Most people fail at goals not because they aimed wrong but because they stopped moving before they arrived.
They set the target, start strong, hit resistance, and slowly drift into something else.
A new goal, a revised plan, a different priority — anything that explains why the original thing didn’t get finished. The target didn’t move. They did.
Locking in means none of that happens. You decide what you’re after, you commit to it fully, and you don’t declare it finished until it actually is.
A Target Without a Locked-In Commitment Is Just a Wish
Setting a goal and locking in on a goal are not the same thing.
Setting is the easy part — anyone can write something down.
Locking in means you’ve decided this is where your focused energy goes until it’s done, and distractions, setbacks, and slow progress are not valid reasons to redirect.
Most people give themselves too many exits. They’re pursuing the goal, but they’re also watching for signs that it’s not working, ready to pivot the moment the evidence gets uncomfortable.
That’s not execution — that’s conditional commitment, which pays conditional results.
Data Keeps You Honest
This is where most people get emotional when they should get analytical.
Progress on meaningful goals is rarely linear.
There will be stretches where the numbers don’t move, the results don’t show, and everything feels like it’s stalled. Feeling your way through that stretch usually leads to quitting.
Using data leads to adjusting.
Track the inputs, not just the outcomes.
Are you actually executing at the level the goal requires?
If yes, the data tells you to hold. If no, the data tells you exactly where to correct. Either way, you’re making a decision based on evidence rather than frustration.
The goal doesn’t change. The approach adjusts based on what the data shows.
Execute Until Attained — Not Until It Gets Hard
Completion is the standard. Not until it gets uncomfortable, not until something more interesting comes along, not until you’ve made a reasonable effort and it hasn’t worked yet.
Until it’s done.
That standard sounds obvious. Put into practice, it’s where most people find out how serious they actually were about what they said they wanted.
Lock in. Use the data. Don’t stop until it’s attained.
Today’s FL10 Minute Workout: Sugar Rush
10 min · No gym · No equipment · 2 min each
- Candy Crush — Jump squats. Drop low, explode up. Land soft. That’s one.
- Caramel Drip — Slow mountain climbers. Drive each knee to your chest. Controlled. No rushing.
- Jawbreaker — Burpees. Drop to the floor, chest down, push up, jump up. Hard to finish. That’s the point.
- Gummy Bear Bounce — High knees. Run in place, knees above hip level. Stay bouncy. Stay fast.
- Melting Point — Plank hold. Arms locked, body straight. Hold until you melt into the floor.