šŸ˜… You wonā€™t believe how it all started

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What’s up, Reader?

Itā€™s my first month of being my own boss again.

ā€‹Last issue, I talked about how I got my employer to hire my business.

Now itā€™s official, and Iā€™ve been able to dedicate serious time to building my personal brand.

And since Iā€™m free, I can afford to tell you the truth:

I never actually intended to be a photographer.

It just happened.

I first picked up a camera in 2016ā€”I was a trippy boy, doing a lot of psychedelics.

Most of the time, it wasnā€™t even recreational; it was a way to explore and understand myself.

(Note: not recommendedā€”while there were some great times, I also encountered nightmarish sh*t in my psyche)

Anyway,

Iā€™d take a tab, go into the woods, and just see what trippy pictures I could bring back.

It was one of the most creative times of my life, honestly.

And Iā€™ve been taking pictures ever since (without the LSD).

It didnā€™t hurt that photography was a great way to meet girls either.

So, now you know the truth. šŸ˜‚

When I got cancelled, I was so done with the medical establishment (which I was a part of) that I wanted out entirely.

The woke mob took my voice, so I had to create a job for myselfā€”one that would let me leave the twilight zone.

Back then, photography felt like my genuine interest.

But what I really loved was the freedom the camera gave me.

I was just following my interests.

And for some reason, it always felt like the right thing to do.

I guess my intuition didnā€™t let me down.

Iā€™ve been reading The Almanack of Naval Ravikant, the book based on Navalā€™s ideas.

Naval is a Silicon Valley legend worth over $600M.

He was an early investor in companies like Uber, Notion, and Twitter.

Heā€™s famous for his Twitter thread on wealth, happiness, and self-realization.

You can check it out here:

twitter profile avatar
Naval

Twitter Logo
@naval
3:23 AM ā€¢ May 31, 2018
74263
Retweets
244588
Likes

ā€‹

One of his big ideas is about having specific knowledge.

Specific knowledge is that skill or insight you alone can bring to the table.

No one can teach it to you, but it can be learned.

If you can figure out your unique knowledge, you can leverage it in ways no one else can duplicate.

Naval says thatā€™s how you create real value and build wealth.

I hope heā€™s right because, unknowingly, Iā€™ve been doing this my whole life: just following my genuine curiosities.

The goal has always been pretty simple, even if I couldnā€™t put it into words:

Build a business around my self-development, interests, and skills.

The personal brandā€”aka, the freedom hack.

And itā€™s working.

Iā€™m starting to see what my specialized knowledge is.

Iā€™ve sat on this knowledge for a while, and maybe thatā€™s why I havenā€™t been afraid to keep experimenting, failing, and pushing on.

By following my genuine interests over the years, Iā€™ve cultivated a unique set of skills and knowledge. This combination allows me to create value for others in ways that are authentically me.

ā€œAuthenticity has no competition.ā€ – Naval

Up until now, I havenā€™t shared much about my background or the training I left behind for photography.

But Iā€™ve realized I need to go back to itā€”itā€™s part of my specific knowledge.

It might be the most unique part of my skillset, actually.

Iā€™ve been a corrective exercise specialist for years, though I stepped back for a bit.

Hereā€™s a thread I wrote on the basics of corrective exercise:

DISCLAIMER: this is some nerdy sh*t.

Iā€™ve been studying corrective exercise at Brookbush Institute to become a human movement specialist, and Iā€™m working on my own imbalances along the way.

Over the past five years, Iā€™ve had two big setbacks:

1ļøāƒ£ Grade III ankle sprain (basketball injury)

2ļøāƒ£ Inguinal hernia surgery (my core hasnā€™t fired the same since)

Basketball and the surgery wrecked my posture, leaving me with asymmetrical dysfunction throughout my body.

This is the hardest kind of dysfunction to correct because you canā€™t use a symmetrical solution.

If both my knees bowed in or out, I could use a balanced approach.

But with an asymmetrical weight shift, one knee bows in while the other bows out.

Here are the fixes for each issue:

As you can see, itā€™s a nightmare to correct, but Iā€™m learning a lot as I go.

Iā€™ve been working on this asymmetry for about two weeks now.

