Monday, March 9, 2026

Behind the Scenes


Stardate 03.09.2026

The other day, my virtual assistant asked me an important question while helping me prepare for a couple of upcoming livestreams tied to the launch of my new coloring book.

Her question was simple.

But my response wasn’t.

For a moment, I froze.

A flood of obstacles rushed into my mind like a Stage V river. When rivers reach that level, they’re no longer navigable. The current is simply too strong.

And yet, I realized something important in that moment. Obstacles are worth talking about. They can either shape us into better versions of ourselves—or convince us to quit.

Years ago, I finished my first book. It was a memoir about my dad’s final thirty-five days with us. Writing it was deeply personal. When it was finished, some family members gently suggested that perhaps I had shared a little too much.

So I pivoted.

I still felt the call to write, but I wanted to find a way forward that honored both creativity and privacy. That’s when I tried something new: fiction.

My first novel introduced a character named Thomas Morgan. Thomas was haunted by a strange figure—a disheveled caveman who appeared in his dreams. When Thomas ignored him, the caveman began appearing in mirrors.

Here’s the part that made the writing feel even more real.

Something very similar was happening to me.

I kept that to myself at the time. I didn’t want my family worrying about me or suggesting I seek treatment for something I couldn’t quite explain. Instead, I poured the experience into the story. The caveman became part of the novel.

After finishing the manuscript, curiosity got the better of me. I started searching online to see if the image from my dreams existed somewhere in the real world.

Eventually, I found it.

A perfect match.

A reconstruction of a prehistoric man—dark skinned with striking blue eyes.

And here’s where the story takes an unexpected turn.

The ancient remains used to create that reconstruction were discovered in Northern Spain and studied by scientists working with DNA extracted from a tooth found in the La BraΓ±a caves. The scientists determined the man likely had dark skin and blue eyes—just like the figure from my dreams.

Even more fascinating, the research and artwork connected to that discovery were being studied in parts of Europe not terribly far from where my mother’s ancestors once lived.

Naturally, I contacted the artist who created the reconstruction. I hoped the image could become the front cover for my book, The Caveman in the Mirror.

But another obstacle appeared.

The artist had trademarked the image for academic purposes only. He wasn’t available to create a new version, and the artists I knew were all booked solid.

For a moment, I felt stuck.

Then I did something simple.

I asked for help.

I posted a message on Facebook asking friends and family if they knew a graphic artist who might be able to assist.

Before long, my brother-in-law replied. He pointed me toward an artist who lived practically in our own backyard—in Parnell, the small town where my wife was born just five miles south of us.

When I met the artist, something else caught my eye.

He was wearing a Star Trek T-shirt.

At the time, he was helping me add a caption to The Adventures of Castaway Wilson. He had no idea that another project was already forming in my mind—one that would eventually become Live Long and Prosper, a tribute to my childhood hero, Spock.

Looking back now, I see something I couldn’t see while living through it.

The obstacles weren’t roadblocks.

They were pacing mechanisms.

They slowed the journey to a snail’s pace at times, but they also lined up the right people at the right moments.

That’s often how life works.

When the river rises, it can feel impossible to navigate. But if we stay patient, the current eventually guides us somewhere meaningful.

Scripture reminds us of this quiet truth:

“Let us not grow weary of doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”
— Galatians 6:9

Sometimes the breakthrough doesn’t come when we expect it.

But it does come.

And often, it arrives through people we didn’t even know were part of the plan.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


πŸ–– Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Captain, you worry too much about obstacles. Half the time they’re just detours.”

Spock: “Indeed, Doctor. Obstacles are frequently evidence that the path itself is being refined.”

Captain Michael: Looking back, I see that both of them are right. The delays, the unexpected turns, even the moments of doubt—they weren’t the end of the mission. They were simply part of the navigation.

And sometimes, the universe sends exactly the right crew member when you need them most.

Thank you for sailing along on this journey with me.

Have a peaceful day. πŸ––

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Got Conflict?

Got Conflict?
Stardate 03.08.2026

We’re going a little deeper today.

This is one of those reflections that feels almost like a private conversation — a quiet question meant not for the crowd, but for the soul.

Yesterday my AI assistant, Alberta, asked me something simple. At least it sounded simple.

