The Law of Accumulation: Outrun. Outlift. Outlast.
- Jordan Goodine
- Aug 7, 2025
- 3 min read

There comes a moment in every person’s life when they face the fire — the realization that if they truly want to become the best at their craft, they must go all in. No more halfway. No more dipping your toe into the waters of greatness. This life, this journey, demands you to dive headfirst into obsession.
To become the best — not just good, not just talented, but the absolute best — you must out run the runners and out lift the lifters. That means showing up when others won’t. That means turning a deaf ear to excuses. That means embracing the grind until it becomes your rhythm, your gospel, your fuel.
This is not about chasing aesthetics or applause. This is about war — the inner war to dominate your potential and break past every self-imposed ceiling. It’s about looking your competitors in the eyes and knowing they didn’t go where you went in training. They didn’t bleed like you bled. They didn’t suffer like you suffered. You earn the right to be called the best by walking the road no one else is willing to walk.
You must lock in 100%. Say yes to losing your mind. Yes to losing your comfort. Yes to becoming so obsessed with the process that people call you crazy — because what you’re doing is no longer explainable through science or logic. You’re tapping into something sacred. Something divine.
It’s not in the textbooks.
It’s not in the labs.
It’s not in the opinions of experts.
What you’re about to do is only explainable by the power of God.
You are becoming living proof that there’s another gear. Another level. A level where your mind and body are in total alignment — bent but unbreakable, weary but unwavering. A level where the mission is too sacred to cheat, too pure to taint with shortcuts.
No more cheating the process. No more skipping meals. No more skipping reps. No more “just one drink.” No more “I’ll do it tomorrow.”
Every action matters. Every rep counts. Every meal fuels your greatness or feeds your failure. You are either adding or subtracting — and there is no neutral.
This is the Law of Accumulation.
The universe doesn’t hand out greatness.
It tallies every effort, every sacrifice, every early morning and sleepless night.
And one day, it pays it back — with interest.
So don’t ask when it’s going to get easier. Ask how much more pain you can endure. Don’t ask how long it’s going to take. Ask how far you’re willing to go.
Because the ones who become the best aren’t the ones who had the most talent.
They’re the ones who decided to keep going when it stopped making sense.
They’re the ones who surrendered to the chaos.
They’re the ones who said: “If I lose my mind along the way, then so be it — I’ll find my soul in the wreckage.”
This is your calling: to train like it’s life or death.
To love the work like it’s worship.
To build a body and mind so sharp, so strong, and so forged in the fire that God himself uses you as a testimony.
So lace up.
Lift heavy.
Run far.
Read deeper.
Pray harder.
And show the world what happens when a man or woman stops negotiating with greatness.
This is the Goodieval Life.
No shortcuts.
No surrender.
Only purpose.
Only power.
Only forward.
Let’s go. The world is waiting to see what happens when you stop holding back.
Outrun. Outlift. Outlast.
Accumulate. Dominate. Repeat.
In the name of discipline, obsession, and God.
Amen.

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