The Reboot Regiment Guide
The Reboot Regiment Guide
REBOOT
The first thing you need to understand is that if you cut the porn and masturbation out, your
sexuality will return to more natural and manageable levels.
This process of recovery is popularly known online as "reboot" which is simply a name for the
journey of cutting out porn. The idea is that you can reset your sexuality to a healthier and
more natural level by temporarily "unplugging it," kind of like how you might reboot a
computer if it's acting up.
Based up on my personal rebooting experience combined with helping hundreds of other men
with their reboots, I can confidently say that the best method of reboot is known as a "hard
mode" reboot, which is just a synonym for a temporary period of complete abstinence. In other
words, no porn, no masturbation, no sex for a period of at least 90 days (or longer depending
on how bad your symptoms are).
For a more in-depth explanation of why hard mode is the best mode or how to navigate your
reboot in a relationship you'll have to check out my other material. But to summarize it, any
other sexual activity before your brain has rebooted will likely serve as a gateway back into
porn.
If you really want to be master of your sex drive, you must learn that you can survive and thrive
without getting every sexual desire met. Without this experience, you will always be a slave to
your sexual urges because you will think you "need" to satisfy them.
Moving forward in this guide it's assumed that you want the best reboot possible and will be
engaging in a hard mode reboot.
Regimen I: Self-Talk
Goal: 5 Minutes of leadership centered self-talk and/or journaling per day
In Part I of this guide we really hammered on how porn use is about escapism. Another way of
looking at it is to view porn as a replacement for actually engaging with and managing yourself.
It's a substitute for authentically showing up and caring for yourself as if you were someone
who mattered. And it totally makes sense that someone would reach for this substitute. Taking
good care of ANY human is a big difficult deal. This is especially true when that human is
yourself!
Once you lift your hood and start looking inside yourself, you'll likely find that you are a
confusing, overwhelming being with crazy swirling emotions, desires, and thoughts that clash
against a crazy overwhelming reality. You’ve got problems, responsibilities, and tough decisions
to make. Life isn’t easy, even if you are a “privileged” modern person.
It can be far more appealing to just say, "Forget this! I have no idea how to deal with any of that
junk. Let's watch porn and numb out." As we stated previously though, this doesn't work. The
only viable option is to figure out a better path. That's our goal with self-talk.
At its core, self-talk is about deciding to actually show up and start leading yourself to a better
outcome. It's about coming to truly understand yourself and have a relationship with yourself.
This isn't some wishy-washy fluff - this is hardcore practical fundamentals of life. If you improve
your self-talk, your entire life will improve.
The first thing I ask someone when trying to help them learn from a relapse is, "What did your
self-talk look like when you were triggered?" Usually their response is, "There was none," or, "I
lied to myself with rationalization X".
Self-talk is the core of your self-control. If your self-talk is non-existent or dysfunctional, you will
not be able to leave porn behind.
EMOTIONAL AUTOPILOT
To have a productive conversation, you need to have two people talking. Sadly, in most
people’s self-talk the conversation is painfully one-sided. Specifically, it’s the side of your
emotions that tends to dominate what’s spoken internally.
I refer to an emotionally dominated inner dialogue as “emotional autopilot.” This is when you
allow an emotional impulse like a craving for porn to take over your actions, leading you to act
out.
Your emotional mind has a lot of power, but it's not always the smartest. Its power is that it
controls the main neurochemicals that are responsible for all your core emotions and feelings
(dopamine, serotonin, endorphin, oxytocin, cortisol etc.).
Its shortcoming is that it lacks the machinery for higher level rational thinking and relies heavily
on instinct and conditioning. If you've got a history of regular PMO, both instinct and
conditioning are working against your best interest.
Your instincts have trouble telling the difference between porn and a real sexual experience.
Your conditioning has proven to you that porn is a path to intense pleasure and release.
Because of this, your emotional mind will constantly be sending emotional messages that
essentially say, "Hey, you know what would be great right now? Porn. Porn would be so good
for us, we should probably go masturbate to some immediately so we can feel fantastic." We
call these messages "cravings."
If you allow these cravings to pass unchallenged through your mind and control your actions,
then you will keep using porn.
RITUAL OVERVIEW
There are five steps to the self-talk ritual (technically the first one can be split off into its own
discipline, but I recommend keeping them together).
1. Ground: Tune into your body and relax your musculature
2. Connect: Be present non-judgmentally with your emotions
3. Translate: Put the main emotional threads into words
4. Respond: Let your rational mind respond to these words with truth, friendship, and
leadership
5. Repeat (optional)
This process can be done in your head whenever you want, but I recommend doing it in a
structured way in a journal at least once a day. Let's get into the individual pieces:
GROUND
Addiction controls you through the unconscious generation of mental, emotional, and physical
tension. If this tension goes unchecked, it will ultimately take over your thoughts, feelings, and
finally your actions. You can think of a craving as dozens of little puppet strings of tension that
pull you into trying to look at porn.
If you wish to avoid acting on an urge, you need to be able to release that tension. The skill of
physical relaxation, then, is essential to self-management. Your body is like the circuit board for
your mind and emotions. Relaxing your body has a significant carryover effect to all other
internal work.