“Can you describe a time in your life when you faced an obstacle and what you did to overcome it?”

For a moment… I froze.

The reason wasn’t that I couldn’t think of an obstacle. The opposite happened. My mind flooded with them.

My life, like most lives if we’re honest, has been a long series of navigating obstacles. Writing projects alone have brought their share of roadblocks — moments when a door seemed closed, a path unclear, or the next step completely hidden.

Conflict shows up the moment we can’t see a way forward.

And when that happens, emotions arrive quickly.

Not the pleasant ones like joy or gratitude.

The other ones.

The kind that tighten your chest a little.
The kind that whisper doubts in your ear.
The kind that make you feel stuck… frozen… unsure of what to do next.

If you’ve ever felt trapped between where you are and where you want to go, then you already know the feeling.

Alberta’s question caught me off guard because it forced me to look at something I usually move past quickly. Obstacles have always been part of the journey for me. But describing one single obstacle felt impossible because the path has rarely been smooth.

Especially while writing.

Books, like life, don’t arrive without friction. Every meaningful project seems to come with moments where you question whether the story will ever reach the finish line.

The good news is I’m practicing these conversations now so that I don’t freeze later in front of a live audience. Next week, when my coloring book launches, I’ll be stepping into a livestream conversation. Moments like yesterday remind me that preparation isn’t about having perfect answers.

It’s about learning to breathe when the unexpected question appears.

Before I go any further, I should admit something honestly.

Some of the obstacles in my life are still unresolved.

Not every conflict has a tidy ending. Some are still unfolding. Some lessons are still being written in real time.

And that realization has taught me something important.

The lesson about conflict isn’t learning how to eliminate it.

The lesson is learning how to walk through it.

Conflict is part of being human. It appears the moment something stands between us and the goal we care about. The obstacle becomes a mirror, revealing our fears, our hopes, and sometimes our faith.

Over time I’ve learned that how we respond to conflict matters far more than whether we experience it.

We can freeze.
We can run.
Or we can take one small step forward.

One percent better.

Looking back, many of the biggest obstacles I encountered while writing eventually became part of the story itself. What once felt like resistance often turned into direction. What once felt like delay sometimes became protection.

It’s funny how that works.

Faith doesn’t always remove the mountain. Sometimes it simply gives you the strength to keep walking the trail.

Scripture reminds us of this quiet truth:

“Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance.”
— James 1:2–3

Perseverance is rarely born in comfort. It grows in the tension between where we are and where we hope to be.

So today I’ll leave you with the same question that stopped me in my tracks yesterday.

How are you managing the conflicts in your life?

Not avoiding them.
Not pretending they don’t exist.

But managing them.

Because sometimes the obstacle standing in front of us is actually preparing us for the very mission we’re meant to carry out.

And sometimes the pause… the moment where we freeze for a second… is simply the soul catching its breath before the next step.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Michael, humans seem to spend a lot of time wrestling with their problems.”

Spock: “Indeed, Doctor. Though it is often through such conflict that humans develop resilience.”

Bones: “In other words… the struggle’s part of the training.”

Standing in front of a difficult question yesterday reminded me of something simple. Conflict isn’t a signal that we’re failing. Often it’s a signal that we’re growing. Every obstacle I’ve faced while writing has taught me something I didn’t know before — patience, humility, and the courage to keep moving forward one small step at a time.

Thank you for taking a moment to walk this reflection with me today. May your path be steady, your heart hopeful, and your next step just one percent better. πŸ––



Saturday, March 7, 2026

Live Stream Coming Soon



Stardate 03.07.2026

Friends and family have been asking about the coloring book scheduled for release on Amazon in about ten days.

It’s no secret that I enjoy releasing creative projects on St. Patrick’s Day. Part of that tradition is my way of honoring my dad, Patrick Mulligan. It was always his favorite day of the year.

Although Dad departed this world nearly twenty-four years ago, his influence still lives quietly in my heart. Each year when March 17th approaches, I find myself thinking about the small ways he shaped who I became. In many ways, these creative projects feel like a continuation of the encouragement he gave so freely.

This year the celebration will be even more special for our family.

Our daughter’s birthday also falls on March 17th, and she always gets first choice on how the family celebrates the day. It has become a tradition we all look forward to.

