The Autobiography of Malcolm X : Book Review
- Xavier Savage
- Jun 3
- 18 min read
A DXTheTrainer Strategic Review
By Xavier Savage — Owner of DXTheTrainer.com
This book is the blueprint for every client I train—mental, physical, and spiritual. Malcolm’s life shows what happens when you stop waiting for permission and start commanding your transformation. He went from scattered energy to surgical purpose. From self-destruction to global impact. From “Detroit Red” to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz. His life is not a cautionary tale. It’s a training protocol.
Chapter 1: Nightmare
Malcolm opens his life story with a house burning and a father broken by the system. This isn’t just biography—it’s trauma as origin story. The kind of trauma that buries most people. His father was a Garveyite—a man of mission and structure—murdered by racists who knew the real threat isn’t chaos, but a disciplined Black man with a vision. That’s the first lesson. Systems don’t fear loud. They fear organized.
For many of my clients, childhood wasn’t safety—it was survival. And if you’re not careful, you grow into a body that reflects that instability: inflammation, cortisol, trauma-fat, and nervous systems always in fight-or-flight. This chapter challenges you to take inventory of what foundational wounds you're carrying into your adulthood. You don’t outlift your trauma. You integrate it and transmute it into action.
Malcolm's early exposure to racial terrorism set the stage for either submission or self-definition. He chose the long road toward sovereignty. For you, that means building not just muscles—but fortresses. Psychological resilience. Nervous system regulation. Sleep hygiene and food as defense mechanisms. The gym isn't a hobby—it's a survival response.
This chapter invites you to look at the origin of your fitness journey. Did you start because of pain? Insecurity? Rejection? Good. So did Malcolm. But the difference between regression and revolution is what you do with the energy. Trauma is the stimulus. Structure is the response. Your training plan should be just as precise as your healing plan.
Chapter 2: Mascot
Here, Malcolm becomes a token—a Black boy in a white foster home, applauded when he entertains, dismissed when he dreams. The message is clear: “Know your place.” And for most people, that place is external validation. From teachers. From likes. From gym mirrors. We internalize the gaze of others and trade self-mastery for applause. This chapter is about the mask—the one you wear to survive and the one you must destroy to evolve.
In fitness, this shows up as training for aesthetics over function. Dieting for events instead of lifestyle. Working out to prove something, not to master something. Malcolm’s foster home didn’t raise him—it shaped him into a performer. The real transformation didn’t begin until he rejected the need to be liked.
Clients constantly ask me: “What should I eat?” “How should I train?” But underneath that is a deeper question: “Who am I doing this for?” If your fitness journey is based on approval, you will always be at the mercy of people who never had your best interest. This is why I teach body autonomy—train for command, not claps.
Malcolm eventually realized that acceptance from oppressors is manipulation in disguise. You’ll never be free if you're constantly seeking validation from systems that benefit from your submission. Stop letting the scale, your followers, or your trainer define your worth. Reclaim your inner compass. Take back the narrative.
Chapter 3: “Homeboy”
Boston introduces Malcolm to street life—and with it, the war on identity. He straightens his hair, mimicking white beauty standards. He chases the look, the flash, the status. This isn’t just about assimilation. It’s a betrayal of design. When you edit yourself to be accepted, you lose the essence of what makes you powerful. This is cosmetic transformation with no structural integrity. Like building muscle over misalignment—it looks good until it breaks.
For the body, this chapter is a warning: Don’t mimic what wasn’t meant for you. I’ve seen too many clients sabotage their hormonal health chasing an influencer’s diet. I’ve seen Black women destroy their curls with chemicals that promise assimilation. Malcolm’s “conk” wasn’t about fashion. It was a silent scream of self-rejection. And the gym is full of silent screams.
What’s the training equivalent of a conk? It’s following the trends without honoring your template. Your body type. Your ancestral rhythms. Your unique recovery patterns. Your spiritual alignment. If your program doesn't reflect your truth, it’s just another mask. And it will collapse.
Malcolm didn’t know who he was, so he tried to become what got praised. That’s most people in the fitness world. Training for attention. Posting for likes. But the deepest transformation requires subtraction, not addition. Strip away what’s not yours. Untrain what you were told to be. Your real body—the aligned one—is waiting.