Just try it out: next time you are feeling some kind of negative emotion, mentally relax any
tense muscles you can sense in your body. I can guarantee that your negative emotion will
become a bit less intense. We’ll look at this power further in regimen II.
The first step of the self-talk ritual is to bring your awareness to your physical presence and
relax your musculature. This "grounds" your mental and emotional energy kind of like a
lightning rod will redirect a lightning bolt safely into the ground.
To do this is simple:
● Take a few deep, relaxing breaths.
● Mentally scan your body for physical tension and relax those muscles (you can go from
head to toe if you want).
● Once relaxed, just tune into your physical senses of touch, hearing, smell, and sight (if
your eyes are open).
You don't need to make anything magical happen here and can spend as much time or as little
time doing this as you'd like. Some people like to make a whole meditation out of this, but for
our purposes you just need to chill yourself out a little so everything else that comes after
works a bit better.
CONNECT
Porn lets you disconnect from your emotions. It lets you temporarily nuke them into oblivion
with high levels of stimulation. In this step you are going to do the opposite and connect with
your emotions.
You do this by bringing your awareness to your emotional center (for most people, this is
somewhere in your chest) and just allow yourself to feel and observe whatever emotional
sensations are there.
The key for this step is to be non-judgmental about what you find in there. Your emotional self
cannot help the way that it feels. Sometimes these feelings are intense, painful, irrational, or
even just plain unhelpful.
The mistake is to judge these emotions as bad/stupid/dangerous etc. and try to squash them or
avoid looking at them. For example, it may be hard to acknowledge that you are craving a
particular kind of porn that the rest of you finds humiliating. In that case, you just need to
observe both the humiliation and the craving side by side and simply let them be there.
Your emotions have various levels of truth and value. Some are neurological junk that hold little
utility. Some emotions hold profound truths. Some are a mix of both. The only way you can sort
through and properly respond to these things is if you can first unconditionally look at them.
This is all you are doing in this step - feel and observe the major emotional threads that are
currently present within you.
TRANSLATE
One of the challenges of your emotional mind is that it's not great with words. It thinks
primarily in the sensations that we just connected with in the previous step.
In order to do effective self-talk we need to have our rational self lend our emotional self a
hand by translating those sensations into words. When you translate your emotions into words,
it puts them into a form that your rational mind can work with and respond to.
So in this step, you basically just turn those main emotional currents that you connected with
into a statement. Ex: "I'm upset about what my boss said to me earlier" - "Watching porn would
be awesome right now" - "I'm mad at myself for not asking that girl out"
Often it's difficult to summarize an emotion in a single statement. This is when you need to
"vent" a little. You might need a lot of words to capture an emotion. That's fine.
This is where journaling starts to become valuable. Just like how it's easier to do complex math
on a piece of paper, it's also easier to deal with more complex emotions with paper as well.
You can think of the translate phase as a "vent" phase where you vent your emotions into
verbal form. The goal is to let this stuff come out unfiltered. You don't need to moderate it or
make it rational. By getting it out raw, you can more easily evaluate it for what it is.
You might find that when you let some of this stuff out raw, that you are appalled at what you
find. Accept it. Just because you have an emotion doesn't mean that you agree with it, it
doesn’t mean you will act on it, it doesn't mean it's who you really are, and it doesn't mean
you're bad. It just means that for whatever reason, a certain part of you is seeing the situation
in this way.
Squashing such things down just cause them to fester and get worse. Getting it out in the open
is the only way you can shift and modify it (if you even need to – sometimes simple
acknowledgement is enough).
RESPOND
So once your emotional side speaks its piece, it's your rational side's turn to respond. The
goal of your rational self should be to
1. Speak truth
2. Be a friend
3. Be a leader
So for example, if in your vent, your emotional self has all these ideas and desires about
watching porn, then it's the job of your rational self to respond with the truth about that
potential course of action.
The truth is that if you use porn then you will stay addicted, your sexuality will stay inflamed
and distorted, and you will continue to run from life and fail to thrive as your best self. The
truth is that porn is fake, you aren't having a sexual experience, and those women don't know
who you are or give a crap about you.
The truth is that if you instead abstain from porn, the urge will be uncomfortable, but it will
pass shortly. Staying clean will heal your brain, it will heal your sexuality, and it will allow you to
show up to life and really live it.
If you are married or in a committed relationship, the truth is that you cannot even consider
being with another woman without also considering cheating or going through a
breakup/divorce. To take the image of some woman and imagine sex with her without any
consequences or effort is to paint an unhelpful picture that has no basis in reality at all (which is
exactly what porn trains you to do).
You need to literally feed these thoughts of truth to yourself in the moments you are
triggered. You must force yourself to think them, or even speak them out loud if necessary. If
you don’t then they won’t be able to influence your decision making. If you have trouble
remembering this stuff, then that simply means you need more practice.
It’s important that you do your best to deliver these truths as a friend. Your emotional mind is
going to be hurting and wanting. Having your rational self show up as a jerk or a bully isn’t
going to make the situation much better. You are going through something challenging. Give
yourself some compassion and understanding.
But at the same time you can't be too compassionate to the point where you let yourself give in
because it's so uncomfortable. Here's where the leadership part comes in. You need to be
keeping yourself focused and honest about what's truly going to give you the BEST life, not just
the best temporary high. It’s not good leadership to let yourself do something that’s bad for
you just because doing the right thing is hard.
