The March 2026 Reset Report
Hi Reader,
February was a month focused on structure.
Across four posts, I explored how people rebuild after disruption, why conflict often continues after court orders are finalized, how solo professionals can design sustainable systems, and why the “grass is greener” mindset can quietly derail progress.
You will also begin seeing something new across the Elevatus platform. Each blog post moving forward will now include a short companion video. These videos will appear within the blog and on the Elevatus YouTube channel.
Many of these videos are delivered using an AI avatar. This allows me to produce thoughtful, structured content in a faster and scalable way while continuing to focus my time on writing, coaching, and developing new frameworks. Some people prefer reading. Others prefer video. This approach allows Elevatus to support both.
Another development currently underway is the creation of the RISE Community, which will be hosted on Skool.
RISE stands for: Resilience, Insight, Strategy, and Elevation. The goal of this space is to bring together individuals focused on personal growth, professional development, and co-parenting stability. It will include structured discussions, learning resources, and community engagement around the ideas explored in Elevatus.
Development is currently in progress, and we are targeting April for the official launch. More details will be shared soon.
Below are the highlights from February.
Published February 5
This article explains the foundation of Elevatus.
When major disruption occurs, effort alone does not restore stability. The internal systems that guide decisions, boundaries, and identity often stop working.
The post introduces transformational resilience and explains how the C2R2E Framework helps rebuild internal structure so people can adapt forward rather than trying to return to an outdated version of their life.
Key takeaway:
Resilience is not returning to who you were. It is building a new internal operating structure that fits your current reality.
Published February 6
Many solo professionals struggle not because they lack discipline, but because their work is not supported by a system.
This article outlines the One Person Ecosystem model, which organizes a solo business around a clear architecture that includes system design, content development, self-paced programs, AI operations, and user experience.
Instead of relying on constant effort, the system allows the work to operate with structure.
Key takeaway:
A one-person business becomes sustainable when the system carries the load instead of motivation.
Published February 16
Many parents assume conflict ends when a divorce case closes. In reality, conflict often increases after the court process ends.
This article explains why.
Most ongoing disputes are not about violations of court orders. They come from attempts to enforce expectations or preferences that the court never authorized.
Understanding the limits of court orders and shifting toward parallel parenting often restores stability faster than continued attempts to control the other household.
Key takeaway:
Courts enforce orders, not expectations.
Published February 27
When frustration builds, it becomes easy to believe that the solution is somewhere else. A different job. A different relationship. A different environment.
But many times the comparison is incomplete. We compare the problems we know with the imagined benefits of a situation we have not experienced.
The article explores how unaddressed patterns follow people from one environment to another.
Key takeaway:
Before changing environments, examine what behaviors or patterns may be repeating.