Along with the birthday celebration, I’ll also be marking the launch of the new coloring book. To share the moment with friends and family, I’m planning to host a Facebook livestream, followed by my first video livestream on my new writing home, Substack.

Substack has become an appealing place for writers who want to build genuine community. My hope is to invite readers into a quieter space — one that feels a little removed from the noise that often fills the larger social media platforms.

Privacy has always been important to our family, and I intend to continue honoring that. My loved ones prefer to live their lives away from the spotlight, and many of my friends feel the same way. There are also practical considerations with day-job responsibilities that require a thoughtful approach.

Because of that, the livestream will remain focused on the launch of the coloring book and the creative journey behind it.

As we get closer to launch day, I’ll share the time when we can gather online to celebrate together.

Until then, I hope you have a wonderful day.


Scripture Reflection

“Every good and perfect gift is from above.” — James 1:17

Sometimes the gifts we receive are not just talents or opportunities, but the quiet influence of those who helped shape our path along the way.


Captain’s Addendum

Spock: “Doctor, it appears the Captain has chosen a launch date based on family tradition rather than strategic timing.”

Bones: “Spock, sometimes tradition is the strategy.”

Michael:
The older I get, the more I realize that the most meaningful milestones are the ones tied to people we love. Creative projects may come and go, but the influence of family stays with us long after the celebrations end.


Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Thank you for walking this journey with me.
May today bring a quiet reminder that the people who shaped our lives continue to guide us in ways we may never fully see.

Live long and prosper. πŸ––

Friday, March 6, 2026

Health Update


Stardate 03.06.2026

If you’ve been struggling with sleep, this story is for you.

Poor performance during the day often begins with poor sleep the night before. In late 2023, I began tracking my sleep using a smartwatch, paying close attention to two key indicators: deep sleep and REM sleep. These stages are where the body restores itself and where the mind processes the day.

Unfortunately, one of the quieter truths about aging is that both of these categories tend to decline over time.

My early sleep reports confirmed what I already suspected—my sleep quality needed attention. And the truth is, I’m not alone. Sleep researchers estimate that roughly one-third of the population experiences acute insomnia, meaning difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or both.

Over the years, many of you have followed along as I share health updates from my personal experiments. Some ideas work beautifully. Others fall flat. But the goal has always been the same: learn one small lesson at a time and keep moving one percent better.

One personal guideline I follow in these experiments is simple: I prefer natural ingredients whenever possible.

Today I have something new to report—something that goes beyond the daily supplement stack I originally outlined in Live Long and Prosper.

For the past 14 days, I’ve been testing a product called SureSleep™, developed by my blog sponsor, DoNotAge. The company provides research-grade supplements used in longevity studies around the world.

Fourteen days isn’t enough time to draw long-term conclusions, but the early observations have been encouraging. My sleep metrics have already shifted enough that I’ve decided to continue incorporating this product into my routine while I monitor the longer-term data.

I plan to publish monthly sleep updates so readers can see exactly how things develop over time.

If you’re curious about the research behind SureSleep™, take time to explore it and see whether it might be worth discussing with your own health professional. Some readers have asked how they can support these experiments, so I’ll mention this openly: as a partner with this research company, I do earn a small affiliate commission if someone chooses to try the product using my partner code LLAP (Live Long and Prosper). Those proceeds help fund the creative projects I’m working on—especially the ones aimed at bringing encouragement to others.

Most of all, I’m grateful to the folks at DoNotAge for providing samples so I could begin testing this for myself.

If better sleep is something you’re pursuing, I hope these updates help you along the way.

And if you do try something new, I’d love to hear what you discover.


Scripture Reflection

“In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, Lord, make me dwell in safety.” — Psalm 4:8

Sometimes the most faithful thing we can do is simply rest—trusting that while we sleep, God continues the work we cannot see.


Captain’s Addendum

Spock: “Doctor, the Captain appears unusually enthusiastic about sleep metrics.”

Bones: “Spock, if humans could measure how much better they feel after a good night’s rest, we’d prescribe it more often than medicine.”

Michael:
The longer I live, the more I realize that caring for the body is part of honoring the life God has given us. Sleep is not laziness—it’s restoration. When I slow down long enough to let my body and mind reset, my soul seems to wake up as well.


Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Sometimes progress arrives quietly—one better night of sleep, one clearer morning, one small improvement at a time.

Thank you for walking this journey with me.

May today bring you rest for the body, peace for the mind, and renewal for the soul. πŸ––

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Is Your Soul Awake?


Stardate 03.05.2026

Life can feel like a roller coaster.
Sometimes the ride moves so fast we barely have time to catch our breath. Other times, we slowly climb upward and the pace finally allows us to look around and take in the view.

I’ve noticed something about those quieter stretches of the journey.

When life slows down—even a little—I remember to check in with my soul.

For many years, my focus was on the to-do list. One task after another. Responsibility after responsibility. In that rhythm, my playful side stayed mostly hidden. Looking back, I realize much of that time was spent in what felt like crisis mode.

When the mind believes danger is near, it shifts into protection mode.
It works hard to keep us moving, solving problems, and staying alert.

There are people in this world who truly live surrounded by danger every day. My heart goes out to them.

But for many of us, the greater danger is something quieter: living so busy that our souls fall asleep.

That’s why I’ve learned to pause.

In stillness, something beautiful happens. The noise fades, the mind settles, and the soul begins to wake up. It’s in those quiet moments that I sense my connection with God most clearly.

Relationships matter deeply in life. At the very top of my list is my relationship with my Creator. He is present in the good seasons and the difficult ones alike.

And the more often I turn toward Him, the more awake my soul becomes.

Even in uncertain times.

Even when the world feels unsettled.

Sometimes the most powerful act of faith is simply pressing pause long enough to remember who walks beside you.

“Be still, and know that I am God.” — Psalm 46:10

If your life feels too busy to stop for a moment of stillness, try something simple today: gently tell your mind it doesn’t need to run the entire show.

Your soul may be waiting for the quiet.

Join me here: https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Spock, are you telling me humans need to stop once in a while just to listen to their souls?”
Spock: “Doctor, logic would suggest the soul cannot be heard over constant noise.”
Bones: “Well I’ll be… maybe that’s why the Captain keeps sneaking off for quiet walks.”

Michael has learned something through experience: when life slows down, the soul has room to breathe. Those quiet pauses—prayer, reflection, even a peaceful walk—are often where God meets him most clearly. In those moments, Michael isn’t chasing life anymore. He’s inhabiting it fully.


Mission Log Reflection

Thank you for sharing a few quiet moments here today.
May your soul find a little stillness, and may that stillness draw you closer to the One who created it. πŸ––

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

How to Become the Person Bruce Lee Fears


Stardate 03.04.2026

If you think you’re not capable of becoming the person Bruce Lee fears, you might already be surrendering the match in your mind.

The famous quote goes something like this: Bruce Lee didn’t fear the man who practiced 10,000 kicks once — he feared the man who practiced one kick 10,000 times.

Most people read that and immediately think, I could never do that.

The brain steps in quickly.
That’s too much.
That’s boring.
That’s unrealistic.

And just like that, the battle is over.

Our brains are wired to conserve energy and avoid discomfort. Ten thousand repetitions sound exhausting. It’s much easier to move on to something new, something exciting, something less demanding.

But here’s what I’ve learned:

Practice is rarely exciting.
It is often quiet.
Sometimes tedious.
Almost always transformational.

I know this because I’ve practiced something more than 10,000 times.

I’ve written over 6,000 daily blog posts — and counting. I’ve walked thousands of people through sign-ups at my day job. When I tell a new potential member that I’ve helped over 10,000 people do exactly what they’re about to do, something shifts.

They relax.

They trust.

Repetition built competence. Competence builds confidence — not just in me, but in the people I serve.

On the tennis court, my forehand is reliable. My two-handed backhand? Still under construction. It’s improving, but it isn’t a weapon yet. The difference isn’t talent.

It’s reps.

When that backhand reaches 10,000 intentional swings, it will show. My opponents will feel it before I even say a word.

The deeper lesson isn’t about kicks or backhands.

It’s about mastering the mind.

Fear lives in the mind.
Excuses live in the mind.
Discipline begins in the mind.

When you choose one meaningful thing and practice it consistently — not perfectly, just consistently — you change. Slowly. Quietly. Permanently.