The truth can be painful to speak to yourself, but it's the antidote that will cure you. The main
ingredient of that soup we talked about earlier is truth. Sometimes the truth is painful to look
at and swallow, but it’s the only thing that’s going to truly cure you and set you free.
Regardless of what form the truth takes, keep feeding it to yourself. It's the only thing that can
moderate, overcome, and ultimately cure the dysfunctional emotional narratives within your
emotional self.
REPEAT
After letting your rational side respond, your emotional side will pop up again with more to say.
Sometimes you need to look at the response. If there are rationalizations or arguments that
hold a lot of emotional weight found in that response, then you’d better address them.
You do this by simply repeating the process again of grounding, connecting, translating and
responding. As you get good at this, you gain the ability to have a literal conversation within
yourself between these two different sides.
The trick is in recognizing that you don't need emotional resolution. If you try to end this
process with your emotional self feeling great, then you'll just end up going in circles.
You don't need to "feel better." Sometimes the conversation ends with your rational mind
speaking the truth and your emotional mind being pissed off or sad about that truth. That's
fine. Your emotional mind will adapt to that truth as long as your rational mind holds the line
and addresses what your emotional mind says.
For some guys, they need to emotionally go through all the stages of grief to let porn go: denial,
anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance. If that’s your situation, then you need to be brave
enough to go through it. If you lie to yourself with some kind of rationalization or simply avoid
looking at the truth in the first place then you are just going to be prolonging your suffering.
SUMMARY
To summarize this self-talk ritual again:
1. Ground: Tune into your body and relax your musculature
2. Connect: Be present non-judgmentally with your emotions
3. Translate: Put the main emotional threads into words
4. Respond: Let your rational mind respond to these words with truth, friendship, and leadership
5. Repeat (optional)
The goal is to ultimately be able to do this when you are triggered with cravings so that you
can remind yourself of the truth and stay clean.
To be able to show up during crunch time, I recommend practicing this supportive self-talk all
day, but at least once a day sit down and do it in a more formal manner in your journal. As little
as five minutes a day can be an absolute game changer here.
As you do this consistently, magic happens. Basically, your emotions will become re-trained to
be in alignment with truth rather than opposed to it. So instead of your positive emotions
being aligned with negative things (desire for porn) and negative emotions being aligned with
positive things (discomfort at staying clean), things get flipped.
Your positive emotions will be aligned with positive things (like living an awesome life) and your
negative emotions will be aligned with negative things (like porn). Once this starts happening,
life gets exponentially easier. Imagine if you actually wanted to do the things that were good for
you and the thought of doing bad stuff for you filled you with distaste or even revulsion?
Believe it or not, this can and WILL happen if you continue to practice this kind of authentic
self-talk. The payoff is worth the effort.
Quitting porn is a challenging thing. To succeed, you need to make sure that you have the
appropriate level of energy to power good decision making in the face of hardship while
maintaining your supporting disciplines.
Showing up to life and engaging with it will tax your mental, emotional, and physical energy
reserves. You can have all the knowledge in the world, but if you lack the energy to put that
knowledge into action then that knowledge is worthless. Therefore, establishing a routine of
energetic self-care is essential for anyone looking to live on the front line of their life and stop
the escapism of porn use.
In this regimen we are going to outline an energy management system that anyone can follow
no matter where they are starting from.
Rest Conclusion
I know I used to think that if I let myself fall in love with sleep and rest, I'd be missing out and
losing productivity. I've found it's just the opposite. The more I rest, the more energy I have to
make aligned and productive choices.
Unless you have a problem with sleeping too much as a form of escape (some people fall into
this category) then getting more rest is probably one of the best things to focus on during your
reboot journey.
ENERGY MANAGEMENT 2: EXERCISE
If you want to have more energy, you need to use more energy. Your body adapts to the
demands that are put upon it. This is where exercise comes in. By forcing your body to regularly
move, it will grow stronger.
Many rebooters have reported that the incorporation of exercise played a major role in their
ability to successfully quit porn. Not only does regular exercise increase your overall energy
levels, it also helps you relax. One of the best ways to blow off some steam is to get a good
workout in.
The big issue is that developing a structured exercise routine can be quite challenging for many
people. You need to either create your own program or choose from the thousands that exist
online.
If your plan involves going to the gym for the first time then you need to overcome the social
discomfort of doing something new in front of people you don't know. And then on top of that
there's the general emotional resistance of breaking out of your body's comfort zone and
pushing it in some way.
Put simply, some guys may not have the energy or drive to deal with all of that when they are
already pushing themselves to quit porn. I think having a physical training regimen is a great
thing for most people, but I'm not so black and white as to believe that absolutely every guy
needs this in order to quit porn (and may actually be a bad move for some).
Because of this, I've tried my best to offer some simpler ways to start getting the benefits of
exercise for your reboot without demanding that you successfully build a gym routine. This is
already a challenging point of your life and it may not be time to add THAT challenge as well.