Chapter 4: Laura
Laura represents possibility—Black love, innocence, connection. But Malcolm throws it away for Sophia, a white woman who represents access and elevation. It’s not about love. It’s about power. He wants what society tells him he’s not supposed to have. And he trades authenticity for status. This isn’t just a dating choice—it’s a metaphor for every time we chase image over alignment.
In fitness, this is choosing a “celebrity program” that doesn’t work for your body over a system that does. It’s ignoring recovery for six-pack aesthetics. It’s sabotaging long-term success for short-term clout. Laura was alignment. Sophia was ambition. Malcolm chose ego. And it cost him.
Your transformation journey will constantly confront you with this choice: results or recognition? Alignment or applause? Will you train with integrity or train for attention? Because the body knows. The nervous system knows. If you’re lying to yourself, the results won’t stick. Fat loss becomes obsession. Muscle becomes armor. Your “progress” becomes a prison.
This chapter asks: What are you chasing? And who are you trying to impress? Your program must serve your purpose, not your ego. And sometimes that means choosing slow, steady, and sustainable over sexy and superficial. Laura was the slow route. Sophia was the shortcut. The lesson: shortcuts always cost more in the long run.
Chapter 5: Harlemite
Harlem is where Malcolm loses the little structure he had. The streets become his training ground—but not for growth. For entropy. He’s deep in drugs, crime, gambling. He’s surviving off instinct, not strategy. And this is what most people do in the gym when they lack guidance. They improvise. They copy. They hustle. But there’s no plan. No system. No sovereignty.
You can’t fake your way into health. Hustle is not a substitute for intention. Just like Malcolm went from job to job, people jump from diet to diet, program to program, hoping something sticks. But scattered energy leads to burnout. You don’t get results from chaos. You get results from calibrated precision.
This chapter is important because it shows what happens when power has no purpose. Malcolm was charismatic, smart, energetic—but undirected. Many of my strongest clients came to me burnt out from years of training with no structure. High effort, low return. The issue isn’t their grind—it’s their guidance.
If your body is a system, then every choice must support its architecture. Harlem was Malcolm’s warning sign: skill without system is self-destruction. And in fitness, that looks like adrenal fatigue, metabolic crash, emotional burnout. Energy without direction is just erosion.
[Continues next message due to length… will deliver all 21 chapters in full. Continuing immediately.]
Chapter 6: Detroit Red
This is where Malcolm becomes a persona—Detroit Red. He trades his real self for the thrill of fast money, quick respect, and dangerous freedom. He’s sharp on the outside, hollow on the inside. And this is where many fitness journeys stall: people build the body, but not the identity to match it. Detroit Red was strong in the streets but fragile under pressure. The same is true of people who build muscle without building mindset. Their bodies can flex, but their discipline can’t hold tension.
Clients come to me at this stage all the time. They’re “fit” but broken. They’ve mastered the performance of power, but not the internal structure. They don’t stretch. Don’t sleep. Don’t meditate. Their gains are cosmetic, not systemic. Detroit Red is what happens when potential is wasted on presentation. It’s a warning: stop building mirrors and start building temples.
You can’t hide behind aesthetics forever. Eventually, life will test the system. Real strength isn’t how much weight you lift when you're motivated—it’s how aligned you stay when your entire world collapses. Detroit Red had the hustle but no internal compass. That's why his world crumbled under its own contradiction.
This chapter is the pivot point: are you playing strong or becoming unshakable? Your fitness journey has to be more than reps and meals—it has to be a daily discipline of character reinforcement. If your program doesn’t demand mental clarity, emotional stability, and spiritual connection, you’re just cosplaying as powerful. Don’t train to impress. Train to endure.
Chapter 7: Hustler
Malcolm’s crew becomes reckless. They’re robbing, scheming, running wild. And even though they’re gaining money, they’re losing all structure. It’s peak dysfunction masked as confidence. This is the equivalent of overtraining in the gym—more sessions, more stimulants, more pressure, fewer results. It feels like power, but it’s actually collapse in disguise.
In this chapter, Malcolm is addicted to the rush. But rush isn’t the same as progress. That’s a trap people fall into with crash diets, two-a-days, or trend-chasing. The adrenaline is real, but the progress is fake. Hustling in your transformation journey looks like doing more without becoming more. And eventually, the body rebels. Hormones crash. Joints ache. Motivation dies. Just like Malcolm’s lifestyle, unsustainable intensity guarantees burnout.
