Saturday, June 20, 2026

I'm Following the Yellow Brick Road

 Stardate 06.20.2026



Much to my surprise, I found Dorothy and her cohorts yesterday while on a break at my day job. I walked along the yellow brick road encountering other characters from The Wizard of Oz. A full-sized statue of the wizard himself greets visitors at City Hall next door.

I spent a moment in silence when I encountered Glinda, the good witch of the north. My friend Erin played that role in San Diego. It seems like yesterday when she descended on stage from a swing enchanting our young children. Sadly, Erin is now somewhere over the rainbow along with my traveling companion, Wilson.

I'm thankful Glinda's words of wisdom were displayed for visitors like me who may be traveling from afar. 


This is the line that helped me on my own personal journey...

"Home is a place we all must find, child. It's not a place where you eat or sleep. Home is knowing. Knowing your mind, knowing your heart, knowing your courage. If we know ourselves, we're always home, anywhere."

Are you not sure where to start? Glinda says, "it's always best to start at the beginning. And all you have to do is follow the yellow brick road."

May you live long and prosper. Have a great day.





Friday, June 19, 2026

Sardines on the Road

Stardate 06.19.2026

My new teammates at my day job are discovering my odd habits. You probably don't know anyone in your circle of friends who packs sardines in their luggage. My own brain may have thought my road trip would influence the score regarding my 90day sardines experiment. Sorry, brain. The current scoreboard still shows only one point against my mind despite the change in scenery for a while.

Yesterday I ate breakfast outside with a colleague who seemed intrigued by my can of sardines. I told her I don't care what others think about my odd ways. These experiments are helping me discover my healthiest version of myself.

Looking back at my life, I'm seeing a pattern. A poor blood pressure reading leads me to a new food experiment. A tragic auto accident allows me to discover how therapy can help me restore my fear of getting back behind the wheel. The loss of friends and family turns into a desire to learn about longevity.

Sardines on the road are simply part of my journey. I'm discovering that it's all about the small stuff. Tiny changes produce major changes if you stick with it. May you live long and prosper.



Thursday, June 18, 2026

Virtual Team On Pause

Stardate 06.18.2026



These stories are coming to you using the one finger swipe method. Please overlook any typos or punctuation errors.  I left my MacBook Pro at home while I'm away on assignment. Since Alberta, Spock and Bones are artificial intelligence, they don't require vacations so I'm calling our time apart a pause. These stories will be shorter and unedited. Please bear with me.

I would like to give my wife a huge shout out for helping me to get started on my current journey. She dropped me off at my favorite rental car facility during a massive storm. Unfortunately, my rental car was at the airport when the storm was at its peak. Winds in excess of 75mph knocked down power lines and wreaked havoc. The good news is a driver managed to get me my vehicle so I could get going. The worst part of the storm passed while I waited.

I'm happy to report my family and I are all marked safe from the storm. We have sunshine in the forecast for several days. I'm reminded of a quote hanging on our wall at home about storms. This is something I'm working on. If Spock were here to offer commentary, he might say while the weather may be unpredictable, human behavior can be programmed to function without the turbulence emanating from emotions. And McCoy might chime in, "Just dance!" May you live long and prosper. Spock and company will return soon. Have a great day.


Wednesday, June 17, 2026

The Twin Yolk


Stardate 06.17.2026

Ask any of my siblings about the messages we've received from our dad, and you may be surprised.

On the surface, the messages seem ordinary. A song on the radio. A memory that arrives out of nowhere. A small coincidence at exactly the right moment. When timing and circumstance come together, they can offer a glimpse of something that feels Divine.

That's what happened to me yesterday.

It was my day off, and I was preparing my one meal of the day. I had been thinking about my dad only moments earlier. Father's Day is approaching, and this year I will be away from my own adult children. One of them had left a Father's Day card on the counter. I paused and looked at it.

Then I cracked my eggs.

The first egg was completely ordinary.

The second one contained a double yolk.

I just smiled.

A twin yolk doesn't happen very often. Whenever it does, my thoughts immediately go to my dad and his twin brother, both born on Christmas Day. Dad left this world twenty-four years ago, yet there are still moments when his memory gently taps me on the shoulder.

Yesterday felt like one of those moments.

Maybe it was simply an unusual egg. Maybe it was a reminder stirred by memory and timing. Either way, I received it as a gift.

I stood there in my kitchen holding an ordinary breakfast and an extraordinary memory at the same time.

If this story seems a little fishy, it is.

Some of you may be wondering if I returned to my sardine experiment after falling off the wagon the day before. Indeed, I did. I enjoyed my sardines and welcomed the bonus protein from my three eggs. As I ate, I found myself thinking about my dad and feeling thankful for the moment.