Here are the levels of exercise we will examine:
● Exercise Level 1: Stretching
● Exercise Level 2: Walking
● Exercise Level 3: Training Routine
NUTRITION
In terms of topics that hold the most dissent and conflicting ideas, politics and religion probably
are at the top. But not too much further down the list is nutrition. There are million different
diets out there, each one claiming to be the best.
This confusion is compounded by the fact that there's been a lot of bad science done by food
and supplement companies basically paying for distorted (or simply inaccurate) data points that
will allow them to sell more product and make more money.
When it comes to quitting porn, nutrition isn't really that important. There's no magic diet
that's going to make your cravings go away. There's no magic supplement that's going to make
you reboot twice as fast.
The reason we are looking at nutrition at all is because if your diet is poor enough, it CAN hold
you back. Additionally, learning how to feed yourself decently is a powerful lifestyle choice
centered around personal responsibility and self-care. This fits nicely within the rebooting
framework.
So, the main goal of this section is to simply move your nutrition out of the "terrible" range and
open the door to a higher level of self-care and personal discipline. If your diet is already decent
enough, you might not need to make any changes in this area.
Here are the levels we’ll be looking at
● Level 1: Eat Meals
● Level 2: Eat Whole Foods
● Level 3: General Diet Plan
2. Leads to less effective digestion which hurts your energy levels (and potentially also
causes physical discomfort)
3. Contributes to mental burnout since you've minimized your rest state, which in turn
leads to poorer decision making
When you sit down and allow yourself to relax into an actual meal, you let your body enter fully
into this parasympathetic state. If you engage in this kind of meal-time relaxation the typical
three times per day (breakfast, lunch, dinner), then 3 times per day you are allowing your body
to enter into this valuable state of rejuvenation.
If you then enhance that state with a relaxing walk after, I think you will see significant benefits
to your energy levels and mood. The bottom line is that you need breaks. If you don't create
these breaks consciously and healthily, then you will create them UNhealthily (like with porn).
So do yourself a favor and sit down and eat meals. I recommend 3-4 a day. If you want to do
less because you are doing intermittent fasting then fine, just make sure you find a system that
doesn't stress your system to the point of counter-productivity.
In order to live a fulfilling life that you don't want to constantly escape from by using porn, you
need to be productive. This productivity requires that you get clear on your priorities, take care
of your main responsibilities, and make meaningful progress in your life.
Yes, quitting porn will require some specific focus on your reboot, but most of the "work" of
rebooting is just about doing better things with your time. In order to do this you need to have
a system that keeps you focused and moving in the right direction.
The goal of this regimen is to help you establish your own system for productivity so that you
can maintain forward progress in your life and leave the masturbatory life of porn behind.
STATUS MATTERS
One of the main things to understand when approaching productivity is how porn acts as a
substitute for real status. We humans care deeply about status, it's literally wired into the
mechanisms of our brain. When our status in areas we care about goes up, we feel good, and
when our status declines or is threatened, we feel bad.
The reason we evolved this way is because the accumulation of meaningful status is inherently
tied to a person's personal and genetic survival and success. So for example, if you are a man
who accumulates physical, financial, social and moral status, chances are you will not only be
more secure and happy personally, but you will also have an excellent chance at reproducing
and passing on your genes.
From this perspective it makes sense that you care about status. Anyone who claims to not care
about status because they believe it's egotistical or something is just unconsciously trying to
earn some sort of higher moral status.
The reason why caring about status gets a bad rep sometimes is because if you go so far as to
identify with your status and define others by their status, then you can justify some pretty
horrible stuff; i.e. "If you are poor, ugly, less intelligent, of the ‘wrong’ race, or lack any status I
value, then you have less inherent worth and value as a human being so I can treat you worse."
Obviously, that’s really screwed up and I am not supporting that. So to be clear, when I talk
about status here, I'm separating inherent human dignity with measurable differences in
personal attributes and competence. I believe people have unconditional and equal human
dignity, but clearly have different levels of measurable status (and this difference matters).
PORN IS A SUBSTITUTE FOR AUTHENTIC STATUS
One of the main reasons I believe that porn is such a powerful escape is because it allows you
to step out of your current perception of status into a virtual world where you get to pretend
that you are this sexual stud experiencing massive sexual success.
Instead of being the guy who missed a deadline at work and got reamed out by the boss in
front of everyone (low status), you can instead be the guy having sex with three women at once
(high status). Instead of being that guy who still lives at home and is too afraid to ask a girl on a
date, you can have a harem of virtual women willing to serve your every desire.
The problem is that when you continuously feed your emotional self this illusion of sexual
success, you are crippling your motivational systems. You essentially trick your emotional self
into thinking, "If I'm being so ‘successful,’ why should I change? Why should I push myself?"
Porn addicts often really struggle with motivation and drive. No wonder - they keep tricking
their emotional systems responsible for their motivation into thinking that they are
experiencing all this “genetic success” and hence have no need to change. Human biology is
efficient, why would it give you energy and drive to fix what isn't broken?
The big areas of status that most guys need to focus on are:
● Sexual status: how do you feel about your romantic life?
● Performance: How well you perform in your major occupations (school/work)
● Financial status: how do you feel about the amount of money you make?
● Social status: how do you feel about your standing at work, in your friend group, and in
society in general?
● Physical status: how do you feel about your own body?