Malcolm doesn’t realize he’s in a death spiral. He confuses motion with movement. Many clients do this too—especially those who think suffering equals success. But suffering without structure is just self-abuse. Malcolm’s lifestyle was high-volume, low-vision. And that’s what overtraining looks like in fitness: pointless grind that robs you of your future gains.
The lesson here is sobering—don’t confuse activity with achievement. Strategy always beats speed. And if your workouts leave you broken instead of built, you’re not hustling—you’re hemorrhaging. Slow down, recalibrate, and return to the fundamentals. Discipline is not just effort—it’s wisdom applied under pressure.
Chapter 8: Trapped
This chapter is the moment of consequence. Malcolm gets caught and sentenced. The streets finally close in. But the power here isn’t in the arrest—it’s in the opportunity. For the first time, Malcolm is forced to sit still. And that’s when transformation becomes possible. In fitness, this is when people hit rock bottom. The injury. The burnout. The blood work. Something snaps, and it forces a choice: evolve or die.
This is the most important stage in any transformation. Crisis. You don’t transform without one. This is the moment when pain makes you serious. Most clients who succeed didn’t start out motivated—they started out sick and tired of suffering. Malcolm was finally cornered by the life he created, and that opened the door to the man he was meant to become.
Trapped is also a metaphor for the prison of your habits. How many people are trapped in sugar addiction? Sedentary routines? Generational health patterns? Trapped isn’t always jail. Sometimes it’s just your kitchen, your couch, your lack of boundaries. This chapter challenges you to redefine what’s holding you back.
Your response to being trapped defines your future. Do you complain, or do you study? Do you spiral, or do you recalibrate? Malcolm started writing. Started reflecting. Started learning. That’s the template. When you hit your wall, don’t panic—build. Use it as your signal to restructure everything.
Chapter 9: Caught
Prison becomes Malcolm’s real school. He stops surviving and starts studying. Every book becomes a rep. Every page a meal. This is when he begins to transform not just his habits—but his identity. That’s what makes this chapter revolutionary. He realizes that if he can control his mind, he can command his life. And in fitness, it’s no different. Clients who learn to love the learning—macros, muscle function, mobility—become unstoppable.
This is why I push education in every coaching program. Because information without application is nothing. But application without understanding? That’s slavery in disguise. Most people follow workouts like inmates—obedient, mindless, dependent. Malcolm breaks that pattern by becoming the architect of his own mental evolution. That’s the lesson. Learn what’s under the hood. Read about your body. Master your engine.
When Malcolm memorized the dictionary, he wasn’t just learning words. He was restructuring his internal operating system. I teach clients to do the same. Rewire how you speak about yourself. Reframe how you approach discomfort. Redefine the standards you’ve been programmed to accept. The body listens to the language of the mind. Upgrade your vocabulary, and you upgrade your physiology.
If you’re not training your mind while you train your body, you’re incomplete. This chapter isn’t just about prison—it’s about focus. And if you can channel that level of obsession into your craft, your transformation becomes inevitable. Malcolm didn’t have freedom, but he had focus. And that was enough.
Chapter 10: Satan
This chapter introduces Malcolm to the Nation of Islam, and specifically the idea of the “white devil.” But beneath the theology is the core strategy—naming your enemy. That’s critical in every transformation. Until you name what’s been sabotaging you, you can’t fight it. The “white devil” was symbolic of the system—of oppression, of lies, of psychological warfare. And everyone has a version of that in fitness: diet culture, pharmaceutical dependency, processed food addiction, corporate food engineering.
Malcolm finds power in having a framework that explains his pain. That’s what I offer clients through the DX System—a way to map your identity, train your nervous system, and decode your personal narrative. People aren’t lazy. They’re uninformed. Misguided. Lied to. And when you finally realize your body isn’t broken, just betrayed, everything changes.
The enemy in this chapter is structural. It’s the lie of inferiority. In fitness, it’s the belief that you’ll always be fat, weak, addicted, or inconsistent. That belief was engineered. And now it must be dismantled. Malcolm’s rage becomes power the moment he gives it a target. Your training becomes sovereign the moment you know what you’re fighting against.
This chapter invites you to name the enemy. Is it sugar? Is it shame? Is it comfort addiction? Until you name it, you can't fight it. But once you do, you no longer train as a hobby—you train as a revolutionary.
