David Gogins
by Mujahid HussainLet me tell you something right now—this year, 2025, doesn’t owe you a damn thing. Not success. Not happiness. Not change. You’re not entitled to anything just because you’ve been through pain. Life doesn’t care about your story unless you do something with it.
The world? It’s moving with or without you.
So ask yourself this: Are you going to be a passenger in your own life—or are you going to grab the wheel and drive through the fire?
You owe it to you.
Not your parents.
Not your friends.
Not the doubters.
YOU
Every day, we make silent deals with ourselves. We negotiate with that voice in our head that tells us we’ve done enough, that we can take it easy, that maybe we deserve a break—even when deep down, we know we haven’t earned it. That voice is comfort. It’s weakness. And if you’re not careful, it becomes your standard. That’s the problem: too many people are making peace with weakness. You cannot afford to be one of them. Not in 2025. Not if you’re serious about leveling up.
You don’t rise by choosing what feels good in the moment. You rise by doing what needs to be done, especially when you don’t feel like doing it. That’s the difference between average and savage. Weakness comes dressed in soft excuses. “I’ve been working hard.” “It’s just one day off.” “I’ll start fresh tomorrow.” It sounds kind, even rational—but it’s the beginning of the end. The truth is, every time you let that inner negotiator win, you build a habit of quitting on yourself. And the scary part? You don’t even realize it until it becomes who you are.
Here’s the deal: you can’t negotiate with that voice. You have to shut it down before it speaks. You don’t let it build a case. Because the second you give it space, it finds a reason to slow you down. Discipline doesn’t debate. It acts. And the way you become disciplined is by killing the option to choose weakness. There are no backdoors, no Plan B, no “maybe tomorrow.” There’s just “do the work”—or don’t.
This mindset is especially critical when no one’s watching. It’s easy to show up when there’s accountability. When people expect something from you. But the real battles are fought in private—when it’s just you, your goals, and the silence. That’s where champions are made. When you choose effort over ease, sacrifice over comfort, and action over excuses—not because someone’s watching, but because you refuse to be owned by weakness.
Let’s bring this to life with a simple example.
There’s a young woman training for her first marathon. She’s never run more than a mile in her life. She’s not an athlete. No one believes she can do it. It’s cold. It’s raining. Her legs are sore. And one morning, she wakes up to run—and everything in her screams, “Stay in bed. It’s just one day.” That’s the negotiation. That moment. Right there. And guess what she does? She gets up anyway. She runs through the rain, through the cold, through the soreness—not because she wants to, but because she made a decision to stop negotiating with weakness. That run didn’t just build her endurance. It built her identity. And weeks later, when she crossed that finish line, it wasn’t just about the race—it was about every moment she chose power over pity.
That’s how it works. You stack those wins, day by day. And eventually, you become the kind of person who does hard things without question. Not because it’s easy. But because you’ve trained yourself to rise when most people fold.
You want 2025 to be different? Then stop making excuses sound noble. Stop trying to talk yourself into comfort and start showing yourself what you’re made of. Kill the negotiations. Silence the weakness. Show up. Every day. Especially when it sucks.
That’s the price of greatness. And you owe it to yourself to pay it.
Nobody is coming to save you. That’s not a harsh truth—it’s the most liberating truth you’ll ever hear. Because once you accept that, you stop waiting and start moving. Too many people are sitting in silence, hoping for a hand to pull them out of the hole they’re in. They think someone will notice their struggle and care enough to change their life for them. But the truth is, people are too busy fighting their own battles. And life? Life doesn’t hand out lifelines. It rewards those who refuse to drown.
This is where most people lose. They keep waiting. Waiting for motivation. Waiting for the perfect time. Waiting until they feel ready. They think something external will shift before they act—like a sign, a mentor, a perfect condition. But life doesn’t work that way. If you’re waiting for the world to validate your worth before you grind, you’ll be waiting forever. The rescue you’re hoping for? It has to come from inside. No one is going to wake you up. No one is going to force you to do the work. No one is going to believe in you more than you believe in yourself. And they shouldn’t have to.
The moment you realize this is the moment you take full ownership. And ownership is power. Because when you take ownership, you stop blaming. You stop playing the victim. You stop looking at your past or your pain as permission to sit still. Instead, you look at your scars and say, “This is fuel.” Because if you're still breathing, you're still in the fight. But no one is fighting it for you. That’s your job.
It’s easy to point fingers when things don’t go your way. It’s easy to say, “I didn’t have support,” or “No one believed in me.” But those statements are distractions. They keep you stuck. Here’s the truth: life isn’t fair. It’s not supposed to be. You may have started behind. You may have suffered more than most. But if you’re serious about changing your life, you have to let go of waiting and lean into doing.
Let me give you a real example.
