Scott's Weekend Wrap-Up (April 5th, 2026)
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Sponsor: Huel
I skipped lunch three times last week. Not because I wanted to—back-to-back calls, no time, and my options were: waste 30 minutes prepping, grab drive-thru garbage, or just stay hungry. By 3pm I’m making terrible decisions because my blood sugar’s crashed and I can’t focus.
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This Weeks Letter:
The thing nobody’s saying
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Last Week’s Episodes
Mark Manson is an American self-help author and blogger known for his refreshingly unfiltered approach to personal development. A three-time #1 New York Times bestselling author, his breakout work “The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck” became a global phenomenon, with his books collectively selling over 20 million copies, being translated into more than 65 languages, and reaching number one in over a dozen countries. Often described as “self-help for people who hate self-help,” his writing blends no-nonsense life advice with sharp cultural commentary. He also collaborated with Will Smith on the actor’s autobiography, and in 2023, a feature film inspired by his life and ideas was released worldwide by Universal Pictures. Beyond writing, Manson is the co-founder of Purpose AI and the host of the Solved podcast, where he continues to explore ideas around human psychology, meaning, and modern life.
See you next week,
Scott



There’s a subtle pattern in this kind of consistency. Show up every week, keep the cadence steady, keep the audience fed. It looks simple on the surface, almost routine, but that rhythm is doing more work than it seems. Familiarity builds quietly. Trust builds even quieter.
It reminds me of markets that grind higher without spectacle. No dramatic headlines, no obvious catalyst, just a steady sequence of higher closes that people dismiss because it feels too ordinary to matter. Then one day the distance traveled becomes hard to ignore.
The interesting part is how small decisions compound underneath it all. Skipping a meal leads to poor decisions in the afternoon. Skipping a week leads to a forgotten audience. Most outcomes are shaped in those unnoticed moments where discipline either holds or slips. That’s where the real curve bends, both in business and in markets.