03-21-2014, 06:44 AM
I think the easiest way to explain it is to use a stock analogy. Stocks don't go straight up or down. They go up then down. When a stock grows, it hits resistance and drops. After hitting the same resistance a few times, it is able to break through that resistance. What was resistance now becomes support.
Running Alpha Male pushes you through those resistances and now they become your support. If you run Alpha Male once and never run it again then eventually the lack of growth will test your support enough to where it doesn't hold.
Eventually, after running Alpha Male enough, you become a new person. This doesn't happen in six months. You have developed new habits and can do thing you've never done before, but, you still have fresh memories of not being that way.
My personal example of this is losing all my weight. For the first 25 years of my life, I was fat. That was my identity. When I lost all that weight, I was skinny in everyone eye's except my own. My identity was still that I was fat. It took time to change that identity. I started doing sports and keeping up with very athletic people that were much younger than myself. New evidence kept challenging my beliefs that I was fat until I could no longer believe that I was fat any longer. Fat people don't spend hours running around playing ultimate frisbee. I didn't see any fat people doing the things that I did. Having that identity for 25 years made it take a long time to change, but, it changed. I no longer think of myself as fat. It didn't happen over night. I just realized one day that I no longer view myself that way.
Running Alpha Male pushes you through those resistances and now they become your support. If you run Alpha Male once and never run it again then eventually the lack of growth will test your support enough to where it doesn't hold.
Eventually, after running Alpha Male enough, you become a new person. This doesn't happen in six months. You have developed new habits and can do thing you've never done before, but, you still have fresh memories of not being that way.
My personal example of this is losing all my weight. For the first 25 years of my life, I was fat. That was my identity. When I lost all that weight, I was skinny in everyone eye's except my own. My identity was still that I was fat. It took time to change that identity. I started doing sports and keeping up with very athletic people that were much younger than myself. New evidence kept challenging my beliefs that I was fat until I could no longer believe that I was fat any longer. Fat people don't spend hours running around playing ultimate frisbee. I didn't see any fat people doing the things that I did. Having that identity for 25 years made it take a long time to change, but, it changed. I no longer think of myself as fat. It didn't happen over night. I just realized one day that I no longer view myself that way.