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Why 90% of Life Comes Down to Your Reactions - Day 1976 Barefoot Running

Why 90% of Life Comes Down to Your Reactions - Day 1976 Barefoot Running

May 25, 20264 min read

Why 90% of Life Comes Down to Your Reactions - Day 1976 Barefoot Running

Today on Day 1976 of my daily running streak, I covered another 10km in my barefoot-style shoes, bringing me to 19,760km of my 40,075km journey around the world. But the real distance I travelled was mental - revisiting a principle that has shaped how I approach every challenge, both on the road and in life.

I was thinking about Stephen Covey's 90-10 principle from "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People." The concept is deceptively simple: 10% of life is what happens to you, and 90% is how you react to it. When you're running every single day regardless of weather, health, or circumstances, this principle becomes your survival guide.

This morning, I could feel my emotions starting to spike before I'd even laced up my Vibram FiveFingers. Work pressures, family commitments, the relentless nature of this daily commitment - they were all pressing in. That's the 10% I can't control. But how I choose to process and respond to those pressures? That's entirely on me.

The 90-10 principle hit me years ago when I first read Covey's book, though I'll admit I can barely remember most of it now. But this one concept stuck because it's so immediately applicable. When you're committed to running every day for what will ultimately be a 16.5-year journey, you encounter that uncontrollable 10% regularly. Equipment fails. Weather turns savage. Your body protests. Life throws curveballs.

I remember one morning last winter when everything went wrong. My usual route was blocked by roadworks, my fitness tracker died, and I was already running late for work commitments. The old me might have used any of these as reasons to skip the run or at least to start the day in a foul mood. Instead, I recognised these as part of the 10% - things happening to me, not defining me.

My reaction became the key. I found an alternative route, ran without tracking the distance (trusting my internal clock), and accepted I'd need to adjust my morning schedule. That response transformed a potentially frustrating start into a reminder of my adaptability and commitment. The same external events, completely different day.

What fascinates me about this principle is how it applies to endurance challenges. When you're covering 10km daily in minimalist footwear, your feet are constantly adapting to different surfaces, weather conditions, and terrain. I can't control whether the pavement is wet, whether there's construction disrupting my route, or whether my legs feel heavy. But I can absolutely control how I respond to these conditions.

The difference between reacting and responding is crucial here. Reacting is immediate, emotional, often counterproductive. Responding is considered, purposeful, aligned with your larger goals. When I react to a difficult running day, I might cut it short or run with resentment. When I respond, I adjust my pace, modify my route, or use the challenge as mental training for tougher days ahead.

This principle extends far beyond running. In building my businesses - Operations Director and Runpreneur - I've learned that market conditions, client demands, and competitive pressures are largely outside my control. How I choose to adapt, pivot, and persist? That's where real progress happens.

The same applies to this fundraising mission. I can't control how many people see my daily videos or choose to support Great Ormond Street Hospital and BBC Children in Need. But I can control my consistency in showing up, my authenticity in sharing these daily reflections, and my commitment to completing all 40,075 kilometres regardless of external response.

Running barefoot-style has taught me that most discomfort is temporary and manageable if you respond rather than react. That initial shock of minimalist footwear on rough terrain could have ended this journey on day one if I'd reacted with panic or abandonment. Instead, I responded by gradually building strength, adjusting my gait, and trusting the adaptation process.

What strikes me most about the 90-10 principle is how it shifts your focus from victim to architect of your experience. Instead of asking "Why is this happening to me?" you start asking "How can I use this to move forward?" That mental shift is the difference between a streak that lasts weeks and one that spans years.

Every day of this journey reinforces this truth. With 20,315 kilometres still to go and a £1 million fundraising target to reach, I'll face countless uncontrollable variables. Weather systems, physical setbacks, life changes - they're all part of the 10%. My response to each of them will determine whether I complete this mission and, more importantly, whether I grow through the process or simply endure it.

The children benefiting from our fundraising efforts understand this principle instinctively. They can't control their medical conditions, but their responses - their resilience, courage, and hope - inspire everyone around them. They're living proof that how we react to circumstances shapes our reality far more than the circumstances themselves.

Tomorrow I'll lace up again for Day 1977, knowing that something unexpected will probably happen. But armed with the 90-10 principle, I'll be ready to respond with purpose rather than simply react with emotion.

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I am on a mission to raise £1,000,000 for children's causes by daily run-vlogging barefoot-style, covering the total distance of a lap around the world—40,075 km.

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