Day 75/100 Still Fighting Flu
Still Fighting Flu
Stormin’
- https://www.verywellhealth.com/coffee-drug-interactions-11793374?hid=457216e8e65815a3ddc25f44a77d440633abf5a5&did=21214875-20260103&utm_source=verywellhealth&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=verywellhealth-today-newsletter&utm_content=010326&lctg=457216e8e65815a3ddc25f44a77d440633abf5a5&lr_input=9085174ae5a7228d76ec58081e335ebc5b99c694fb8f5d41ffd48eaa197495e4&utm_term=PM
- https://www.verywellhealth.com/quiet-habits-that-are-destroying-your-health-11867889?hid=457216e8e65815a3ddc25f44a77d440633abf5a5&did=21215284-20260104&utm_source=verywellhealth&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=verywellhealth-today-newsletter&utm_content=010426&lctg=457216e8e65815a3ddc25f44a77d440633abf5a5&lr_input=9085174ae5a7228d76ec58081e335ebc5b99c694fb8f5d41ffd48eaa197495e4&utm_term=AM
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Introduction: What this book is and how it’s positioned
WHY YOUR GOALS ARE SH*TTY! (David DuVall) is a provocative, profanity-forward “anti-fluff” goal-setting book in the broader self-help / execution / productivity lane. Its hook is simple: most people don’t fail from laziness—they fail because their goals are poorly designed, and the fix is better goal architecture + systems rather than motivation. The book is part of DuVall’s “Tao of Success” branding, leaning into blunt, combative clarity (“stop playing small,” “goals that don’t suck,” “no-bullshit practicality”). (Amazon)
Marketplace reality check: this title appears to be very new (Oct 2025), meaning there likely isn’t a deep, stable review-history yet across major platforms. (Amazon) Some listing pages currently show no customer reviews (which is common early on, especially for indie/KDP launches). (ThriftBooks)
1) The Strengths: what sets it apart in its category
- Aggressive differentiation via voice + title
- The profanity and “slap-you-awake” framing is designed to polarize on purpose—which can increase conversion among readers who hate gentle motivation talk and want something sharper. (Amazon)
- Clear enemy: “motivational fluff”
- The positioning is explicit: not manifestation, not quote-therapy—systems and execution are the promise. That’s a strong, modern angle in a crowded goal-setting market. (Amazon)
- Systems-over-motivation promise (high-demand theme)
- “Motivation dies” is a widely felt pain point; readers actively seek frameworks that work when energy is low—habits, feedback loops, constraints, tracking, and environment design.
- Action-oriented packaging
- The description claims chapter-end exercises, frameworks, tools, diagnostics, and rebuild steps, which is what practical readers want when they buy execution books. (Amazon)
- Broad appeal across multiple psychographic clusters
- Likely to resonate with:
- “No-BS” self-improvers (anti-woo, anti-inspo)
- Burned-out achievers who want fewer feelings and more levers
- Problem-solvers (engineering-minded readers) drawn to systems language
- Likely to resonate with:
2) The Weaknesses: where it could be improved (or where readers may push back)
Because review volume appears limited so far, these are high-probability friction points based on how this positioning typically performs in-market:
- Profanity is a filter (and a liability in some channels)
- It will turn off a meaningful slice of readers who otherwise want goal-setting help—especially older readers, faith-based readers, educators, corporate buyers, or anyone who reads self-help in public/around family.
- “Neuroscience/psychology” claims invite scrutiny
- When a book claims neuroscience, readers increasingly expect sources, precision, and restraint. If it uses “brain science” loosely, it risks credibility hits.
- Potential sameness beneath the swagger
- Many “anti-fluff” books repackage familiar ideas (SMART goals, habit loops, systems, tracking) with tougher language. If the frameworks aren’t meaningfully novel, some readers will feel the title overpromised.
- Tone risk: feels like being yelled at
- A “slap you awake” style can backfire if it reads as contempt for the reader rather than alliance with them.
- Over-broad promise
- “Make success inevitable” language can trigger skepticism if the book doesn’t clearly address:
- constraints (health, money, caregiving, disability)
- mental health realities
- structural barriers
Readers may call it unrealistic if it doesn’t include contingency planning.
- “Make success inevitable” language can trigger skepticism if the book doesn’t clearly address:
3) Why did they buy? what they likely liked / wanted
Based on the positioning and typical buyer intent for this sub-genre:
- They’re sick of motivation
- They want a method that works when they don’t “feel like it.”
- They suspect their goals are poorly designed
- Vague goals (“get in shape,” “make more money”) have failed them—so a goal diagnostic + rebuild is attractive.
- They want structure, not inspiration
- Checklists, systems, tracking, “blueprints,” and exercises feel like a plan, not a pep talk. (Amazon)
- They want permission to aim bigger
- The “stop playing small” promise sells well to readers who feel stuck in cautious, “realistic” goals. (Amazon)
- They want a strong voice
- Some readers buy tone as much as content: they want a coach who sounds like a tough friend, not a therapist.
