How you try things
Start small or go all in.
Either works.
Strict challenges
When "try it once" isn't enough. Strict challenges are structured with defined tasks and real accountability — for when you want to actually follow through.
Open challenges
Just dip your toe in. Open challenges are low-pressure and flexible — no schedule, no failure state. A gentle push toward the thing you've been putting off.
Solo or with a group
Try it alone, or make it a shared thing. Groups create a pull that's hard to replicate on your own — shared momentum, not peer pressure.
Three steps
"Someday" is not a day of the week.
Pick the thing
That thing you've said "I should really try that" about for months. Pick it. Choose open if you just want to see how it feels, or strict if you're ready to actually commit.
Try it alone or with people
Some things are better solo. Others land differently when someone else is doing it alongside you. Groups share a feed — progress, check-ins, the occasional nudge.
Show up
Mark it done. Post how it went. Watch the people in your group do the same. One check-in at a time, "someday" starts looking a lot like today.