Angle 3: Formulas for Success

Formulas for Success: Discovering Your Unique Code for Thriving

TL;DR

Success isn’t about hacks or hustling harder. It’s about aligning with timeless natural laws and proven practices that make life flow in your favor. At Paradigm Rhyme, we call these codes—formulas that dissolve resistance, amplify energy, and make success repeatable. Everyone’s code looks a little different, but the process of finding yours is universal.


How Angle 3 Fits With the Others

If you’ve been following along in this series, you know we’ve already explored Angle 1: You & the World Around You and Angle 2: Paradigm. Think of them as the foundation and the operating system.

Here’s the truth: you can’t just drop good code into a bad system and expect it to run smoothly. If your hardware—your body, nervous system, and mind—is fried, even the best formulas won’t stick. And if your operating system—the paradigms, beliefs, and unconscious patterns running in the background—is outdated, the code won’t execute as intended.

That’s why Formulas for Success is Angle 3. Once your instrument is tuned (Angle 1) and your paradigm upgraded (Angle 2), these codes land deeper and hold longer. They shape how you experience life moment-to-moment, and they reinforce the paradigm you’re already running on.

Think of these formulas as the software layer. They don’t replace the system—you still need good hardware and a solid OS—but they transform raw potential into real, repeatable results.


Why Formulas Matter

We live in a culture obsessed with hacks. “Top 10 ways to optimize your morning routine.” “The 5-minute trick that billionaires swear by.” “Biohack your way to focus.” If any of those really worked long-term, we’d all be walking around enlightened, energized, and effortlessly successful. But most people I meet are still burned out, anxious, and trying to force outcomes.

Here’s why: hacks don’t change the system. They’re like trying to put a turbocharger on an engine that hasn’t had an oil change in five years. It might rev louder for a minute, but eventually the whole thing seizes up.

Formulas are different. They’re not gimmicks. They’re not shortcuts. They’re timeless principles of how life actually works—principles the sages and yogis understood thousands of years ago, and that modern psychology and neuroscience are now catching up to.

Take gratitude, for example. The Stoics talked about cultivating contentment with what is. Yogic philosophy pointed to non-attachment as a path to freedom. Today, Harvard studies show that two weeks of gratitude journaling measurably increase optimism and reduce doctor visits. Different cultures, different eras, same formula: attention + appreciation = resilience and joy.

Here’s the kicker: formulas multiply when applied correctly. Think of them as codes that interact with your body (hardware) and your paradigm (operating system). When you practice them consistently, they don’t just add up—they compound. They unlock energy, dissolve resistance, and make the game of life a lot smoother.

This is why Formulas for Success matter. They’re not quick fixes, they’re operating instructions. Get them right, and you stop white-knuckling your way through life. You start flowing with it.


The Happiness Formula

Let’s start with the most chased, most misunderstood formula of them all: happiness. Most people treat happiness like a prize at the end of the marathon. Once I hit the number in my bank account, then I’ll be happy. Once my business scales, then I’ll be happy. Once I find the right partner, then I’ll be happy.

Here’s the truth: happiness isn’t the reward. It’s the foundation. Without it, even your biggest wins feel hollow.

I learned this lesson the hard way. When I was climbing the corporate ladder, I thought each promotion or pay raise would be the thing that finally filled the gap inside. The external markers stacked up, but the internal satisfaction never arrived. It wasn’t until I began building practices of self-compassion, presence, and gratitude that success started to feel like success.

Neuroscience backs this up. When you practice gratitude, your brain literally rewires itself to release dopamine and serotonin—the same chemicals tied to motivation and joy. When you drop attachment and stop clinging to outcomes, your nervous system shifts from survival mode into flow. Happiness, it turns out, is not abstract. It’s trainable.

At Paradigm Rhyme, we use a simple equation:

Happiness = (Paradigm + Acceptance + Presence + Purpose) – Attachment

It’s not math you can plug into a calculator, but it’s a framework that works in the real world. Align your paradigm, practice acceptance, stay present, live with purpose—and release the death grip on how outcomes must look—and suddenly happiness stops being elusive. It becomes a baseline you can build on.

Because when happiness becomes your foundation, success stops being something you chase. It becomes something you create.


Redefining Success

Most of us grew up with a pretty narrow definition of success: money, titles, recognition, maybe a corner office with the skyline view. And don’t get me wrong—those things can be satisfying. But I’ve worked with enough executives, founders, and high performers to know that plenty of people who “make it” still feel empty inside.

