The Honest Beginning - Spartan Race Miami Florida
Years ago, I signed up for the Spartan Race in Miami. A friend of mine had put together a team and invited me to join. I was in much better shape then and signed up right away.

At the time, I was fired up — training hard, eating right, feeling like I was finally taking control of my life. For the first few weeks, I was unstoppable and feeling good about myself.
Then life slowly started creeping in — work, family, responsibilities, a few late nights here and there and just like that, I started skipping workouts.
First once a week, then twice. Then I told myself, “I’ll start again Monday.” Monday came… and so did another excuse.
I still showed up to the race — but deep down, I knew I hadn’t earned it. Every obstacle felt heavier than it should’ve. Every hill reminded me of the workouts I skipped and the quilt of having let my team down. I did finish, thank God, albeit almost in last place.
By the time I crossed the finish line, I was exhausted — not just physically, but emotionally. And I promised myself I’d never let my own inconsistency cost me that much again.
The Lesson That Stuck With Me
At the same time the woman who convinced me to sign up kept training. She had the same obligations that I had, the same hours and the same time constraints. Yeah, the same obstacles I had — long hours, bad weather, family chaos — but she showed up anyway.
Months later, I saw her on Instagram: Top 3 in the women’s division Spartan Race.
(with a much better time than mine) That hit me hard.
She wasn’t more talented. She was simply more consistent. She showed up and put in the time, everyday. No excuses.
That day, I realized something I wish I’d learned much earlier:
Motivation fades. Discipline beats talent Everytime.
But discipline is hard to sustain when your body’s running on empty. When you feel you have much more day, than energy. I was embarrassed, hurt and too exhausted – my brain would say let’s go but my body was just not there.
Why Most People Quit (And How to Break That Cycle)
Most people don’t fail because they’re weak. People fail for two basic reasons. One they fail because they don’t develop or do the repetitive task long enough to create new long lasting habits. They give up before it’s a part of them. The other, is simply they don’t have the energy it takes to do the task in the first place. So, they fail because their energy gives out before their will does.
We tell ourselves it’s a lack of motivation — but often, it’s a lack of recovery. Poor sleep, stress, and bad digestion all stack up until showing up feels like an internal battle between mind and body.
That’s when “tomorrow” starts becoming a habit. “I’ll do it tomorrow” becomes the war cry.
So here’s what I’d tell my younger self — and maybe you too:
- Don’t wait for motivation.
- Build systems that support you.
- Track your progress, even on bad days.
Rebuild your body’s energy so your discipline can actually hold.
When the Mind Is Willing but the Body Isn’t
I think, there’s nothing worse than having the desire to keep going but feeling like your body’s stuck in first gear. You know that feeling when it’s only 3PM but you’re running on empty. Your mind is clear on your goals and what you have to get done but your body is M.I.A. (missing in action).
That’s where I had to make a shift — to take recovery seriously. I started looking at what my body was missing: better sleep, better absorption, and real recovery. I was getting enough sleep, eating well and hydrating regularly but still not getting better.
That’s when I came across BIOptimizers — a company focused on helping your body work smarter, not harder. Their Magnesium Breakthrough formula supports calm, deep sleep and recovery, while MassZymes helps your body absorb nutrients more efficiently — giving you back the stamina that life slowly drains.
It’s not a “motivation pill.” It’s a recovery tool — a way to give your body the support it needs to keep showing up.
“Discipline thrives when recovery is respected.”
👉 Explore my recommended recovery stack on the GER369 Resource Page →
The Restart Plan
After my experience with the Spartan race, I didn’t quit fitness — I redefined it.
I stopped chasing motivation and started tracking consistency.
It’s why I created the 7-Day Mito Recharge Plan — not to be perfect, but to start again with structure. It’s a simple plan that helps you:
- Reclaim your natural energy
- Build small, repeatable habits
- Reduce fatigue without relying on caffeine or sugary drinks
- Help support your Mitochondria
👉 Download the 7-Day Mito Recharge Plan →it’s a free guide to help you beat the second reason for failure – low energy.
Final Thoughts
I recommend before starting any weight loss or energy supplement programs to consult with your health care provider to ensure you have no underlying medical condition that might be preclude you from taking them. now and then.
I still think about that Spartan Race. Not because I failed — but because it taught me the cost of inconsistency.
You don’t need to be the best.
You don’t need to be perfect.
You just need to keep showing up — and support the body that carries you.
Discipline beats talent — every time.