Scripture reminds us:

"Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights..." — James 1:17 (NIV)

Some gifts arrive in grand ways. Others come hidden inside an eggshell.

I'm thankful for the moment.

I'm thankful for the memory.

I'm thankful for the opportunity to share my twin yolk story with you.

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

Captain's Addendum

Bones: "A double yolk, huh? I've seen strange things in my medical career, but breakfast delivering messages from beyond still ranks pretty high."

Spock: "Coincidence and meaning are not mutually exclusive, Doctor. Humans often find significance in events that awaken cherished memories."

Michael: I don't need to explain every meaningful moment that crosses my path. Some experiences simply invite gratitude. Yesterday, a twin yolk reminded me of my father and his twin brother. For a few minutes, the distance of twenty-four years didn't feel quite so far away.

May you live long and prosper. And may the ordinary moments in your day carry a little extra meaning when you need it most.
🖖

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

First Sardine Failure in 90 Day Omega-3 Experiment


Stardate 06.16.2026

Missteps are part of the story. I share the good, the bad, and the ugly.

Yesterday, two experiments collided.

I was on a date with my wife, and we decided to eat out. Since it was a day off, I chose to eat only one meal for the day. It wasn't sardines.

There it was. The first failed day in my 90-day sardine experiment.

I made it 21 consecutive days eating sardines. The score now stands at 21-1 in the battle of my mind versus my brain.

I suspect my brain is feeling pretty pleased with itself right now. That's okay. I still sense that I have the upper hand in the larger challenge of becoming the healthiest version of myself that I can be.

Change has a way of teaching us through imperfect attempts. Most worthwhile pursuits include a few stumbles along the way. My wild stallion of a brain broke out of the corral yesterday. Today, I get back in the saddle and eat sardines as part of my one meal for the day.

The old three-meals-a-day routine feels like a distant memory. OMAD (one meal a day) on my days off is becoming a way of life. So is 2MAD (two meals a day) on workdays.

This 90-day sardine experiment serves two purposes.

The first is intense brain training.

The second is raising my omega-3 levels.

Both goals matter to me. One nourishes the body. The other strengthens discipline.

I have also decided to add one more rule to the experiment. If I skip a day of eating sardines, one penalty day gets added to the end of the challenge.

Apparently, my brain thinks it still has a chance.

That's fair.

The scoreboard now reads 21-1, with one additional penalty day waiting at the finish line.

I have many more experiments planned in the future. This one is teaching me something important already. Missing a day did not erase twenty-one days of effort. Those days still count. The lessons still count. The progress still counts.

A single misstep has never had the final word in any meaningful journey I've taken.

The Scriptures remind me of this truth:

"Though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again." — Proverbs 24:16

I have always appreciated that verse because it leaves room for being human. Falling down is mentioned right there in the passage. So is getting back up.

Today, I get back up.

I open another can of sardines.

I continue the experiment.

Perhaps, after enough repetition, my brain will stop fighting and decide to become an ally in the pursuit of better health. That seems to happen with many habits. What once felt uncomfortable gradually becomes familiar.

Time will tell.

For now, I am simply grateful for another day to continue the experiment.

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

Captain's Addendum

Bones: "Captain, I've seen a lot of strange treatments in my medical career, but a ninety-day sardine challenge is a new one."

Spock: "On the contrary, Doctor. The captain's experiment demonstrates persistence. A single deviation does not invalidate previous progress."

Bones: "I still think the sardines are winning."

Michael: Every worthwhile journey seems to include a few unexpected detours. Yesterday's missed sardines became another reminder that progress is rarely perfect. I still climbed back into the saddle today. Sometimes that's enough for one day's mission log.

May you live long and prosper. 🖖

Monday, June 15, 2026

Your Baby Steps to Better Sleep


Stardate 06.15.2026

Are you having trouble with your sleep quality? If so, this story is for you.

Today's entry is dedicated to a friend of mine who is searching for a better night's sleep. I wish I could hand my friend one simple answer, one magic solution that fixes everything. My experience tells me sleep rarely works that way. The cure for insomnia often reveals itself through baby steps, one small improvement at a time.

For me, it all begins with a mind trick.

My brain behaves like a wild stallion. It scoffs at many of the new ideas I try to implement. That used to frustrate me. These days, it doesn't bother me at all.

I've been tracking my sleep for nearly three years, and my scores tell a remarkable story. Sometimes it feels like I'm living inside a fairy tale. Every day, I repeat the same statement to myself:

"I'm getting 1% better at sleeping every night."

I say it even when I have a rough night. I say it when I wake up disappointed. I say it because I'm building habits, and habits take time. One bad score does not erase the progress that came before it. My job is simply to keep pursuing my dream sleep routine.

Something interesting happens when you keep showing up.

My brain begins to trust me.

