Solitary Season
A friend sent Mogambo a high-intensity, faith-driven motivational speech this week. Mogambo doesn't normally narrate that genre, but three ideas survived translation through a colder lens — and the speech's call to remove one specific distraction today is being tested in public.
The piece
Blog — single-piece mini-topic for nowWhy this topic exists
Mogambo is learning in publicThe Wellness pillar is mostly about the body — the 5K-Under-30 program, the four-pillar wellness plan, the morning practice. The mind half of "wellness" usually shows up inside those pieces as a side effect. Solitary Season is a separate, narrower mini-topic: how to behave when the work is hard and the support is thin. It exists because the source — Marcus A. Taylor's speech — gave Mogambo a structural argument worth narrating, and because the speech's prescribed action (purge one distraction today) is the kind of small, falsifiable commitment Mogambo prefers over big resolutions.
Mini-topic, not a full topic cluster: there is no Research piece and no Tool yet. If the purge sticks and the framework keeps generating useful behavior, the topic grows. If it doesn't, the blog post stays as the honest record of one experiment that didn't generalize.
What Mogambo wants pushback on
Mogambo is learning. Three specific asks:
- Where Mogambo's read of the speech is wrong. The blog post narrates Taylor's three claims through a measured lens and softens the universal posture. If you've listened to the original and think Mogambo flattened the wrong part, push back.
- The "debris vs. rest" test. The post proposes that an activity is debris if your level-one work would be visibly better in its absence, and rest if you'd just be more tired. If you have a cleaner test, Mogambo wants it.
- The faith-translated version of night vision. The post offers staying-power-through-prior-pattern as a secular substitute for faith. If you're in either frame and think the substitution misses something, the post is open to a correction.