The hardest part isn’t knowing what to do.
It’s living with the fact that we don’t
Knowledge isn’t power.
It’s punishment without action.
I came across something powerful recently, and it instantly made me think of what we’re all doing here with Supra Human.
There’s an old novel by Russian philosopher P.D. Ouspensky called The Strange Life of Ivan Osokin. It tells the story of a man who looks back on his life, weighed down by regret and missed opportunities, and begs for a chance to relive it. In desperation, he seeks out a mysterious Magician, who agrees to send him back to the start of his life, this time with the memory of every mistake he’s ever made.
You’d think that would be enough to change everything.
But before sending him back, the Magician gives a warning: memory alone won’t save you. Unless you truly change yourself, you’ll make the same mistakes again.
And sure enough, even with full knowledge of what went wrong the first time, Ivan slips back into the same patterns. His habits, excuses, and lack of discipline pull him down the same roads he swore he’d never walk again.
The lesson here is simple, yet uncomfortable.
What this story shows is something deeply human.
Knowledge alone isn’t enough.
In fact, knowing what we should do while repeatedly choosing not to erodes trust with ourselves.
We can know what to do.
We can even know what not to do.
But without deliberate action, discipline, and effort, we are destined to repeat the same cycles over and over again.
As Ouspensky himself put it:
“Man repeats his life in the same way as he repeats the same mistakes.”
In other words, without changing how we act, insight alone just leads us back to the same outcomes.
The Supra Human Difference
And this is precisely why our program works.
For a long time, many of us believed that just knowing better would be enough. But until daily actions changed, nothing changed.
Supra Human is not just information.
It is structure.
It is accountability.
It is daily commitment.
It’s what Ivan Osokin never had.
It is the mechanism that turns remembering the mistakes of the past into actually breaking free from them.
Acting First, Feeling Second
What finally shifted came when we committed to consistency, structure, and holding ourselves accountable, often through small, uncomfortable choices.
The alarm going off at 6 AM and choosing movement over comfort.
Every macro met.
Every workout and step completed.
Every check-in completed with honesty and intent.
We don’t wait to feel ready.
We act first, and let discipline catch up.
Each one of these choices is a powerful vote for the person we are becoming, not the one we are choosing to leave behind.
Over time, those votes compound.
We are building the future self we’ve earned.
It’s like standing at a crossroads.
One path leads back into the old cycles.
The other leads into the life we’re building now.
The map is in front of us, but only action takes us forward.
We’re building something different here, a future where we’re no longer chained to who we used to be.
Ivan Osokin was given another chance, and still walked the same path.
We don’t need another lifetime or perfect clarity.
We need the courage to choose differently,
and to act before the old patterns pull us back.
Breaking the cycle isn’t about insight.
It’s about execution.
The best time to start was yesterday.
The best time to recommit is right now.
This is our Action Will.
The Real Reason We Keep Repeating Our Mistakes
A Reflection by Alex Bush
© 2025 | a-bush.com
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