The 300-Day ME Project

Three hundred days. One real shot at a different life.

300 days — roughly one percent of an 82-year life — long enough to stop dabbling and build better settings that actually hold.

Why give a one percent slide

Why it works

Enough time to stop dabbling.

1

Roughly 1% of a life

An 82-year life is about 30,000 days. Three hundred days is roughly one percent of that — small enough to commit to, serious enough to matter.

2

Long enough to create proof

Three hundred days gives you enough runway for repetition, stronger standards, and visible evidence that the better settings are beginning to hold.

3

Honest enough to expose the truth

The ME Project quickly reveals whether you want distraction, self-help theatre, or a genuine upgrade in how you live.

4

Deep enough to change identity

This is where better thinking, better behaviour, and better standards stop being buzzwords and start becoming lived evidence of a different identity.

The Reset Loop slide

The reset loop

Nullify. Navigate. Neutralise. Pinpoint. Process. Perform.

The Reset Loop is the action layer of the ME Project.

It gives the build a sequence instead of leaving change to mood. Remove the old pattern, install the better setting, and repeat until it stops feeling foreign.

The daily rhythm

"Living life on an even keel."

TRC is flow, not force. It needs consistency.

Review where your settings were today.
Realign small things that matter.
Repeat long enough for the better setting to stop feeling foreign, and RISE.

What changes

Momentum builds momentum. Fake dopamine starts losing its grip, and PROGRESS becomes the new reward.

ME Project video

No hype. No new-year, new me (False start 9.0!) .

The point is not to start dramatically. It is to use the Blueprint properly, for long enough that the better settings stop feeling foreign. This is not one percent better every day. It is one percent of a life, used properly.

The ME Project is where TRC stops being interesting and starts being real. Three hundred days. Better settings. Less bullshit. More evidence.