 This is a fundamental misunderstanding of successful people sometimes. If you look at anybody who's achieving great things, you will see that they've been able to enact what I'm about to tell you in their life. So if we're looking at a gym that's far across town, it is not a matter of laziness or not. It is a matter of pragmatism. Will I consistently go to this gym every single day if there's going to be traffic jams? It's going to take me a long time to get there. I have to get in my car and drive across town. And the answer is I'll probably get there the first week when I'm still excited about it and I'm committed. What will happen the second week when life gets busy? I'm going to start skipping days, maybe just one at first and then another. And pretty soon I'm not going to that gym at all anymore and I've just given up on my martial arts training. So this is what's called friction. The chances of me consistently doing something are so much lower. And so if we want to do something consistently over time, we want to remove all of that friction.