.”

  2. Ask: “Does this actually serve me?”
    Where did it come from? Who modeled it?
    What has it cost you in the last 5 years?

  3. Act anyway.
    Courage is not “I’m not scared anymore.”
    Courage is “I’m scared and I still showed up.”

You don’t need to feel ready. You need to move.

Step 5: Kill Your Time Assassins

You don’t just “run out of time.”
You leak time.

For the next 30 days, you’re hunting down the stuff that steals your focus and your energy.

Some usual suspects:

  • Notifications
    Turn them off. All of them.
    You’re not a 911 dispatch center. You can check your phone on purpose instead of getting yanked around by every buzz.

  • Vices
    Anything you feel guilty about the next day because it stole from your goals.
    Could be drinking. Could be scrolling. Could be gaming. Could be junk food.
    If it consistently leaves you worse, it’s a problem.

  • Energy Vampires
    People who drain you every time you talk to them.
    Do a quick inventory:

    • Who leaves you lighter, more energized, more focused?

    • Who leaves you annoyed, heavy, or angry?
      Limit the second group. This month especially.

  • Late Nights That Don’t Mean Anything
    “Nothing good happens after 9 p.m.” isn’t far off.
    You want better mornings? Protect your nights.

  • Saying Yes to Everything
    “No” is a complete sentence.
    Every “yes” you give to nonsense is a “no” to your main goal.

Your time is the most valuable thing you own.
Stop hiring assassins to kill it.

Step 6: Stack Small Wins Until They Change Who You Are

Here’s where people screw up:
They only celebrate big wins — the promotion, the giant month, the big milestone.

That’s like only counting your workout as a win if you bench 300.

You build confidence and identity by stacking small, boring wins consistently.

For the next 30 days:

  1. Track your progress.

    • Steps.

    • Work sessions.

    • Dollars saved or paid down.

    • Calls made.

    • Content posted.

    What you measure, you manage. What you ignore, you drift on.

  2. Recognize the win.
    Don’t just move on to the next thing.
    “I did my 90 minutes today.” That’s a win.
    “I skipped the junk food.” Win.
    “I had a hard conversation calmly.” Win.

  3. Share some of it.
    Not to brag — but to build accountability and inspire your circle.
    Post that you’re on Day 7 of your 30-day run. Or Day 14. Or Day 28.
    Once it’s public, you’ll think twice before quitting.

You’re not just trying to hit a goal.
You’re building the identity of the person who hits goals as a matter of who they are.

Step 7: Start Today (Not January 1st)

This is the part where most people nod, agree, and… change nothing.

They save posts. They like videos. They feel a little inspired.
Then they go right back to their old operating system.

Don’t do that.

Imperfect action today beats the perfect plan you swear you’ll start “next year.”

So here’s the move:

  1. Write down your 30-day goal.
    Not in your head — on paper or in your Notes app.
    Make it specific and a little uncomfortable.

  2. Pick your two habits that support it.
    Simple. Daily. Clear.

  3. Decide what you’re saying “no” to for the next 30 days.
    One or two vices. One or two time assassins.

  4. Tell someone.
    A friend, a spouse, a coworker, social media — whatever.
    Make it real.

How TASRConsulting Fits Into This

TASR stands for Take Action. See Results.
Not Think About It. See Nothing.

My whole goal with TASRConsulting is to give you:

  • The mindset to stop living on autopilot

  • The tools to build discipline (not just motivation)

  • The frameworks so your goals don’t die by February

  • The community so you don’t try to do this alone

As we roll into 2026, TASR isn’t just “content.”
It’s a movement for people who are done settling — in sales, in business, in money, in health, in family.

If you’re tired of living the same year on repeat…
If you’re ready to squeeze everything you can out of this last month and walk into 2026 already in motion…

Then this is your invitation:

👉 Use these next 30 days like your life depends on them.
👉 Check out the resources, guides, and tools on my TASRConsulting site.
👉 Plug in, take action, and start stacking wins now — not later.

You don’t need another year.
You need 30 focused days to prove to yourself that you’re not stuck — you were just unfocused.

Let’s change that.

Take Action. See Results.
Let’s make this the last year you coast.

Previous
Previous

If You’re in Your 20s or 30s… Read This Before Life Teaches You the Hard Way

Next
Next

50 Easy Habits That Will Change Your Life Forever