● Moral status: how well do you live according to your own highest conceptions of
goodness? (I believe people rightfully place this as the most important)
All these things are connected. Bringing up your status in one area can improve your standing in
another. It can be intensely challenging to take a sober look at where you stand on these levels,
it makes sense why so many guys reach for porn.
The problem is that the more you reach for porn to escape rather than take meaningful action
in these areas, the further you will decline. The underlying point here is that you need to
identify the status that best honors your ideals and dignity and then do the work to acquire
it. Unless you do this, quitting porn simply forces you to be more present in a reality where you
don’t feel (and perhaps measurably aren’t) good enough in areas that matter to you.
50% MINDSET 50% HUSTLE
Not everybody can be at the top in every area. You probably won’t ever be as good looking as
Brad Pitt, as rich as Warren Buffett, or as athletic as Lebron James. I know I won’t be anyway.
Sometimes our status is limited by things outside our control like our genetics or life
circumstance, and sometimes our status is limited because we need to make choices with our
energy and can only excel in so many areas.
Because of this, half the battle is mindset. For the status you are going to pursue, you need to
accept where you are, where you realistically could reach, and how long it might take to get
there. For the status you can't or won't pursue, you need to let it go.
This kind of mindset is equal parts humility and dignity. You need to choose that you are
unconditionally worth the effort of pursuing your best (dignity), but you also need to choose to
love yourself even with your imperfections and limitations (humility). If you refuse to make
these choices, then you will never feel “good enough.”
At the end of the day, the core status you are reaching to achieve is to be someone that YOU
admire. Imagine someone who had the exact same circumstances, abilities, and opportunities
that you do. How would that person have to behave for you to admire them? That image
should be the compass for your own behavior.
After that, it's just about getting stuff done. You need to set your goals that align with your
vision and just do it. Not only do you need to mentally believe that you are worth the effort of
living well and making progress, you need to embody that self-love with productive action.
In other words, you want to make sure that you truly put first things first. If your main goal is to
quit porn, then you need to prioritize the things that are going to let you do that. So this
includes the stuff that we’ve talked about so far like building the habit of self-talk and
incorporating your chosen energy management disciplines. These will primarily fit into the
“habit tracking” section of the system that we’ll cover in a moment.
Other things of priority level 1 would be anything else that enhances your connection to truth,
such as spiritual practices (prayer, scripture etc.), working through my porn recovery course, or
really anything else that helps you connect with your higher morals and values. This kind of
stuff supercharges your self-talk capabilities.
Once you get these foundational regimens in place, you will want to focus on your core
responsibilities such as your work (or schoolwork if you are a student), family responsibilities,
and other non-negotiable activities that should come before anything else.
It is only after getting things moving well in these basic areas that I recommend expanding your
focus to bigger goals. If you need to spend a couple weeks or months solidifying your
foundation, that's fine. It could take a little bit to get used to journaling, managing your energy,
and being productive at work/school. But once you start getting this down, you might want to
start expanding your life changes.
So if one of your big goals is to enter a romantic relationship, maybe this is the point where you
start prioritizing dating and hitting the gym a bit harder. If you want a career shift, maybe you
start working on that business you've been dreaming of building. If you are an artist, maybe you
decide to start taking your art production more seriously. Maybe it's as simple as going out,
getting involved in some activity and making some new friends.
It's the goals on this level that often have the biggest personal impact in terms of life
satisfaction. The issue is that people often try to sprint into them without building the proper
foundation first and then are unable to sustain themselves. So if you follow the plan I've
outlined here, you should be able to steadily improve your status in the areas that best
represent your ideals.
PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEM
So now that we’ve identified the value of productivity and a general order of priorities, the
following information we’ll cover in this regimen is about how to set up your own baseline
productivity system so that you can set achievable goals and make sustainable progress.
If you've already got a system that works great for you, then awesome, use that. I still
recommend reading through this section though, because there may be some useful
information that can improve your process.
The system is fairly simple and was inspired by the Zen to Done method and Getting Results the
Agile Way, but modified and simplified in certain aspects.
The overall method is quite straight forward: you basically just make a plan for the week and a
plan for each day. For both the weekly and daily plans you separate the most important tasks
from the less important ones. I've purposely kept the core system minimalistic, but I'll also later
point out some areas where you can enhance this system if you need to.
The real value of this planning is that you are making decisions and limiting your main foci.
When you are just flying by the seat of your pants without a plan, there is the tendency to start
too much, finish too little, or just get overwhelmed and default to the path of least resistance
(which often includes PMO).
SETUP
For your planning, I recommend sticking with pen and paper or simple digital documents like
text or note files. Personally, I do all my self-talk journaling with pen and paper and my
productivity planning in digital. I find a digital format more efficient for creating and updating
plans (plus I’m on the computer when I work anyway), but after working on the computer all
day I love to sit down with my nice fountain pen and special journaling notebook to write and
draw. However, plenty of people do great with all digital or all analog systems.
If you want to plan digitally, OneNote, Evernote, or Simplenote will probably work well for you.
These are mature cross platform products that probably won't disappear anytime soon.
Alternatively, if you have a programming background I recommend your preferred text editor
combined with txt or markdown files for ultimate future-proofing and efficiency (I use a highly
customized version of Vim + dropbox).