Chapter 11: Saved
This is where the break happens. Malcolm stops being a prisoner and becomes a disciple. When he takes the “X,” he severs his ties to the slave name that had defined him. This isn’t just symbolic—it’s surgical. It’s the spiritual equivalent of a detox. Removing every trace of false identity and replacing it with purpose. That’s what most people need to do with their bodies. Strip the labels. The old habits. The self-doubt. Take the “X” on your body by rejecting everything that made you feel powerless.
Identity is the foundation of every transformation. If you still see yourself as lazy, fat, weak, or inconsistent, your workouts won’t stick. Malcolm changed his name because he changed his operating system. This chapter is a call to rename yourself—not on paper, but in practice. Create a new definition of who you are and what you tolerate.
Saved doesn’t mean soft. Malcolm didn’t become passive—he became lethal. More focused. More strategic. That’s the version of you waiting after your ego dies. When you stop trying to be impressive and start trying to be aligned. Taking the “X” was Malcolm’s way of saying: “That version of me is dead.” That’s what you need to say about the version of you who sabotaged every progress streak.
This chapter isn’t just about religion—it’s about declaration. What are you willing to kill in order to evolve? That’s the price. Every client who succeeds does it after declaring war on the old identity. Saved isn’t safe. It’s radical rebirth. The type of commitment that makes comfort impossible.
Chapter 12: Savior
Now Malcolm starts speaking. Preaching. Leading. This is when transformation becomes transmission. He isn’t just learning—he’s applying, teaching, embodying. In fitness, this is the point where clients go from student to example. You become a leader in your family, in your community. Not just because of your body—but because of your discipline, your language, your presence. You carry conviction, not just protein powder.
This chapter is what I call the “transference phase.” When your results begin to ripple. When your child starts watching you prep meals. When your partner joins you for workouts. When your mom asks you what supplements to take. Malcolm wasn’t perfect, but he was contagious. That’s the power of alignment—it spreads.
Clients often want to wait until they’re “ready” to lead. But that’s backward. You lead by walking. Malcolm didn’t wait for degrees or credentials. He studied, he spoke, he embodied the mission. You don’t need to be shredded to lead people to discipline. You need to be consistent, honest, and walking the path with urgency.
Savior doesn’t mean superhero. It means system builder. Malcolm starts creating rituals, frameworks, language. That’s what we do with DXTheTrainer programs. You’re not just doing workouts—you’re creating structures that will outlive your motivation. This chapter is a model for how to teach through action, not perfection.
Chapter 13: Minister Malcolm X
Malcolm becomes a weapon. His words cut like blades. His discipline becomes unshakable. This chapter is about mastery—deep understanding, tactical speech, embodied clarity. He’s no longer hustling for relevance. He is relevance. And in fitness, this is when you stop seeking inspiration and start becoming it. You don’t need more motivation. You need to become your own standard.
Everything about Minister Malcolm is deliberate. He eats with discipline. Dresses with clarity. Speaks with fire. That’s how I teach my clients to move. Don’t just train—operate. Eat for cognition. Sleep for regeneration. Move like your mission depends on it—because it does. Your family is watching. Your children are absorbing your rituals. Every rep is a sermon.
People think transformation is about having more. It’s about being less scattered. Less impulsive. Less diluted. Malcolm’s power came from focus. Not just energy, but direction. Clients who get the best results aren’t the ones who work out the most. They’re the ones who remove the most distractions. The clearest minds make the strongest bodies.
Minister Malcolm is a blueprint. He’s the result of subtraction: no drugs, no distractions, no disloyalty. Just message. Just mission. Just movement. When your life becomes that clean, your body has no choice but to follow. The weight sheds. The inflammation dies. The confusion clears. All that’s left is clarity and command.
Chapter 14: Black Muslims
Now we see scale. Malcolm isn’t just changing himself—he’s multiplying his message. Building temples. Organizing men. Recruiting thousands. This is where fitness becomes culture. You don’t just work out anymore—you start creating communities that reflect the discipline you’ve earned. That’s the DX vision. Your body becomes the beacon. The anchor. The example.
Malcolm’s genius wasn’t just in his speech. It was in his system-building. Every temple had rules, structure, hierarchy, rituals. And every successful client eventually creates their own temple. Their kitchen becomes sacred. Their gym bag becomes an altar. Their schedule becomes non-negotiable. Fitness without ritual is just random movement.