The problem isn’t that success is bad. It’s that the old definition is incomplete. If your version of success is built on external validation alone, it will always feel fragile. You’ll keep moving the goalposts, chasing the next promotion, the next investment round, the next accolade. And every time you arrive, the finish line moves again.

Here’s what I’ve learned: real success is progress toward a worthy ideal. Not someone else’s definition. Yours. For me, that shift happened when I stopped measuring myself only by corporate advancement and started aligning my work with purpose. The external wins didn’t disappear—I still wanted growth, clients, and recognition—but suddenly those things were in service of something deeper, not substitutes for it.

When you redefine success around authenticity, the game changes. It stops being about climbing someone else’s ladder and becomes about building your own path. And here’s the paradox: when you stop hustling for the shiny outcomes and start aligning with what’s real, the external markers tend to follow anyway.

Failure also starts to look different. Instead of being a verdict on your worth, failure becomes feedback—information you can use to refine your formula. In other words: failure is mostly an illusion. The only way you truly fail is by living someone else’s definition of success.


Purpose × Passion

If redefining success sets the direction, then Purpose × Passion is the engine. It’s the overlap of what you love, what you’re good at, and what the world needs. When you find that sweet spot, energy multiplies.

Most people treat purpose and passion as two separate things. Purpose feels heavy—like duty, legacy, or obligation. Passion feels lighter—like hobbies, creative flow, or what you’d do for free. But when you bring them together, you get something sustainable. Purpose fuels passion with meaning. Passion fuels purpose with energy.

Think of it as a multiplier, not an addition:

Purpose × Passion = Sustainable Drive

I’ve seen this play out again and again. One client of mine had built a successful coaching practice, but she felt drained. She realized her purpose was guiding leaders, but her passion was creative expression. By weaving storytelling, poetry, and art into her coaching, her work stopped being a grind and started feeling alive. She didn’t just get more fulfillment—her business grew, because clients could feel the authenticity.

I’ve lived this formula too. When I was running on purpose without passion, I burned out. When I chased passion without purpose, I lacked direction. But when both clicked, the work became magnetic. Doors opened. People noticed. The effort felt less like effort, and more like flow.

Your formula won’t look exactly like mine—or anyone else’s. That’s the point. Authenticity is your ultimate success code.


Emotional Alchemy

Every entrepreneur, creator, or leader I’ve worked with eventually hits the same wall: emotions. Fear before the launch. Anger when something falls apart. Grief when a dream doesn’t unfold the way you hoped. Most people try to suppress these emotions, thinking they’re weaknesses or distractions. But here’s the truth: emotions are energy. And energy can be transformed.

That’s what I call emotional alchemy. It’s the process of turning difficult emotions into fuel for growth, creativity, and clarity. Instead of resisting fear, you learn to breathe into it and find the message it carries. Instead of being consumed by anger, you channel its intensity into creating boundaries or driving change. Instead of being stuck in grief, you allow it to open compassion and deepen your sense of purpose.

Neuroscience supports this. When you reframe emotions, you literally create new neural pathways in the brain. Fear that once triggered paralysis can, with practice, trigger curiosity or preparation. Anger that once erupted destructively can be rerouted into clear, assertive communication. This isn’t just mindset—it’s rewiring at the deepest level.

I’ve seen this shift change everything. A client once told me he dreaded pitching investors because of his fear of rejection. Through emotional alchemy, he learned to see fear not as a stop sign, but as a signal: “This matters. I care. My body is preparing me to rise.” His pitches transformed. Not because the fear disappeared, but because he transmuted it into presence and conviction.

The gold is always hidden in the shadow. When you stop running from dark emotions and start working with them, you unlock an endless well of energy. Fear becomes creativity. Anger becomes courage. Grief becomes wisdom. That’s emotional alchemy.


Tools to Thrive

Formulas are powerful, but they only take root through practice. You can understand gratitude in theory, but until you write it down, speak it, or feel it in your body, it remains an idea. That’s why thriving requires tools—practical practices that turn codes into lived experience.

Some of my go-to tools include:

  • Breathwork → Fastest way I know to reset the nervous system. Six minutes of coherent breathing can shift you from fight-or-flight into balance. I’ve used it before client calls, tough conversations, even mid-flight when anxiety hit. Every time, it brings me back online.