I do NOT recommend standard to-do list applications. After using literally dozens of these kinds
of apps I've come to the conclusion that most to-do list apps are both too efficient and too
inefficient at the same time.
On one hand, they are too efficient in that they make it easy to add a million things to which
are not currently relevant and ultimately create mental clutter. But on the other hand, they are
often too inefficient when it comes to cleaning, organization, prioritization, and review. It's easy
to get bogged down in complex tagging systems, priority matrices and built up recurring tasks.
When you use the system I outline here, single sheet has all the information you need for a
given week or day. Additionally, cleaning, organization, and prioritization is built into the
system. Every day and every week you just start the planning system anew. If you want to
review, you just flip through your entries and can easily see what you got done when.
Another part that’s nice about this system is that by regularly having to write down and update
your plan, you are doing the work of priming your brain and setting your focus (which is the
main point of planning in the first place). I find that this tends to be more useful than a quick
glance at some pre-made digital list or an inbox of yesterday’s unfinished tasks. It may seem
paradoxical but sometimes it's more efficient to be less efficient.
You don't have to take my advice here and can use whatever app or system you want and
probably still do just fine as long as you stick to it and take action. You'll just have to create/use
a different system or adapt what I'm saying here to fit what you're doing.
WEEK PLAN
Your productivity starts with your week plan where you get clear about what you want to
accomplish for the week. There are three main components:
• Habit Tracker
• MIT's
• To-do’s
Here’s an example of what this plan might look like for a college student looking to quit porn
and connect with women more authentically:
Habit Tracker
The habit tracker is just a simple grid that you can use to track any new habit you are trying to
build. If you hit that habit for the day, you mark an X; if you don't you mark an O.
If you've already internalized a habit or are doing alright with it, don't track it, that just adds
clutter. I'd limit this section to three habits at once because for the most part, you can only
really sustainably change a few variables in your life at a time.
Once you feel comfortable with the habit and have internalized it pretty well, then feel free to
stop tracking it and add something else. Just remember that not all habits are created equal. If
you end up dropping more important habits to make room for less important ones, then you
are making a bad trade.
If you want to track a streak longer than a week then you can do what I did in the example
above, where I put a “[22]” next to no PMO which means that at the beginning of the week, you
were already 22 days clean, by the end then you’ll be 29 days clean.
If you are following the plan here, then you should initially use this tracker to focus on your
self-talk/journaling and energy management routines until you’ve incorporated them as a part
of your life.
MIT's
MIT stands for Most Important Task. These are the major things you need to accomplish to feel
like you are moving forward in your life.
You want to separate these things out from your other tasks because if anything must get
dropped or pushed back, you need to know that it's not going to be one of these things. I
recommend keeping your MIT’s around 3 or so. Some weeks I'll just have one or two, some
weeks I'll maybe bump it up to four or (rarely) five.
You want to make sure you keep your MIT's measurable. If it's a completion-based goal such as
"finish project X" then it's easy, if you got it done then you can cross off the MIT. But for other
things you'll have to come up with your own measurement.
For me, MIT's tend to be time-based goals. So for example, instead of "Work on course" I'll
have "Hit 12 hours of content creation for my new course." But time isn’t the only unit of
measurement you can use. So if you're a salesman, instead of writing "Make a bunch of cold
calls," a better MIT would be "Make 100 cold calls".
For the most part I recommend setting your goal at the median between your ideal outcome
and your minimum acceptable outcome. So for example, let's say my ideal outcome would be
to do 15 hours of content creation, but the minimum I'd deem acceptable would be 8 hours. In
that case I'd probably aim for around 11-12 hours. If I got more - awesome. If I got a little less -
I'm still pretty happy.
Part of goal setting comes from experience. It takes some trial and error to understand your
capacity to get stuff done. In the beginning I'd focus on keeping your goals simple and super
achievable. As you develop your willpower, focus, and momentum you can always aim higher.
The important thing is develop your habit of crossing off your MIT's. This is best accomplished
by making your goals reasonable and doable.
General To-Do’s
Separate from your MIT list, you just have a general to-do list. This is where you throw the
other stuff you'd like to get done this week that's not important enough to be an MIT. This is
where I'll put down chores, one-off tasks and stuff like that. Often I'll add to this section and
update it throughout the week.
Sometimes I get everything done on my general task list. Sometimes I don't. Sometimes I'll
carry those unfinished tasks over to next week's plan. Sometimes I decide they aren't really that
important and delete them altogether. The key to keeping with a productivity system is for it to
be flexible in the right spots. You want to be less flexible with the completion of your MIT's and
more flexible with the completion of your general to-do’s.
Sometimes the best move is to procrastinate on something and focus your energy on more
important things (like hitting your MIT's and big habit changes like quitting PMO).
DAY PLAN
So now that you've got an idea of what you want to accomplish for the week, you need to
figure out what you are going to get done today.
Every morning (or night before) you want to:
1. Look at your week plan (and calendar if you keep one) to see what's on the table
2. Update any habits you're tracking in your week plan (did you stay clean?)
3. Break off the pieces of your week plan that you want to accomplish and put them on
your day plan
4. Identify any critical points that will make or break your success for that day
For your day plan we'll use a similar format to the week plan in that we'll separate your daily
MIT's from just your general tasks. We'll also add a special section for "Critical Points" where
you identify key forks in the road that will have a big impact on your personal success.
