My Messy Adventure with Isaac Stallworth’s Success Steps
Okay, so yesterday I stumbled on this article shouting “Isaac Stallworth best tips?” Felt kinda clickbaity, you know? But hey, I’m always lookin’ for simpler ways to handle my chaotic weekdays. Figured I’d give it a proper shot and actually do the steps, not just read ’em. Let’s see how it played out.
Step one was basically about knowin’ what you want. Honestly, I kinda breezed through this. “Be more productive,” I scribbled in my notebook. Real deep, right? Just wanted to get less buried in emails and random tasks. Felt too vague, but I moved on ’cause Isaac makes it sound so simple.
Then came step two: breakin’ it down into tiny bits. This part actually stopped me cold. Sat there starin’ at my “be more productive” goal like an idiot. Tiny bits? How tiny? Finally decided: “Finish invoicing by 10 AM” and “Actually schedule that meeting TODAY.” Wrote down three things only. My brain was already protesting about the whole “tiny” idea.
Step three was the action part – just start doin’ it. Grabbed my laptop first thing this mornin’, aiming to tackle those emails ASAP. Felt super motivated… for about ten minutes. Then the dog started barkin’ at the mailman, my phone blew up with family group texts, and I needed another coffee. Gotta admit, the “just start” felt easy until life happened. Still, I wrestled my way back to finishing those invoices by 10:15. Close enough!
The review step came next. After lunch, pulled out the notebook again. Looked at the invoicing – done! Felt good. Scheduling that meeting? Also done! Felt even better. But my third “tiny bit”? Totally forgot it existed. Whoops. So yeah, not a perfect score. Isaac probably wouldn’t be impressed.
Here’s what I ended up with:
- Actually did the first two “tiny bits” – invoicing and meeting.
- Got sidetracked hardcore by distractions.
- Felt okay about progress, not amazing.
- Kinda forgot the exact “what you want” goal by afternoon.
So, bottom line from my trial run? The steps work… kinda. Writing things down makes you slightly more likely to do ’em. “Just start” really does kick you off, even if you get knocked off track later. And yeah, tiny tasks feel less scary. But man, do those distractions ever hit like a truck. And that review step? Crucial, ’cause I definitely forgot stuff without it.
Would I keep doin’ this? Maybe for stuff I really hate doin’ but gotta get done. Feels like a decent framework to fight the brain fog. Simple? Yeah. Magical success potion? Nah. But it got me through some invoicing today, and honestly? I’ll take that win.