FIELD NOTES #006
The Map So Far
Six weeks ago, I said this wasn’t a brand.
It was lived experience—distilled into direction.
Now, you’ve seen that direction begin to take shape.
Being. Doing. Having. Sharing.
Four Coordinates.
One map.
The Four Coordinates Recap
Being:
The person you’re becoming when no one’s watching.
Not your image. Not your intentions.
Your trajectory.
Doing:
Your habits, your commitments, your patterns.
The things that reveal what you’re truly loyal to.
Not what you say you value—what your behavior proves.
Having:
The external reality that reflects your internal choices.
Peace or chaos.
Order or erosion.
Support or sabotage.
What you possess tells the truth.
Sharing:
The wake your life leaves behind.
Because you’re always transferring something.
Legacy isn’t a future concept.
It’s a present pattern.
These Coordinates aren’t a checklist.
They’re a terrain scan.
When someone is stuck, I don’t start with motivation.
I start here.
Nine times out of ten, the answers are already in the pattern.
The Compass didn’t come from a textbook.
It came from a thousand moments of regret, silence, repentance, and reconstruction.
It’s not a product I made.
It’s the system I needed when my life fell apart.
And now, it’s the system I walk with.
Coach with.
Pass on - one Field Note at a time.
Next, we begin unpacking The Seven Anchors -
The internal and environmental levers that shape your behavior, direction, and results.
They’re how we move once we know where we are.
But first -
Ask yourself:
Which of the Four Coordinates feels weakest right now?
Where are you avoiding clarity because it would require a change?
That’s where your work begins.
That’s where our next phase takes root.
Weekly Compass Question:
Which of the Four Coordinates—Being, Doing, Having, Sharing—currently feels out of sync with the life you’re trying to build?
Trail Task:
Pick one Coordinate and perform a “terrain scan”:
List three signs that it’s misaligned.
Name one action that would bring it closer to center.
Do it this week.
Resources from the Trail:
Book: ‘Essentialism’ by Greg McKeown
Until next week — Engage. Adapt. Overcome.
—Remy