Here’s an example of a day plan taken from the same college student we looked at earlier
So if I had 12 hours of content creation for my week plan, I'll probably shoot for 3 hours of
content that day. If I have a lot of appointments or other tasks, maybe I'll only aim for one or
two. Regardless, this will go in my MIT section for the day.
Like with the week plan, you want to limit the number of daily MIT's to around 3 or less. For the
other tasks you'd like to get done, you separate them off into your general to-do list for the
day.
Critical Points
The one special thing for the daily plan I recommend including is the identification of "critical
points." These points are essentially crucial forks in the road that you know can make or break
your success for showing up as someone you admire for the day.
So for example, let's say you've got some important stuff you want to get done after you get
home from work. However, you know that your pattern once you get home is to lie down on
your couch, start surfing social media, end up on porn, and PMO. So that time right after work
would be a critical point.
In your day plan, you'd want to identify that pattern and remind yourself of what you are going
to do INSTEAD. Don't just write, "Don't lie on couch & PMO after work", instead, outline the
alternative path of action like, "When I get home from work, immediately get changed and go
for a decompressing walk to avoid my PMO relaxation pattern."
By making the decision of what you are going to do in these key moments AHEAD of time, you
just need to REMEMBER what you are going to do in the moment rather than come up with it
on the spot. It's easier to remember than to create, especially when you might be tired or
distracted when that moment arises.
OPTIONAL ENHANCEMENTS
As a solopreneur with multiple projects, clients and responsibilities it takes me a bit more to be
organized than most people. If you are in a similar boat, then you might need a more than the
baseline system I've outlined here to get organized and focused.
Here are some other things you may wish to investigate or experiment with. I'll just give short
descriptions here, but you can find a wealth of information on any of these topics with some
googling.
You may not need any of this at all and just need to hit your dang MIT's. I wouldn't mess with
any of this stuff unless it has become clear that you need it. If reading this list fills you with
anxiety and overwhelm, then you shouldn’t be doing this stuff yet.
If you read this stuff and are like, “Oh my gosh, this is exactly what I need,” then you probably
should think about incorporating it. Here’s where that famous quote, “Everything should be
made as simple as possible, but not simpler” fits nicely.
---
Calendar
If you have lots of appointments, irregular chunks of time, or things to remember on certain
dates then using a calendar is basically mandatory. It’s very difficult to be intentional with your
time if you don’t know how much of it you have available.
Time Blocking
Time blocking is a technique where you schedule out chunks of time to focus on specific tasks.
It's kind of like making an appointment with yourself. Works well with a calendar.
Project Planning
I often have multiple complex projects going at once that are too much to keep track of in my
simple weekly and daily plans. To solve this issue, I store my projects in a separate place where I
break the action steps down into tiny manageable pieces and organize them along with any
other relevant information to the project.
I do this in Dynalist because it’s the best outlining tool I’ve found, but if your projects are simple
enough you can just do them on another sheet of paper or note document.
With this setup, I can just reference how much time I want to work on the project in my daily or
weekly plan. When it's time to get to work, I just open my project outline and take the steps
I've outlined (if I haven’t outlined what needs to get done, that’s usually first).
The trick with projects is to do your best at limiting your work in progress. If you try to put too
many meals in the oven at once, you’re going to burn something.
Routines
I use routines to neatly wrap up a bunch of tasks together. I have a morning routine, an evening
routine, a workday startup routine, a workday shut-down routine, and multiple recurring work
routines. For most people a morning and evening routine are enough and can be quite the
game changer.
For daily routines I recommend implementing them one at a time, tracking it as a habit in your
week plan, and only working another once you've internalized the first one. For weekly
routines, I'd just add it to your week plan as a task. If you've got a ton of weekly routines, you
can even add a separate part to your week plan to separate your routine tasks from your MIT's
and unique one-off general tasks.
Templates
I use pre-made templates created using text-expander software so that I can quickly create the
structure of my plans or checklists for routine tasks. It’s a bit of an investment up front, but
becomes a big time saver over the long haul.
Extra Information
I add a bit more information to my daily and weekly plans than what I showed here. So for
example, on my daily plans I like to create separate sections for appointments (where I write
down the appointment name and time) and notes (where I put anything I learned or observed
so that I can see it when I review). I just like having everything on one sheet that can serve as
my control system for the day. Feel free to change the structure and content of the plans to
best suit your needs.
Reviews
Reviewing is sort of already built into this system since when you make a new week plan you'll
have to look over your previous entries to see what it needs to move forward. But it can be
useful to take a little time to reflect on the day/week/quarter to celebrate your wins and to see
what you can learn from and improve. Here’s my weekly review checklist:
● Go back through this week's entries and review what you accomplished.
● List your top accomplishments for the week.
● How did you progress on your weekly MIT's?
● What are some lessons that you learned and how will you change your behavior moving
forward?
PRODUCTIVITY SUMMARY
To summarize, we are using productivity practices to help you cultivate authentic and
meaningful status in life so you no longer need to rely upon the virtual status that porn offers.
