If you need caffeine just to feel human… this is for you....
Everybody loves the “5AM grind” clip.
Nobody shows the part where you feel like a dead battery.
First responders aren’t tired like normal people are tired.
You’re wired-tired.
Sleep’s chopped up. Stress is constant.
And yeah… half your blood type is caffeine and/or ni****ne.
And listen...I’m not here to act holy about it. At this stage of my life, running a business and having a two year-old and a newborn, I would legitimately die without caffeine daily
Do I want you living on pre-workout + energy drinks? Hell No.
But I also live in reality.
Sometimes you wake up smoked… and you train.
Not because you’re “motivated.”
Because you’re the type of man who doesn’t let tired decide the standard. If you operated based on your feelings, then you would've accomplished a lot less in your life, but that's also why you need a system
Here’s the shift-worker truth:
âś… Some days you feel great.
✅ Most days you don’t.
âś… The men who stay in shape train anyway (with a plan that fits real life).
That’s why Mission Ready exists.
One program, three outcomes always: burn fat, build muscle, increase performance so you can be fit for duty in life: the phases just change what we emphasize most.
If you’re stuck in the caffeine + chaos loop, you don’t need more hype.
You need Phase 1 of our program: stabilize the system so your body responds again.
DM me “MISSION” and I’ll tell you which phase you need first.
Coach Stefan Kunz
🚨Helping Everyday Heroes Get Fit For Duty & Life👮🏻‍♂️👨🏼‍🚒👩🏻‍⚕️
https://www.pursuit-hp.com/home
Stefan has dedicated the last 11+ years to fine-tuning his skills as a fitness, health, mindset, and performance coach. Stefan started his career as a trainer when he served in the United States Air Force as a Physical Training Leader for 5 years. He is currently the CEO and owner of Pursuit Health & Performance, a premium online and in-person training service that specializes in fitness and nutri
I’m busy.
Business doesn’t shut off at 5.
Decisions follow me home.
The weight doesn’t magically disappear when I walk through the door.
But here’s what I refuse to do:
Disappear behind it.
My family sees me tired sometimes.
They see the long days.
They see the moments where I’m carrying more than I say out loud.
What they also see — because I make it non-negotiable:
Me at the table.
Me on the floor with my kids.
Me choosing presence even when my head is full.
Here’s the truth most men miss:
Being busy isn’t the problem.
Letting busyness become an excuse is.
I don’t wait for life to “slow down” to show up.
I build my body, my energy, and my standards so I can show up — consistently.
Because success that costs you your family
isn’t success.
It’s just a different kind of failure.
If you’re building something meaningful
and still refuse to be a ghost at home —
DM me “PRESENT.”
Look — if you’re a cop or a firefighter,
you cannot cut the same way everyone else does.
Most fat loss advice is built for people who:
- Sit at a desk
- Control their stress
- Know exactly what their day looks like
- Don’t have to perform when things go sideways
That’s not your job.
Those people can slash carbs, drag themselves through the day,
and still get their work done.
You can’t.
If you’re on patrol or on the line,
you don’t get to choose when things pop off.
You don’t get to say, “I’m low on fuel today.”
You still have to perform.
That’s why, for cops and firefighters,
a cut has to be more strategic.
Slower.
More controlled.
Built around performance — not suffering.
You need carbs to:
- Stay sharp
- Move well in gear
- Handle long calls
- Recover between shifts
If you get too aggressive, you don’t just feel tired —
you feel flat, irritable, and useless halfway through the shift.
And then what happens?
Training falls off.
Patience at home disappears.
You end up quitting the cut altogether.
That’s not a discipline problem.
That’s a bad plan.
For first responders, fat loss has to:
- Protect performance
- Account for unpredictable shifts
- Fuel the job first, the mirror second
If you want to lean out without compromising your ability to work —
DM me “SHREDDED.”
I’ll help you build a cut that actually works for cops and firefighters.
A lot of active duty guys don’t have a “training problem.”
They have a schedule problem.
�A kid + marriage + shift chaos problem.
�And a nutrition problem they’ve been dodging because it’s easier to just “train harder.”
In this clip Brian says it straight:
* Down 10+ lbs in a couple months
* 9:00 mile → 7:00 mile
* Running was his biggest hurdle for his PFT
* We adjusted the plan to fit his real life
* And the biggest takeaway: nutrition is 90% of the fightďż˝
The part most dudes miss:�It’s not the “perfect program.”
It’s having a plan that still works when you’re tired, busy, and the day goes sideways…�and a coach who actually adjusts it instead of judging you.
If you’ve got a test coming up (PFT / academy / PAT / fitness standards) and you’re sick of guessing…
DM me “PFT” and I’ll tell you what I’d do in your situation.
Every man is born wanting to test himself.
How far can I go?
How hard can I push?
What am I actually made of?
You felt it as a kid — jumping, racing, wrestling.
Not to beat your friends…
but to find your edge.
Then life shows up.
Work. Bills. Shifts. Stress.
And we settle.
“Good enough” job.
“Fine” marriage.
“Not that bad” body.
And we stop asking the most important question a man can ask:
👉 What am I capable of?
That’s when the fire dies.
That’s when anxiety, numbness, and cheap escapes creep in.
Not because you’re weak —
but because you stopped testing yourself.
Fulfillment doesn’t come from comfort.
It comes from effort.
From leaving it all on the court — in your body, your marriage, your leadership.
I refuse to reach the end and say, “I could’ve done more.”
So I choose discomfort on purpose.
Because pride is earned — not given.
If this hit, it’s because that fire is still in you.
DM me “CAPABLE” if you’re done settling and ready to find out what you’re made of.
The worst thing about the way you look, feel, and perform, is you used to have higher standards.
You telling yourself, “ it’s not that bad. There’s a lot of guys in my department that are in way worse shape than me” is a terrible excuse and not a pass
You’re the same man that you used to be on the inside, you’ve just chose to settle for mediocrity. There’s zero reason you shouldn’t be a fricking unit.
You’ll die for them.
Cool…it’s easy for men to say that
But most men only say that because it costs nothing today.
Your kids don’t learn “values” from what you post or preach (especially if you’re unalive)
�They learn from what you do when you’re smoked… when you’re stressed… when nobody’s watching.
Because that’s the real you.
If the real you is:
* couch + phone
* “I deserve this” beer
* drive-thru dinner
* energy drink + ni****ne “to take the edge off”
* “I’ll start Monday”
…then that’s what they’ll copy.
And one day you’ll look up and realize you didn’t just raise kids.
You raised your habits in smaller bodies.
Here’s the part nobody wants to admit:
A lot of guys don’t want to die for their kids.
�They want to feel like they would… while staying comfortable.
Dying is one moment.
Training is a thousand little moments where you don’t get applause.
�Eating like an adult is a thousand little moments where you don’t get a medal.
�Going for a walk when you’re tired is a thousand little moments where nobody claps.
That’s what your kids are watching.
So ask yourself tonight:
When your son is 30 and tired and stressed… what will he reach for?�A barbell and a plan… or a bag and an excuse?
If you want to be the kind of dad your kids can copy without paying for it later, I’ll help you build that system.
DM me “DAD” and I’ll send you the exact structure I use with busy men to stay in shape when life gets heavy.
01/26/2026
After 30, training stops being about the mirror.
It becomes mental hygiene.
I lift to shut off the noise.
To get my mind right before the day tries to run me.
Because the real fight isn’t the weight on the bar…