  • Meditation → Not about clearing your mind, but training your attention. Even ten minutes of noticing your breath or body sensations teaches you to stop being pulled by every external distraction.

  • Somatic Resets → Quick movements, shaking, or tapping to discharge stress your body holds. Animals do this naturally. Humans forget. But every time you give your body permission to reset, you prevent stress from calcifying into burnout.

  • Journaling → Sounds simple, but writing thoughts down creates space between you and them. A page a day has saved me more than a few sleepless nights.

I once walked into a boardroom after a tough morning where everything went wrong—late train, broken laptop, bad news text. Old me would’ve carried that stress into the meeting. Instead, I stepped aside, did a few minutes of breathwork, and reset my system. I walked in clear, grounded, and led with presence. The difference wasn’t subtle; the energy of the room shifted with me.

These tools are not extras. They’re the practices that make the formulas stick. Without them, codes remain theory. With them, they become embodied. And once embodied, they start reshaping your paradigm automatically.


The Law of Vibration

Here’s where things can sound “woo” if you’ve only heard it on Instagram, but let’s ground it in both ancient wisdom and modern science. The Law of Vibration says that everything is energy. Your thoughts, emotions, and even your physical body all vibrate at certain frequencies. And those frequencies influence the experiences, people, and opportunities you attract into your life.

At first glance, this can sound mystical. But think about it: neuroscience has shown that your brain is constantly predicting and filtering reality. If you’re tuned to fear, you literally see more threats. If you’re tuned to gratitude and possibility, your brain’s reticular activating system starts filtering the world to find matches. Energy shapes perception. Perception shapes choices. Choices shape results. That’s vibration in action.

I’ve lived this in my own journey. When I was laid off, my vibration was initially fear and scarcity. I thought I had to scramble to find the next safe job. But when I shifted—through breathwork, meditation, and reconnecting to purpose—suddenly doors opened that I never could have forced. The projects, people, and opportunities that came my way matched the energy I was holding.

I’ve seen it with clients too. One founder I worked with was pushing so hard for a corporate partnership that she was repelling the very relationships she wanted. Once she shifted her vibration—stepping into confidence and ease rather than desperation—the calls and connections started landing. Not because the universe magically delivered, but because her energy changed the way she showed up, spoke, and built trust.

The yogis talked about vibration thousands of years ago. The Yoga Sutras point to samskaras—energetic imprints that shape experience. Zen teachings emphasize dropping resistance so you can flow with reality. Even Jesus said, “Ask and it will be given to you”—a vibration principle if there ever was one.

When you understand vibration, you realize it’s not about forcing outcomes. It’s about tuning yourself. Like a radio, you attract what you’re broadcasting.


Building

Your

Formula

Here’s the liberating truth: there is no one-size-fits-all formula for success. If there were, every self-help book, productivity hack, and motivational seminar would have already solved the problem. Your formula won’t look exactly like mine—or anyone else’s. And that’s the point.

Formulas for success are deeply personal. They’re about authenticity—living in alignment with who you actually are, not who you think you “should” be. Some people thrive with highly structured routines. Others need flexibility and freedom. Some find energy in groups, others recharge in solitude. The work isn’t to copy someone else’s formula—it’s to uncover your own.

Here are a few prompts to help you start sketching yours:

  • What energizes me naturally? Pay attention to the activities that light you up versus the ones that drain you.

  • Where do I feel most authentic? Notice the environments, people, and practices where you feel fully yourself.

  • What practices reliably bring me back to center? Think breathwork, journaling, movement—tools that reset your system when life throws curveballs.

  • What outcomes actually matter to me? Strip away the “shoulds” inherited from culture, family, or social media.

The process is iterative. You don’t discover your formula overnight—it evolves as you grow. What worked for you last year may no longer fit today. And that’s not failure, that’s proof you’re alive and adapting.

When you treat life as an experiment, you give yourself permission to test and refine your code. Every reflection, every practice, every course correction is a line of code shaping your unique operating system.

Authenticity isn’t just nice to have—it’s the ultimate success code.


Why This Matters Now

It’s tempting to think all of this—formulas, codes, vibration, emotional alchemy—is just “personal development.” But it’s much bigger than that. The way we live, work, and create in 2025 demands a new approach to success.

The stats paint the picture clearly:

  • 83% of U.S. workers report workplace stress (OSHA).

  • Depression and anxiety cost the global economy $1 trillion per year in lost productivity (WHO).

  • Half of U.S. adults live with high blood pressure and most don’t even know it (CDC).