The recommended order of priorities is to focus on self-management (self-talk, journaling,
planning), energy-management (rest, exercise, nutrition), and core responsibilities (school,
work, family). Once you are doing alright in these areas, you will want to expand your focus to
higher level goals that allow you to build the kind of status or lifestyle that will allow you to live
a life you don't want to escape.
To keep yourself focused, you will use a weekly and daily planning practice where you track
your core habit changes, prioritize your tasks, and identify any critical points that will make or
break your success.
Putting it all together
Goal: Follow the checklist to put your Reboot Regimen Together
So now that we’ve gone through the different pieces, you need to make decisions about what
exactly your reboot regimen looks like. Here’s a checklist you can use to help you put it all
together:
● Decide where you are going to do your self-talk journaling (Notebook? Digital?)
● Decide when you are going to do your self-talk journaling (morning, evening etc.)
● Pick which energy management disciplines you are going to enact (I wouldn’t do more
than 3) and be specific about their implementation (if you are going to walk, when are
you going to walk? Etc.)
● Decide where you are going to record you weekly and daily plans (Notebook? Digital?)
● Decide when you are going to generally do your planning (every morning, night before
etc.)
● Create your first week plan
● Create your first day plan
You aren’t going to be perfect. That’s okay. This just gives you something to talk about and
grow from in your self-talk ritual!
Connection
I've heard it said that the opposite of addiction is connection. I don't quite agree with that, I
believe the opposite of addiction, if indeed you can even claim an opposite of it, is truth.
Regardless, I agree with the sentiment of how important connection is.
Porn use is a very isolating experience. It's something that is overwhelmingly done in secrecy
and causes someone to withdraw from greater communion and intimacy with others.
Building meaningful connections with others can be crucial to constructing a life where porn
has no place. Getting out to socialize with friends or spending time with family can make a
major difference.
However, there's a special kind of connection that can be particularly useful during the
rebooting phase. This is the connection with like-minded peers who are also going through a
similar process.
I know that for me personally, connecting with others through the online porn recovery forums
played a key role in my ability to leave porn behind. There are many of these kinds of online
communities and joining one could be of great benefit to you on your journey.
To facilitate this kind of connection, I've started the Vanguard community. This is a community
for men who are looking to flip the script on their escapist habits and live on the front lines of
their life so that they can become men that they admire. Not surprisingly then, a big focus
within this community is on quitting porn.
This community gives you weekly access to calls with me along with a private chat forum for
everyone to share support, inspiration, and accountability. If this sounds like something you'd
be interested I highly recommend you check it out here.
Inner Work
Sometimes the split between the "porn brain" and the "real you" runs very deep. Many guys
today have huge disconnects between their higher ideals and their primal sexual impulses.
Repairing this split is no easy task and requires you to do some significant inner work. Not only
can this include examining and upgrading your beliefs and values but can also require you learn
how to interact and work with yourself in new and more effective ways.
I've mentioned previously that self-talk is the heart of your self-management. Well, your
self-talk is only going to be as effective as your ability to understand yourself in the first place
and know what to say in response. This is where learning plays an important role in your inner
work. There are hundreds of self-help books out there and educating yourself on better modes
of operation can be a real game changer.
This is the kind of stuff that I've looked at extensively in my other work. Understanding topics
such as sexual transmutation, masculinity, sexual dynamics, mindset, belief systems,
overcoming rationalizations and similar topics can supercharge the effectiveness of your
self-talk.
I highly recommend you can check out my YouTube channel, my NoFap Academy porn recovery
course, and simply subscribe to my mailing list. I'm always releasing updated content and
currently have some pretty big stuff brewing.
Professional Support
Sometimes the very best thing that you can do is to get yourself some professional support. If
you don't want to slog an indefinite period of research combined with trial and error, then
getting the help of a trained professional can do a ton for your success.
The trick with rebooting is to find someone who understands the problem and is willing to truly
HELP you with it. The crazy thing is that many sex therapists think that porn is great for you.
They believe the problem isn't your porn use, it's just that you are filled with SHAME about your
porn use.
So, your typical sex therapist will simply try to convince you to keep using porn and just drop
the shame around it. I think a big reason for this is because many sex therapists simply got out
of school before much of the scientific literature proving the issues of porn use was developed
(If you’re shaky on the science yourself you could probably get a lot from checking out
yourbrainonporn.com).
Now, there definitely are some good therapists out there though if you are willing to look for
them but you just need to make sure that you watch out for someone who is just going to try
and get you to normalize something that truly is not serving you well.
An alternative to therapy is coaching. This is what I offer. Coaching is more proactive and
directive than therapy and often requires a bigger investment. If you are truly ready to change
as rapidly and effectively as possible, then coaching is probably the right move. If you are still
back and forth about seriously quitting porn but are very troubled by it, then therapy might be
a better fit.
If you want to find out more about my coaching, then check out my coaching page and hit me
up!
Closing Thoughts
I hope you found this guide insightful and useful. You can absolutely quit porn and live as a man
you admire. The heart of this process is choosing to value yourself enough to show up and work
for your own benefit. You are worth this effort and worthy of the reward. If you have any
questions, comments, or feedback, feel free to email me at [email protected].
Stay sharp,
Mark Queppet