
Over the past few years, I’ve become increasingly familiar with Jesse Itzler’s work and the way he thinks about challenge, growth, and living life with intention. Many of you know that in 2023 I completed the 29029 Everesting event, and in 2024 I took on the 29029 Trail endurance event. Both were created by a company Jesse co-founded. Learning about the Jesse Itzler Misogi method has been especially inspiring for how to approach big health goals with intention and structure.
What I’ve learned through those experiences is that big, meaningful change never happens by accident. It happens through structure, intention, and stretching yourself. And that’s exactly what Jesse teaches.
I’ve been reflecting on Jesse’s yearly planning philosophy, including his Misogi, Kevin’s Rule, and his simple three-part annual plan, and I want to show you how to apply it to your own health goals so that six months from now, you can look back and say, “I actually did it.”
The Jesse Itzler Misogi is described as a once-a-year challenge that’s so difficult it has a 50% chance of failure. It’s designed to stretch your limits and transform your belief in what you can do.
For health goals, your Misogi does not need to be an ultra, a mountain, or anything extreme. It simply needs to push you outside your comfort zone, far enough that the process forces growth.
A Misogi should make you think:
“I’m not sure I can do this… but I think I want to try.”
Because here’s the truth:
When you train yourself to do something hard on purpose, everything else in your life feels easier.
Kevin’s Rule is named after Jesse’s friend Kevin who always says yes to new experiences. The concept is refreshingly simple:
This is powerful for heart health because positive experiences and novelty are directly linked to:
Mini-adventures create internal momentum. They reset your nervous system. They help you feel alive again which matters deeply when stress, monotony, or burnout are part of your health story.
These micro-adventures reduce stress naturally and chronic stress is one of the biggest contributors to cardiovascular disease.
And they work seamlessly with my “plan for obstacles” step (keep reading) since mini-adventures help you reconnect with your motivation when life starts feeling monotonous or heavy.
You cannot change everything all at once. Not sustainably, anyway.
Too much at once is the fastest path to discouragement.
This is where so many people derail, not from lack of effort, but from trying to do too much, too fast.
Jesse’s simplicity is brilliant:
That gives you 90 days to practice, repeat, adjust, stabilize, and actually integrate the habit before adding more. By the end of a year, you have four deeply rooted, meaningful changes, not twelve abandoned ones.
These are measurable, actionable, specific, and completely align with how to create an action plan:
Clear → Specific → Scheduled → Trackable.
Jesse organizes his year using three simple questions:
Most people focus only on #3… but the real change comes from doing all three together.
Let’s break it down.
Example:
“I will walk 100 miles total before the end of the year.”
Notice how different this is from:
“I should walk more.”
Your brain responds differently to concrete goals.
Other examples:
Example:
“I will try one new active hobby each month until I find one I love.”
Add one to your calendar every 8 weeks.
Start with ONE:
These small, consistent habits are what actually move the needle.
Let’s walk through how someone focused on improving heart health can start today.
People don’t fail because the plan is bad.
They fail because they never planned for real life.
For each habit, list:
Examples:
Obstacle planning transforms intention into follow-through.
Track your habits, check them off, and review monthly.
If something isn’t working, you revise – don’t quit.
Once a month:
Progress is rarely linear.
But with monthly review, it becomes consistent.
Success comes from clear goals, simple steps, intentional structure, and consistent reassessment.
3 Key Concepts:
This structure helps you:
As I’ve learned through my endurance events, big change doesn’t happen because we feel like it.
It happens because we set the intention, make a plan, and stay connected to why it matters.
You do not need perfection, you just need direction.
And this framework gives you exactly that.
All the best,
Lisa Nelson RD
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