It’s the noise in your head.
The stress from shift.

The “I’ll start Monday” loop.

The slow drift you keep calling “life.”
That 30–45 minutes in the morning?
It’s me getting my brain back.
And don’t get me wrong, I’m definitely training to look good and perform, but I truly feel that the mental benefit outweighs the physical, more often than not

It’s me choosing calm over chaos before the house wakes up.

So my wife gets a man… not a roommate.

So my kids get a dad… not a tired body on the couch.
This is why I train now:
To show up steady.
To lead from the front.

To stop letting the day happen to me.
If this hit you — share it to your story and tag me.
If you “know what to do”… why do you keep ending up in the same body?
I did 5 years active duty and learned something that applies way beyond the military:�structure beats feelings. Every time.
And honestly… I didn’t learn it only there.
�Sports gave me a taste of it early. The military just made it non-negotiable.
Now I talk to first responders all week, every week.
�And you all say the same thing:
You need structure.�You need a plan.�You need a routine that survives shifts.
�And you need someone who won’t let you talk your way out of it.
Here’s the part that should p**s you off:
You already know the environment you thrive in…�but you keep choosing the one that lets you slide.
So you keep doing the same cycle:�“I’ll lock it in.”�“I’ll try harder.”�“I’ll be good this week.”�…then life hits, and you’re right back to drifting.
That’s not discipline.�That’s you negotiating with yourself until you lose.
If you want a better body, a better marriage, and to lead from the front—�you don’t need another pep talk.
You need an environment that makes the right move the default.
And that’s exactly why I created our Mission-Ready program. Putting you in an environment where you have all the tools, and you reset your default, and more importantly, get back the standards you used to have for yourself
If your crew can outwork you… this is for you.
Thomas is a fire captain in CA. 23 years on the job. Fresh off knee surgery. Sitting around 245 with most of it in the gut.
And it wasn’t “just weight.”
It was the moment on a long push when your guys are a quarter mile ahead—still cutting line—while you’re grinding behind, trying not to blow up your knee… trying not to look like the weak link.
He told me straight up: “I’m not becoming the out-of-shape captain who barks orders from the back.”
So he got coached. He followed the plan. Even through Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Six months later he’s living around 204–210:
* Waist down. Abs/back showing.
* Stronger and more durable post-injury.
* Conditioning is back.
Recent structure fire: pulled ceiling, ran the attic, swapped bottles… and still had enough gas to go back in for another full cycle.
No panic breathing.
�No “please don’t be a working fire tonight.”
If you’re scrolling this between calls with your gut sitting on your belt… telling yourself, “I’m fine, I still get it done”…
But you know you can’t stay with your crew on a long one..
The make a real change and start leading from the font.
six months from now, they won’t respect your rank. They’ll respect how you show up and lead and more importantly you’ll respect yourself because you know you’re not settling.
You’ll respect yourself because you didn’t take the easy route. You didn’t take the route of comfort that slowly kills a man. You showed the hell up and gave it your best for your crew, your family, and yourself.
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