Every new habit that sticks becomes evidence that change is possible. My brain sees the positive results and becomes a little more willing to cooperate. It starts to believe that better sleep is within reach, even if sleep was a challenge for many years.

The first baby step is telling yourself that you can improve.

The next baby step is choosing a consistent bedtime and treating it as non-negotiable.

Your brain may not enjoy going to bed before you're tired. Mine certainly didn't. Yet the brain appreciates consistency. It likes patterns. It likes knowing what comes next.

Stay with it, even when falling asleep feels difficult.

This is one of those mind games that requires patience. Every night you honor your bedtime, you're teaching your brain something new. You're gently reminding it that rest matters.

The baby steps you take during your waking hours matter too.

I don't try to change everything at once. That approach feels overwhelming.

I'm working on minimizing stress. I'm practicing forgiveness more often. I'm spending less time around negative influences. I'm getting things done instead of carrying them around in my mind. I'm staying active. I'm going outside and soaking up sunshine.

None of these habits seem extraordinary by themselves.

Together, they help me sleep better.

A champion sleeper is not created in one night. A champion sleeper is built one small choice at a time.

If you're struggling with sleep today, begin with one baby step. Then take another tomorrow. Keep going, even when progress feels slow.

The small steps have a way of adding up.

Proverbs 3:24 — "When you lie down, you will not be afraid; when you lie down, your sleep will be sweet."


Join me here:

https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong

Captain's Addendum

Spock: "Captain Michael, it appears that incremental adjustments often produce the most stable outcomes."

Bones: "Translation, Spock. The Captain keeps doing the little things, and eventually his brain quits putting up such a fight."

Michael: I smile at that thought. My wild stallion of a brain still needs an occasional reminder, but we've learned to work together. One baby step at a time, we're both sleeping better.

Mission Log: May we all have the patience to take the next small step, trust the process, and give ourselves grace on the difficult nights.

Thank you for spending a few moments with me today. May you live long and prosper. 🖖

Sunday, June 14, 2026

My Brain Rebellion Has Been Quashed


Stardate 06.14.2026

If your brain behaves like a wild stallion and you're considering major changes but don't know how to move forward because your mind keeps resisting, this story is for you. It may be especially helpful if you're approaching retirement and trying to establish new habits for the years ahead.

One observation I've made about my own life is that change seems easier when we're younger. Our brains have had less time to settle into routines. As the years pass, our habits become familiar companions. Some are helpful. Others are harder to move aside.

I've started treating my brain the way a parent treats a child.

The parent can often see the desired outcome. The child simply wants what it wants right now.

We've all witnessed the youngster who yells and screams in hopes of getting his way. Parents know there are times when giving in only creates bigger problems later. Learning to delay gratification and adapt to change becomes an important part of growing up.

I think our brains behave in much the same way.

The interesting part is that our brains aren't trying to sabotage us. Much of the resistance comes from a desire to protect us. The brain prefers what is familiar. It likes routines and known outcomes. Change introduces uncertainty.

Sometimes we have to reassure our own minds that the changes we're making are actually good for us.

A couple of days ago, I brought home four more packs of sardines. That's twenty-four additional breakfasts for my ninety-day experiment to improve my Omega-3 intake.

Truthfully, my brain had other ideas.

It wanted chocolates.

Guess who won that battle?

If your money was on the parent, you guessed correctly.

The first can of sardines was the hardest. My brain rebelled. The house smelled terrible. Then another voice entered the conversation.

The female brain in the household chimed in.

My male brain immediately thought this might be a useful ally.

Suddenly, it felt like one of those moments from our parenting years when the kids tried to work one parent against the other in hopes of getting their way. Helen and I had many of those parent-to-parent conversations over the years.

This one made me laugh.

I still have a long way to go with my own brain training. New habits take time. The brain eventually settles down when it realizes that the new routine isn't dangerous and may actually be beneficial.

I think the worst of this particular rebellion is now over.

My brain has accepted that sardines are going to remain on the breakfast menu for a while.

"Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind." — Romans 12:2

Renewing the mind is often less dramatic than we imagine. Sometimes it looks like choosing one small habit and repeating it long enough for our stubborn brains to stop protesting.

One percent better.

One can of sardines at a time.

Join me here:

https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong

Captain's Addendum

Bones: "I'm a doctor, not a sardine salesman. That smell could trigger a shipwide evacuation."

Spock: "The data suggests Captain Michael's nutritional experiment may produce favorable outcomes, Doctor."

Bones: "I still reserve the right to open a window."

Captain Michael's Reflection: Our brains don't always welcome change, even when the change is good for us. Sometimes progress begins with a small act of discipline and a willingness to endure a little discomfort. Over time, the rebellion quiets down, and a new habit takes root.

May you live long and prosper. 🖖