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 Day 1981: The Crab Bucket Effect - How Your Inner Circle Shapes Your Success

Day 1981: The Crab Bucket Effect - How Your Inner Circle Shapes Your Success

June 01, 20264 min read

Day 1981: The Crab Bucket Effect - How Your Inner Circle Shapes Your Success

Today marked day 1,981 of my consecutive running streak, taking my total distance to 19,810km with 20,265km remaining in this mission to circle the world and raise £1M for children's causes. As I ran through the familiar streets this morning, I found myself reflecting on something that's become increasingly clear over these past five and a half years: the people we surround ourselves with fundamentally shape who we become.

The crab bucket analogy hit me particularly hard during today's run. If you've never seen it yourself, imagine a bucket full of crabs at the seaside. Each crab desperately tries to escape, but the moment one gains any traction toward the top, the others instinctively pull it back down. It's a brutal but accurate metaphor for how some people respond to others' success or ambition.

When I started this 40,075km journey, I quickly learned who belonged in my bucket and who didn't. Some people immediately understood the mission - the daily discipline required, the long-term commitment, the vision of saving children's lives through sustained action. Others saw it as madness, constantly questioning why I'd put myself through such an ordeal.

The difference wasn't just about belief in barefoot running or fundraising. It was about fundamental mindset. The people who supported this mission were those who looked at challenges and asked "how can we make this work?" rather than "why won't this work?" They were the ones applying what I've come to understand as the 90/10 principle.

This principle has become central to my daily practice. Ten percent of what happens to me each day is completely outside my control - weather, traffic, unexpected obstacles during my run, technical issues with equipment. The remaining ninety percent is entirely within my control: how I choose to respond to those circumstances.

Yesterday's run was a perfect example. Heavy rain started just as I stepped outside, my usual route was blocked by roadworks, and my filming equipment was acting up. The ten percent - completely beyond my influence. But my response? That was pure choice. I could have seen it as a sign to cut the run short, to skip the vlog, to treat it as a "bad day." Instead, I adjusted my route, embraced the rain as part of the story, and worked around the technical issues. The result was still 10km completed and another episode in the archive.

The people I choose to spend time with operate from this same framework. They don't dismiss challenges or pretend everything's easy, but they instinctively move toward solutions rather than dwelling on problems. When I talk about the physical demands of running daily for over five years, they ask about recovery strategies and nutrition rather than warning me about injury risks. When I mention fundraising targets, they suggest new approaches rather than questioning whether it's achievable.

This isn't about surrounding yourself with yes-people who never challenge your thinking. The best supporters I've found are those who push me to think deeper, plan better, and stay committed to what matters. They're positive in their orientation toward life, but realistic about what success requires.

Looking at the five people I spend most time with outside my family, I can see how their influence shapes my daily decisions. My business partner approaches every operational challenge as a puzzle to solve. My running contacts share strategies for maintaining consistency rather than excuses for missing days. The fellow entrepreneurs in my network discuss long-term vision and systematic progress rather than getting caught up in daily fluctuations.

The shift isn't always comfortable. There have been relationships that naturally faded as my priorities became clear. Some people found my daily commitment inconvenient or my mission unrealistic. Others struggled with the discipline required and projected their own limitations onto my goals. Recognising these patterns and making conscious choices about where to invest my energy has been crucial.

What strikes me most after 1,981 consecutive days is how much mental energy gets freed up when you're not constantly defending your choices or managing other people's negativity. Instead of spending time explaining why I run daily or justifying the fundraising target, I can focus that energy on execution, improvement, and impact.

The children's causes I'm supporting don't benefit from my doubts or from surrounding myself with people who amplify uncertainty. They benefit from sustained, consistent action driven by clear purpose and supported by people who understand that extraordinary outcomes require extraordinary commitment.

As I continue toward the remaining 20,265km and work toward that £1M target, the lesson becomes clearer with each passing day. Success isn't just about individual discipline or motivation. It's about creating an environment where positive action becomes natural, where challenges are met with solutions, and where the people around you reinforce your best intentions rather than your worst fears.

The question isn't whether you'll face adversity - you will. The question is whether you'll face it surrounded by crabs pulling you down or eagles lifting you up.

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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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