4) Why they may not buy? what they likely disliked / avoided
- Title/cover embarrassment factor
- Many readers won’t buy or recommend a book with “SH*TTY” in the title—even if they’d like the content—because it’s harder to share socially or professionally.
- They want calmer, kinder guidance
- A sizable audience prefers encouragement over confrontation.
- They distrust “no-bullshit” branding
- Some readers interpret it as marketing posture that masks thin substance.
- They’ve already read the classics
- If readers have consumed GTD, Atomic Habits, 12 Week Year, etc., they may assume this is a remix unless clearly proven otherwise.
- They want specificity (their domain)
- If examples aren’t tailored (health vs money vs career vs relationships), readers can feel it’s generic.
If you’re writing a competing book: 7–10 critical elements to include (and mistakes to avoid)
1) Pick a tighter niche than “goals”
- Competing books win by owning a lane:
- “Goals for burned-out high-achievers”
- “Goals for diabetics/health rebound after 60”
- “Goals for solo seniors rebuilding life”
- Mistake to avoid: being “for everyone.”
2) Offer a measurable transformation with a clear timebox
- Example: “Rebuild one life domain in 30 days” or “12-week execution system.”
- Mistake to avoid: vague promises like “change your life” without a timetable.
3) Create a distinctive framework that’s easy to remember
- A named method + diagram beats generic advice.
- Include:
- Goal diagnosis
- System design
- Weekly cadence
- Tracking + review
- Reset protocol
- Mistake to avoid: “here are 27 tips” with no operating system.
4) Prove it with lived-feeling examples and failure cases
- Readers trust books that show:
- what didn’t work
- how the system handles relapse, sickness, chaos weeks
- Mistake to avoid: only showing perfect outcomes.
5) Include “low-motivation” and “low-energy” versions
- Provide “minimum viable days”:
- 5-minute plan
- 10-minute workout alternative
- bare-min tracking
- Mistake to avoid: assuming constant discipline.
6) Add templates people can actually use
- Checklists + worksheets + trackers:
- goal rewrite sheet
- constraint audit
- weekly review script
- obstacle pre-mortem
- habit/system map
- Mistake to avoid: exercises that feel like homework with no payoff.
7) Handle burnout and pacing explicitly
- Include:
- rest cycles
- sustainability rules
- “when to push / when to coast”
- Mistake to avoid: hustle-only messaging.
8) Make credibility frictionless
- If you mention neuroscience/psychology:
- keep claims modest
- cite responsibly (even light sourcing helps)
- Mistake to avoid: “brain science” as decoration.
9) Design for shareability
- DuVall’s title is polarizing; you can outcompete via:
- cleaner title
- quotable “rules”
- printable one-page system
- Mistake to avoid: a title that blocks gifting/recommending.
10) Build a companion ecosystem (lightweight, not overwhelming)
- A simple reader path:
- QR code to downloads
- optional email sequence
- 4-week challenge
- Mistake to avoid: upsell overload that makes the book feel like a funnel.
If you want, I can also generate a competing-book concept package (title options, subtitle matrix, table of contents, positioning statement, and a “why this beats the profanity-first angle” pitch) in the same blunt/practical market style.
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Yes, you can freeze liquid whey for longer storage (3-6 months) in ice cube trays or freezer bags, but for protein powder, freezing isn’t recommended as moisture causes clumping and texture changes; store powder in a cool, dry, airtight container instead to preserve quality and mixability. Freezing powder introduces condensation that affects texture, though nutrients remain intact. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Freezing Liquid Whey (After Cheese Making)
- Portion it: Freeze in ice cube trays for small amounts or large freezer bags for bigger batches.
- Label: Date and label the containers to avoid mix-ups.
- Thaw: Defrost in the refrigerator for best results, which usually takes less than 24 hours. [2]
Storing Whey Protein Powder (Supplement)
- Best Practice: Keep in its original airtight container or a sealed zip-top bag in a cool, dry place.
- Avoid: The freezer or refrigerator due to condensation, which leads to clumping and potentially spoilage.
- Why: Temperature fluctuations cause moisture to enter the powder, affecting its texture and mixability, even if nutrients aren’t lost. [1, 3, 4, 6, 7]
Freezing Protein Shakes
- Nutrients: Freezing a pre-mixed shake won’t destroy nutrients, but texture will change after thawing.
- Preparation: For best results, blend ingredients (minus powder) and freeze, then add powder and blend fresh in the morning. [4, 8]
[1] https://freerx.com/Blog/Details?s=%09Whey-Protein-Expire%09
[2] https://missourigirlhome.com/how-to-freeze-leftover-liquid-whey/
[3] https://earthchimp.com/blogs/news/can-you-freeze-protein-powder
[4] https://www.mensjournal.com/food/does-freezing-or-cooking-protein-powder-ruin-it
[5] https://www.facebook.com/groups/InstantPotCommunity/posts/1301274056633246/
[6] https://www.gainful.com/blogs/protein/everything-you-need-to-know-for-proper-protein-powder-storage
[7] https://www.vivolife.com/blogs/news/how-to-store-protein-powder-and-shakes
[8] https://www.vivolife.com/blogs/news/freezing-meal-replacement-shakes-is-it-okay
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