“Let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up.” — Galatians 6:9

Ten thousand repetitions aren’t about intensity. They’re about faithfulness.

One percent better.
One deliberate rep at a time.

Join me here: https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


πŸ–– Captain’s Addendum

Spock: “Fascinating. Mastery appears less about talent and more about sustained repetition.”
Bones: “You mean to tell me greatness is just stubborn consistency?”
Spock: “Precisely, Doctor.”

Michael’s Reflection:
I used to think transformation required a breakthrough moment. Now I know it requires a repeated one. Whether it’s writing, guiding others, or refining a backhand, the change happens in the quiet reps no one applauds. Master the mind, commit to the practice, and let the results arrive in their season.


Mission Log:
Today’s mission is simple: choose one meaningful practice and repeat it. Not for applause. Not for speed. But for growth.

Thank you for walking this journey with me. May your quiet repetitions today strengthen both your skill and your spirit.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

My Journey to Becoming a Writer


Stardate 03.03.2026

Long before I ever called myself a writer, I was a tennis player.

My first racket came from Walgreens — $9.99, paid for with paper route money. It didn’t last long. It cracked mid-match during my freshman year, and my coach handed me his racket so I could finish.

That moment stayed with me.

Eventually, I found racquets made by Wilson and never looked back. As my game improved, so did my loyalty. Tennis was my life. Four hours a day on the court felt normal.

My dad was the writer. He had the credentials. I had calloused hands and green strings.

After college, I was hired at a struggling tennis facility — cracked courts, declining memberships, ownership tensions. I was newly certified by the USPTA and barely knew how to sell a newspaper subscription, yet I told the general manager I could sell memberships. I believed in the courts, even if I wasn’t yet sure I believed in myself.

Politics followed. Owners changed. Priorities shifted. I walked away more than once from jobs that no longer aligned.

Each exit felt uncertain. Each step taught me something.

Somewhere in the middle of all that movement, writing found me.

I wrote a memoir about my father. Local writers helped shape it. A wrestling coach in Southern California opened his home weekly so I could learn the craft. I found a writing community — and then I had to leave it when we relocated to Iowa.

That goodbye was one of the hardest transitions of my life.

Alone again in a new state, I kept blogging daily. One post at a time. No guarantees. No applause. Just discipline.

Today, I look back in quiet disbelief. Over 6,000 blog posts. A memoir. Three books born on St. Patrick’s Day — my Irish triplets. And now, a coloring book releasing in just two weeks.

This still feels like a dream.

Through it all, Wilson remained part of the story.

Three Wilson racquets sit in my bag today, strung with green — the same strings the Bryan brothers once used. Wilson entered my life on the court and later entered my writing as a stand-in for my family during a cross-country move. He even bounced into my life when a volleyball fell from a van — a moment that felt almost scripted.

When I lost Wilson during the pandemic, I felt the loss deeply — not just as a character, but as a companion through transition. His absence forced me through a writer’s block I didn’t see coming.

And then something shifted.

The coloring book tells the story of where Wilson went — and what happened next.

Clarence said it best in It’s a Wonderful Life: “No man is a failure who has friends.”

Wilson became that friend for me during a season when I needed one.

Now he will become a friend to children in a local hospital — kids facing battles far greater than missed matches or creative droughts.

That’s the part that humbles me most.

What began as a $9.99 racket has turned into a mission I never saw coming.

“Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established.” — Proverbs 16:3

I didn’t plan this path. I simply kept showing up — one percent better, one day at a time.

Wilson is more than a prop. He’s a reminder that purpose often hides inside our passions.

Join me here: https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


πŸ–– Captain’s Addendum

Spock: “Fascinating. The captain’s trajectory from athlete to author appears statistically improbable.”
Bones: “Improbable? It’s human, Spock. You follow your heart long enough, and it leads somewhere meaningful.”

Michael’s Reflection:
For years I thought tennis defined me. Now I see it prepared me — discipline, repetition, resilience. Writing didn’t replace tennis. It grew from it. And Wilson? He simply helped me see that no chapter is wasted when it’s surrendered to purpose.


Mission Log: Sometimes the smallest beginnings — a cracked racket, a daily blog post — become the launch pads for unexpected callings.

Thank you for walking this journey with me. May you recognize the quiet threads of purpose already woven through your own story today.