On paper, humanity is producing more than ever before. AI is coding, diagnosing, even creating art. But what’s the cost? Anxiety is spiking, burnout is normal, and many people feel like they’re running faster but getting less fulfillment .

That’s why these formulas matter. The old game was about more output—work harder, produce faster, chase external success. The new game is about alignment. Machines can out-produce us in countless ways. But they can’t feel, they can’t intuit, they can’t rewire trauma or transmute grief. Our edge as humans is our ability to live consciously—to tune our hardware, upgrade our paradigm, and apply the right codes.

This isn’t just about feeling better (though that’s a worthy goal). It’s about creating a life—and a society—that actually works. When you practice these formulas, you don’t just get personal breakthroughs. You show up differently in your relationships, your business, and your community. You lead with clarity instead of fear. You create from authenticity instead of ego.

In a world drowning in hacks, speed, and surface-level success, this is the deeper revolution: learning to thrive by design.


Your Code, Your Life

Formulas for success aren’t abstract—they’re daily operating instructions. They’re the patterns that help you turn chaos into clarity, resistance into flow, and pressure into purpose.

When your hardware (body, mind, nervous system) is tuned, and your operating system (paradigm) is upgraded, these codes are the software that brings everything to life. They don’t just help you “get by.” They help you thrive.

Your formula won’t look like mine. It won’t look like anyone else’s. And that’s exactly the point. The closer you get to your authentic code, the more life starts working with you instead of against you.

Because in the end, success isn’t about chasing what looks good on the outside. It’s about discovering and living the formula that makes you come alive on the inside. And when you do that, the external wins have a way of showing up too.

Authenticity is the ultimate success code. The invitation now is simple: start experimenting, start aligning, and start writing yours.

Angle 2: Paradigm, The System Beneath Everything

TL;DR (for my fellow high-performers who skim first, then maybe circle back later):

Your life runs on a hidden operating system called paradigm. It’s built from your nervous system (which equates “change” with “danger”), the culturescape you grew up in, and the ego that will do anything to protect the familiar. That’s why willpower and New Year’s resolutions rarely stick — the old code pulls you back.

At Paradigm Rhyme, we break it down into six parts: Beliefs, Stories, Habits, Body, Relationships, and Results. If you don’t shift the paradigm underneath, your outcomes will keep looping. Change the paradigm — through somatic practices, mindset rewiring, and conscious design — and you stop settling for “good enough.” You start living as the author of your life, not the operator of old programming.

 

The Paradigm System

Your nervous system is always trying to keep you safe. But “safe” to the nervous system usually means “don’t change.” It wants you to stick with the familiar, even if the familiar is not serving you. Growth feels risky to the body. Layered on top of that is our conditioning. Every one of us is shaped by a culturescape — the beliefs, expectations, and “rules” of the families, communities, and societies we grew up in. These cultural codes silently train us in what’s “normal,” what’s acceptable, and what’s possible.

then there’s the ego. The ego is a mental construct, designed to protect itself. Change to the ego feels like death, so it resists by generating fear. It pushes us back toward the known, even if the known is exactly what’s keeping us stuck. Together, the nervous system, the culturescape, and the ego create a powerful inertia toward the status quo. Which is why so many people find themselves repeating the same cycles year after year, wondering why progress feels impossible. This is where Paradigm comes in. Paradigm is the hidden force dictating almost everything in life. It’s the operating system running underneath your thoughts, actions, and results.

 

The Six Parts of a Paradigm

At Paradigm Rhyme, we break a paradigm into six interconnected parts:

The Four Primary Factors

  • Beliefs: Mental programs that shape what you see as possible.
  • Stories: The narratives you tell and retell that either trap you or free you.
  • Habits: The small daily actions reinforcing old cycles or opening new ones.
  • Body: The foundation where stress, trauma, and energy live, and where transformation begins.

The Two Reinforcing Outcomes

  • Relationships: The people and communities who mirror and reinforce your paradigm, either expanding you or pulling you off center.
  • Results: The visible outcomes that show exactly what paradigm is running in the background.

These parts are not separate — they constantly interact and reinforce each other. Beliefs shape stories. Stories drive habits. Habits and stress live in the body. Your body and energy field shape the relationships you attract and the results you produce. Change in one dimension creates ripples in the others.

This is why Bob Proctor’s famous words are so true: “You don’t get what you want. You get what you are.” If your paradigm doesn’t shift, your results will keep looping, no matter how hard you hustle or how many goals you set.