Iā€™ve been working with my dysfunctions overall for about 3-4 months.

Turns out, I was doing my assessment wrong.

(I didnā€™t have my feet close enough. In retrospect, my body was compensating to hide the asymmetry.)

The asymmetry didnā€™t show up on my initial assessments, so I was using symmetrical solutions instead of what I actually needed.

When I finally did the assessment correctly, the asymmetry was obvious.

After applying the right corrections, I definitely got better results this time.

Thereā€™s still some dysfunction, but thatā€™s normal.

The important part is the asymmetry is gone, and now I can address the rest of the dysfunctions more effectively.

The asymmetry is the biggest indicator of injury risk, so itā€™s pretty important to correct it first.

Iā€™m excited to get back into all of this.

I love lifting and movement in general, but Iā€™ve been mostly sedentary since 2020, other than walking and playing drums.

I stopped working out because I kept getting hurt.

Even though I was a NASM corrective exercise specialist, I didnā€™t have the knowledge back then to work through it all.

Honestly, I thought I was good.

But every time I worked out, it just didnā€™t feel right.

It felt like I was going to break in some areas.

No wonder, look at my assessments!

Imagine loading that under a 400lb deadlift. Thatā€™s what I was doing. šŸ¤¦ā€ā™‚ļø

Iā€™m documenting all this as I go. My goal is to get back to lifting heavy in the next few months.

But for now, Iā€™m just excited to do these simple exercises that target my imbalances.

They feel good because they hit the muscles in my body that need the most work.

The workouts arenā€™t much, but thereā€™s no better feeling than being straightened out and ready to do whatever kind of workout I want.

The next step is to keep correcting and maintaining good posture while slowly moving into compound movements with a light load.

Itā€™ll look something like this:

Day 1: Corrective Work + Light Lower Body Lift

Warm-up (10-15 mins):

  • Dynamic mobility for hips, ankles, and thoracic spine

Corrective Work (20 mins):

  • Foam rolling & lacrosse ball release on right side
  • Static stretching for hip flexors, hamstrings, adductors

Light Lifting (20-30 mins):

  • Goblet squats 3×10-12 (focus on form)
  • Step-ups or box step-ups 2×10 per leg

Cool down with light stretching

Day 2: Active Recovery + Mobility

Active Recovery (30-40 mins):

  • Go for a walk and/or yoga

Stretching/Mobility Work: Focus on any tight areas

Day 3: Corrective Work + Light Upper Body Lift

Warm-up (10-15 mins):

  • Dynamic stretches and mobility drills for upper body

Corrective Work (20 mins):

  • Static stretching for shoulders and chest
  • Focus on imbalances

Light Lifting (20-30 mins):

  • Band pulldowns or rows 3×10-12
  • Light overhead press 3×10-12

Cool down with stretching and foam rolling

Day 4: Lower Body Stability

Warm-up: Dynamic movements for lower body

Stability Work (30-40 mins):

  • Single-leg balance hold for 30 seconds, 2-3 sets
  • Wobble lunges or split squats 3×8-10 (focus on control)

Corrective Work (15-20 mins): Self-releases and stretches for any tight spots

Day 5: Total Body Circuit

Circuit (3 rounds):

  • Goblet squats 10-12 reps
  • Push-ups 8-10 reps
  • Plank or side plank hold for 20-30 seconds

Finish the week with 15 minutes of corrective workā€”self-release and stretching for any tight areas.

Day 6: Reassess and Write Corrective Program for the Next Week

So here I am, back at square one but with a bigger goal and the tools to make it happen.

Corrective exercise isnā€™t just stretching and foam rollingā€”itā€™s eliminating barriers to physical freedom.

As a freedom junkie, thatā€™s probably why Iā€™ve been obsessed with it for so long.

And thereā€™s a more mystical side to this tooā€”it opens the chakras šŸ¤Æ (if youā€™re into that sorta thing).

Every tweak to my posture, every step in the gym, every project I take onā€”itā€™s all about building a life where my mind, body, and spirit are free.

And the work I do on myself, I will help others with too.

Hope you have a good week,

E

Get at me on Twitter; Iā€™m focusing on building there because itā€™s easier than video.

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