There was a guy who grew up in a rough neighborhood—poverty, violence, abuse. He barely made it through school, worked dead-end jobs, and had every reason to quit. At 25, he was sleeping in his car, blaming the world for what it never gave him. Then one day, after another failed job interview, he looked in the mirror and asked, “What if nobody’s coming?” That question changed everything. That night, instead of crying, he started reading. He picked up a book about mindset. Then another. Then another. He got a job washing dishes. Saved money. Went back to school. Fast forward five years—he owns his own business. Was it fast? No. Was it easy? Hell no. But the moment he stopped waiting and started working, his entire life began to shift.
That’s what you need to understand: it’s not about what happens to you—it’s about what you do next. Every day you wait for a hero, you waste another day you could have been building one: you.
So stop looking outward. Start looking inward. That fire you’re hoping someone will light? You’ve had the match the whole time. Light it. Burn. Build. Fight. Because no one’s coming to save you. And the moment you stop expecting them to is the moment you finally get free. That’s where the power lives. Not in being saved, but in saving yourself.
Pain is not your enemy—it’s your training ground. It’s where you find out what you’re really made of. Most people treat pain like a signal to stop. They feel discomfort and immediately look for the exit. But if you keep running from pain, you’ll keep running from growth. You’ll never break limits you’re unwilling to suffer for. Pain is the price of progress, and if you want to rise in 2025, you’ve got to start paying that price willingly.
Growth doesn’t happen in easy moments. It’s forged under pressure, in struggle, in silence, in the moments where your body is begging you to quit and your mind is screaming “keep going.” That’s where the change happens. That’s where strength is born—not when things go right, but when everything goes wrong and you decide to keep showing up anyway.
Most people want the results, but not the suffering that comes with it. They want strength without the strain. Confidence without the setbacks. Victory without the battle. But that’s not how it works. You earn it. And the currency? Pain. When you learn to stop fearing it, and start using it, everything changes. You start walking into challenges instead of avoiding them. You stop hesitating when it gets hard. You lean into the suck—because you know it’s shaping you.
Here’s what pain really does: it exposes your weaknesses. And that’s a gift. You can’t fix what you won’t face. When you’re pushed to your limits, you see the truth about who you are. That moment when your lungs are on fire, your legs are giving out, and your mind is telling you to stop—that’s the moment you meet your real self. And the only way to level up is to go through it, not around it.
Let’s put this into perspective with a simple but powerful example.
A young man decided he wanted to become a firefighter. But he wasn’t fit. He wasn’t strong. During training, he failed every physical test—pull-ups, hose drags, stair climbs with full gear. He was constantly last. Embarrassed. In pain. One night, after throwing up from exhaustion, he thought about quitting. Everyone else seemed naturally stronger, faster. But he made a decision: I’m not going to run from this pain—I’m going to use it. Every day, he woke up early and trained in the dark. He carried weights up stairs. He ran sprints in gear. Every failure became fuel. Every ache reminded him that he was rebuilding from the ground up. Months later, he passed every test. Top five. What changed? Not his body first—his relationship with pain. He stopped seeing it as a punishment and started treating it like a coach.
That’s the mindset you need in 2025. Pain is not there to destroy you—it’s there to refine you. It’s your forge. Your fire. Every time you push through it, you become someone tougher, sharper, more capable. You earn the right to say: I went through hell—and came out harder than steel.
So the next time it hurts, don’t shrink. Don’t tap out. Step into it. Look it in the face. Smile. Say, “Let’s go.” Because every time you do, you’re one step closer to the version of you that doesn’t break, doesn’t fold, and doesn’t quit. That version is forged in pain—and it’s waiting for you.
Don’t run from it. Run through it. That’s where your greatness lives.
Your mind is the most dangerous battlefield you’ll ever step foot on. Not the gym. Not the office. Not the street. The war is between your ears—and every day, you’re either winning that war or you’re losing it. The thoughts you entertain shape your decisions, and your decisions shape your reality. If your mind is weak, your life will be too. If you don’t learn to control your thoughts, they will control you.
Most people don’t realize how much power they hand over to doubt, fear, and negativity. They listen to that inner voice that says, “You’re not good enough,” or “You’ve failed too many times,” or “Why even try?” And instead of fighting back, they surrender. They let that voice dictate their effort, their energy, their ambition. And the scary part is, it happens so quietly, they don’t even notice they’ve already given up.
Winning the war in your head starts with awareness. You’ve got to catch those lies the second they show up. When your mind tells you to quit, you don’t negotiate—you override. When it whispers doubt, you counter it with belief. When it screams fear, you drown it out with action. You’ve got to become your own commander, not your own enemy. Because no one else lives in that space with you. No one else can fight that battle for you. If you lose control of your thoughts, everything else follows.
And this isn’t just about being “positive.” This is about taking control. About becoming the dominant voice in your own head. It’s about flipping the script from victim to victor, from fear to focus, from weakness to willpower. Because thoughts become behavior. If your thoughts are undisciplined, your life will be too.