 

Why Most Change Doesn’t Last

Every January, gyms fill up with new members. By February, most are gone. Professionals set ambitious career goals but stay in the same jobs for years. People commit to therapy, but sometimes cycle through the same stories for decades.

The reason is not laziness or lack of willpower. It is paradigm. If the paradigm underneath does not shift, the old code overrides the new intention. The subconscious always wins. Research from Yale shows that as much as 95 percent of human behavior is driven by subconscious programs (Bargh & Chartrand). That means most of what you do each day is autopilot. Only a tiny fraction of your choices are truly conscious. Unless the paradigm changes, new goals eventually get pulled back into the old gravity.

And here’s the tricky part: it can be hard to convince someone of this truth precisely because of how strong their paradigm is. The ego resists change because change feels like death to it. Conditioning tells us to defend the familiar even when the familiar is suffocating us. Paradigms are sticky, powerful, and invisible. When you start peeling away at the edges, creating cracks in the armor, the whole structure begins to unwind. That process can be uncomfortable, even painful. But on the other side of that unraveling is something most people have never actually touched: themselves.

If you wonder how some of the most headstrong figures in history — Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Hussein, or Ghaddafi — could justify their choices, it comes down to paradigm. And the same is true for figures like Robert E. Lee, Tom Daschle, Donald Trump, Elon Musk, or the most celebrated humanitarians and moral leaders. No exceptions. Paradigm explains it every time. There is always a logical rationale inside their operating system that makes the behavior make sense to them.

Change your paradigm and you change your life. Leave the paradigm untouched, and even the best strategies, intentions, or resolutions will get absorbed back into the old code.

 

The Role of the Body

A lot of self-help work stops at the mind. But your paradigm is not just mental — it is embodied. Anxiety feels like a tight chest. Shame shows up as a flush in the skin or a gut punch. Stress loops through tense shoulders and shallow breathing. These are not abstract concepts. They are physiological patterns playing out inside the body.

This is why somatic practices like breathwork, movement, meditation, and energy work are essential. They rewire the body’s role in the paradigm. Without addressing the body, the other shifts do not hold. And this is not woo — it is science. Research shows that somatic practices improve heart rate variability (HRV), help resolve trauma symptoms, and regulate emotional states (NIH, Polyvagal Theory, The Body Keeps the Score).

In a recent blog, Finding Balance in the Ultra-Modern World, I went deeper into this. The nervous system that once helped us survive predators in the jungle now struggles under emails, deadlines, social feeds, and information overload. At our core, we are mammals. When a gazelle escapes a lion, its body shakes off the adrenaline and resets. When a bear emerges from hibernation, it discharges built-up energy before resuming life. But humans often never complete the cycle. We stay in fight-or-flight mode, scrolling, stressing, and pushing forward without release.

Ancient cultures knew this. Whether through drumming, dancing, or storytelling around the fire, they built practices to move stuck energy and restore balance. Today, somatic therapies like Somatic Experiencing and breath-based practices are giving us the same tools, backed now by neuroscience and clinical research.

The body is not separate from the paradigm. It is the foundation. Change the body, and suddenly beliefs, stories, habits, relationships, and results all have space to shift. Leave the body out, and you are trying to run new software on old hardware.

 

Breaking Free from “Good Enough”

The real trap of an old paradigm is not total failure — it’s settling. Settling into jobs that look fine on paper but feel dead inside. Settling into relationships that are “ok” but not truly alive. Settling into routines that keep us safe but not fulfilled.

This is why so many high performers quietly confess they feel stuck. They’re running a paradigm built for survival and productivity, not one built for thriving. Until the paradigm changes, “good enough” becomes the ceiling.

 

Building a New Paradigm

The invitation of 2025 is to stop running the old code. The nervous system work, the somatics, the mindfulness — these are not isolated practices. They are tools to reprogram the paradigm.

When you start shifting beliefs, rewriting stories, building new habits, curating relationships, healing the body, and focusing on aligned results, life stops being an endless cycle of reaction. It becomes conscious creation.

This is not about rejecting the past. Many traditions, rituals, and lessons are worth carrying forward. But it is about stripping away what no longer serves, integrating the best of ancient wisdom and modern science, and writing a new paradigm that actually supports human thriving.

Because in the end, you don’t get what you want. You get the results your paradigm is wired for. Change the paradigm, change everything.