The Line You Have To Cross
A field manual for men who are done drifting and ready to do the work. Not a self-help book. Not a motivational speech. A working document for the man who wants to rebuild something real.
Paperback · Kindle · Audiobook Coming Soon
The framework for men who are ready to cross.
Eleven areas. One direction. A field manual built for the man who refuses to stay on the wrong side of the line.
The Line
What the line is. Why most men never cross it. What it costs to stay on the wrong side.
Identity After Loss
Who you are when the roles you built yourself on are gone. How to rebuild from the inside out.
Radical Responsibility
The difference between what happened to you and what you are going to do about it.
The Cost of Passivity
What passivity actually takes from you. The people who pay for it when you choose to wait.
Purpose That Lasts
The difference between a goal and a mission. How to build a life around something that outlasts you.
Brotherhood
Why men fail in isolation. What real accountability looks like and where to find it.
Leading When You Have Nothing Left
Fatherhood, leadership, and the men who depend on you. Even when you feel empty.
Carrying The Standard
What it means to hold the line, shield your brother, and live for something greater than yourself.
This book is for you if —
- You are divorced or going through separation and don't know who you are anymore
- You have achieved success but feel empty underneath it
- You are drifting and you know it
- You want structure, accountability, and a brotherhood that holds you to a standard
- You are done making excuses and ready to do the actual work
- You want your life to mean something more than it does right now
This book is not for you if —
- You are looking for someone to validate staying where you are
- You want shortcuts, life hacks, or a formula that removes the hard work
- You are not willing to look honestly at where you have failed yourself
- You need to be comfortable while you grow
- You believe the problem is entirely someone else's fault
The line is not going to cross itself.
Start with the Field Assessment. Know where you stand. Then get the book and begin the work.