Here’s the truth: you won’t always feel motivated. You won’t always feel strong. But if you train your mind to act regardless of emotion, you become unstoppable. That’s mental toughness. Doing what you said you’d do, long after the mood you made the decision in has left.
Let me show you how this plays out in a real-life example.
There was a college student who struggled with anxiety and self-doubt. Every time she had a presentation, her hands would shake, her chest would tighten, and her mind would spiral. “You’re going to mess up.” “Everyone’s judging you.” “You’re not cut out for this.” And every time, she’d either bomb or back out entirely. Then one day, fed up with her own limits, she made a shift. She started training her mind like a muscle. Every morning, she stood in front of a mirror and spoke confidence into herself, even if it felt fake at first. She visualized success. She practiced discomfort—raising her hand in class, volunteering first. Slowly, her inner voice changed. It wasn’t overnight, but week after week, the fear lost power. Her final year, she stood on stage in front of hundreds and delivered a flawless speech. Not because the fear was gone—but because she won the war in her head.
That’s what it takes. Not perfection, but control. You have to discipline your thoughts like you discipline your body. When doubt shows up, you confront it. When fear creeps in, you face it. You train your mind to obey, not rebel. That’s how champions are built—through mental repetition, daily conditioning, and relentless self-mastery.
So if you want to rise in 2025, start by seizing command of your own thoughts. Monitor them. Question them. Replace the lies with truth. Because until you win the war in your head, you’ll keep losing the battle in your life.
Dominate the mind—and you dominate everything.
Most people spend their whole lives chasing comfort, chasing praise, chasing safety. But none of those things will turn you into who you’re supposed to be. Growth doesn’t live in the easy. Greatness doesn’t come from what’s convenient. If you want to become the hardest, most unbreakable version of yourself, you have to go looking for the pain. You have to chase the hard things. The uncomfortable things. The things that expose your flaws and force you to rise. That’s the only way to build real strength.
The truth is, there’s a version of you out there that you haven’t even met yet. A stronger, more focused, more disciplined version. But you’ll never meet that person if you keep doing what’s easy. That version doesn’t exist in comfort. That version lives on the other side of resistance. Every time you back down from a challenge, every time you choose comfort over growth, you widen the gap between who you are and who you could be. And the only way to close that gap is by doing the hard things—on purpose, every single day.
Most people avoid difficulty like it’s a disease. They see suffering and they run the other way. But what they don’t realize is, the suffering is the shortcut. That’s where you develop calluses—on your hands, on your mind, on your soul. When you choose the hard road again and again, it becomes your new normal. And that’s when life starts to get interesting. That’s when you stop getting rattled by pressure. That’s when people start asking, “How do you do it?” And the answer is simple: You trained for this.
The hardest version of yourself isn’t created by accident. It’s built through consistent decisions to step into the fire when everyone else is walking away. It’s built when you say yes to the things that scare you, challenge you, and stretch you. The discomfort becomes your fuel. The struggle becomes your sharpening stone.
Let’s break it down with a real-life example.
There was a man who had always been afraid of water. Nearly drowned as a child. That fear stayed with him his entire life. Couldn’t even go near a pool without getting anxious. Then one day in his 30s, he decided he was done being owned by fear. So what did he do? He didn’t just take a swim class. He signed up for a triathlon. Couldn’t swim a single lap, but committed anyway. Every morning before work, he showed up at the pool—heart racing, body tense—and forced himself into the water. Not because it felt good, but because it felt hard. Because it terrified him. Month after month, stroke by stroke, he got better. Stronger. Sharper. By race day, he wasn’t just able to swim—he dominated that section of the triathlon. And more than that, he became the type of man who didn’t flinch in the face of fear. That’s what chasing the hardest version of yourself looks like.
This isn’t about proving something to others. It’s about proving something to yourself. That when things get hard, you don’t fold. You don’t retreat. You rise. You endure. You get better. The version of you that you’re chasing is forged in fire. And the only way to meet that person is to stop hiding from the heat.
So ask yourself: what are you avoiding? What are you running from? Because that’s probably the exact thing you need to run toward. Don’t wait for courage to show up—build it by doing the hard thing first. That’s how you meet the version of you who doesn’t quit, doesn’t break, and doesn’t fear the struggle.
Chase the hard. That’s where the power is. That’s where you find you.
Look in the mirror. You see that person? That’s the only one responsible for how 2025 ends for you.
No more blaming.
No more hoping.
No more half-effort.
You owe it to the version of you who stayed up late grinding.
To the version who cried in silence but kept moving.
To the version who was doubted, mocked, and overlooked—but still stood tall.
You owe it to you.
So get up. Lock in. Bleed for it.
And when this year ends—don’t look back with regret.
Look back knowing you went to war for yourself—and won.
Let’s get it.