Take a look at a selection of the recent projects, designed to make an impact. This page documents active and developing initiatives. Each project reflects applied thinking, disciplined effort and long-term vision to become better
The 100-Day Self Care Project
Overview
The 100-Day Self Care Project is a personal commitment to steady, intentional progress.
It began during a period of transition. Direction felt uncertain and identity felt less defined than before. Rather than wait for clarity, I decided to create it.
The aim is not dramatic transformation in 100 days, rather to build momentum, one day at a time.
Why It Exists
There are moments in life when the path you expected shifts.
When that happens, it’s easy to feel stalled or disconnected from the person you thought you were becoming.
This project exists as a response to that feeling.
It is an attempt to rebuild confidence through small, repeatable actions by showing that progress does not require certainty, only consistency.
What It Involves
For 100 consecutive days, I commit to one intentional act of self-development.
That might include:
Improving physical wellbeing
Developing a skill
Reading and learning
Structured reflection
Taking one small professional step forward
The commitment is to show up daily, regardless of mood.
What I’m Learning
So far, this project has been less dramatic than I expected — and that’s probably the point.
Some days feel productive. Some feel ordinary. A few feel heavy. But showing up each day, even in small ways, has started to change how I relate to myself.
I’ve realised that progress often feels quiet. It doesn’t announce itself. It builds gradually in the background.
I’m also learning that confidence doesn’t always come before action. Sometimes it follows it.
More than anything, this project has reminded me that small, consistent effort creates a kind of steadiness which feels like a solid place to begin.
The Bigger Picture
The 100-Day Project is a practical tool. It began during a time when I felt slightly off-track. I decided to focus on something manageable with one intentional action each day.
Progress often feels quiet. It doesn’t come with a breakthrough moment or a sudden shift in identity. It builds gradually, in the background, through repetition. Some days feel productive, others feel ordinary, and a few feel heavy.
This is a way of rebuilding trust in myself through small, consistent actions. I don’t know exactly where it will lead, but I know that taking one step a day feels better than standing still
The Insights section contains reflections drawn from the experience by exploring themes of resilience, identity and growth through uncertainty.