The Morning After the Math
The audit was the easy part.
The morning after I opened my own books, really opened them, I made coffee I didn’t drink.
Stood at the window for a long time.
The number was on the table behind me. I didn’t need to look at it again. It had already done what numbers do; laid bare the facts, emotionless, non-judgemental, just data.
Every discounted invoice. Every scope addition absorbed in silence. Every time I’d decided what someone could afford before they opened their mouth.
And then the other column.
$46,000 spent on coaching, conferences, and courses.
I sat with that number for a long time too. Because here’s what I hadn’t let myself see until that morning: I hadn’t taken $46,000 worth of action. I had taken just enough to feel like I was doing something about the problem, which meant I was spending money on the belief that I was the problem.
The extraction economy doesn’t just collect from your invoice.
It collects from your self-doubt too.
It convinced you that you were broken, underprepared, not quite ready yet — and then sold you the solution. And you bought it, because you are exactly the kind of person who believes that growth is always the answer, that investing in yourself is never wasted, that the next certification or the next mastermind or the next coach would finally close the gap.
It was all the same math.
Undercharging on one side. Overspending to fix the thing the undercharging told you was wrong with you on the other.
The gap wasn’t in your skills. It was never in your skills.
It was in the story the system had been running — and you had been funding — since the beginning.
I wasn’t ready to make a plan. I wasn’t ready to restructure or renegotiate or rebuild.
I was ready to make one decision. The smallest aligned move available to me that morning. The one that said: I have seen this. And I am no longer available to keep running it.
One decision. One step. A new timeline.
You’ve done the audit. Or you’ve felt where you would land if you did. Either way, something shifted this week — in how you see your pricing, your scope, your packages, your body’s response to sending an invoice.
What are you going to do with the knowing?
The gap between seeing and deciding is where Martyr Math makes its last stand.
It knows you’ve seen it now. It knows the invisibility is gone. So it pivots. It doesn’t argue with the number anymore — it argues with the timing.
Not yet. You’re not ready. The clients you have now can’t handle the change. Wait until the market shifts. Wait until you have more proof. Wait until it feels safer.
Same system. New disguise.
The seeing was the excavation.
The decision is the build.
And the build starts with one move.
What one aligned decision actually looks like
It arrives quietly. Usually smaller than you expected, given the weight of everything that led to it.
It looks like:
Setting the rate card in a document and closing the laptop.
Sending the invoice or proposal that has been sitting in drafts — the one you’ve been circling for days because sending it felt like too much of a statement.
Having the conversation with the client on the “temporary” discount that has quietly become permanent.
Deciding that the next yes comes from overflow, and meaning it.
Writing one sentence at the top of a blank document: I require, desire, and deserve to be fully compensated for this work.
And not deleting it.
Why one move is enough
The nervous system rewires one decision at a time. One move. One report filed. One new baseline.
When you make one clean, aligned move — specific, embodied, held — your nervous system files a new report.
It registers: we did that, and we survived.
We did that, and the right people stayed.
We did that, and the work didn’t diminish.
We did that, and something in me relaxed
That report becomes the new baseline.
The next decision is easier because this one happened.
This is how Martyr Math actually gets rewritten — not in a single dramatic restructure, but in the accumulation of aligned decisions made one at a time, each one updating the nervous system’s understanding of what is safe, what is possible, what you are available for.
One move. Then another. Then another.
That’s the whole equation.
Reflection Questions
What is the one aligned decision you’re making today based on what this week revealed?
Where is Martyr Math making its last stand in you right now — arguing for the timing instead of the number?
What would it feel like in your body to make one clean move and let it be enough?
Daily Affirmations
I require, desire, and deserve the accumulated weight of every aligned decision I make today and every day forward.
My nervous system files a new report with every clean move I make. My baseline rises.
I require, desire, and deserve to be unreasonably resourced — wildly, structurally, unapologetically abundant in every currency that matters.
The equation is rewritten. I am the one rewriting it.
I am the signal. The math changes here. The overflow starts now.
PS. Profit is Protest and so is making one aligned decision on a Friday morning when the easier thing would be to close the tab and wait until you feel more ready.
You have seen the math. You have named the gap. You have felt where Martyr Math was hiding and what it cost you to keep it hidden.
That’s not nothing. That’s everything.
Now make the move. The one that’s been waiting. The one your body already knows.
The moment you decide — now, this morning, before the tab closes — the timeline shifts.



I have been reading even though I haven't commented. It was ok to scale back for a moment and to review your vision and recommit to your truth. We all have to do it. I was already in transition but the Martyr Math articles have really hit home. Posting today's affirmations in big letters where I can see them daily so I don't fall into the Cart trap. Keep posting. The world needs you! Cheers, Liz