What made Malcolm powerful wasn’t just his body or his tongue. It was his ability to replicate values. That’s what real transformation is—when your example starts duplicating in others. When your friends say, “I’m doing that workout you posted.” When your little cousin asks for your protein shake recipe. That’s impact.
This chapter is your challenge: can you replicate your discipline in others? Can your habits withstand pressure, time, scrutiny? Malcolm scaled his message by embodying it without fail. That’s how I teach my clients to move. Don’t just be the change. Become a factory for it.
Chapter 15: Icarus
Success brings shadows. Malcolm becomes too big for the Nation. Elijah Muhammad, once his mentor, starts to distance himself. This chapter is about the danger of ego—both your own and others’. When you become visible, your discipline will be tested by jealousy. People will question your methods, your motives, your growth. Stay grounded.
Fitness brings this same test. When you start transforming, people will attack your glow. “You’re obsessed.” “You’ve changed.” “You think you’re better now.” And the worst thing you can do is shrink. Malcolm never shrunk. He stayed committed to the message even as the organization turned on him. That’s the lesson. Let your results speak louder than their envy.
You must understand that not everyone who claps for your first mile will stay for your marathon. And that’s okay. Growth is lonely. Power is isolating. This chapter forces you to choose: validation or vocation. Do you water yourself down to stay liked, or do you stay lethal and risk exile?
Malcolm paid the price of elevation. But he never folded. That’s your model. When people question your transformation, don’t explain it—embody it. You don’t owe comfort to those committed to your old version. Your body, your voice, your presence—let them testify.
Chapter 16: Out
Malcolm walks away from the Nation of Islam. Not because he hates it—but because he values truth more than loyalty to broken leadership. This is a crucial turning point. It’s where alignment becomes non-negotiable. In fitness, this is when you leave behind the gym that promotes toxic culture. Or the dietician who sells shame. Or the coach who trains you like a number.
You will reach a point in every transformation where what worked for you no longer serves you. That’s not failure—it’s evolution. Malcolm left the Nation not out of rebellion, but because he had outgrown the container. Clients go through this too. They start with meal plans, then graduate to instinctive eating. They begin with structure, then ascend to sovereignty.
This chapter is painful because it’s honest. Loyalty must never override principle. If your current environment compromises your values, walk. Your fitness journey is sacred. And anything that poisons it—even if it helped you once—must be removed.
Malcolm didn’t abandon the mission. He purified it. That’s your call too. Are you willing to walk away from what’s familiar in order to honor what’s true? Out isn’t exile—it’s the beginning of real independence. Train like it.
Chapter 17: Mecca
This chapter is rebirth. Malcolm travels to Mecca and experiences a shock to his worldview. He sees Muslims of every race praying together, sharing meals, honoring one God. For the first time, he witnesses unity not built on color, but on discipline, devotion, and faith. This unravels the racial absolutism he had previously clung to. And in that unraveling, he evolves. This is what I teach: truth isn’t comfortable—it’s catalytic. You grow when your beliefs are broken and rebuilt with better structure.
In fitness, this is the moment when clients drop the dogma. They stop labeling food as “bad” or “clean.” They let go of the idea that cardio is the enemy or that one type of body equals success. Malcolm dropped the belief that only Black nationalism could free him. He realized the problem wasn’t race—it was ignorance, power hoarding, and structural evil. Your version of that is believing your body is broken, or that change is impossible for you.
Transformation demands exposure. You must witness other realities to challenge your current limitations. Malcolm’s Mecca pilgrimage wasn’t a vacation—it was a psychological death and resurrection. That’s what happens when clients travel, train with new mentors, or confront their traumas. They realize their suffering wasn’t unique, and their limitations were learned. Mecca is the mind opened.
Malcolm left Mecca a more dangerous man—not because he hated more, but because he now saw with precision. He was no longer reacting to whiteness. He was now operating from spiritual clarity. This is the client who no longer trains out of anger or revenge. They train from alignment, from sovereignty, from self-honor. That’s when the gains go from temporary to eternal.
Chapter 18: El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz
Malcolm returns from Mecca changed—and not everyone welcomes it. He no longer fits into the Nation of Islam, but he’s also not fully embraced by the mainstream. He’s in-between. And this is the most dangerous position a man can be in: awakened but not yet protected. For clients, this is the space after they’ve started changing, but before their circle supports it. They’re eating clean, meditating, training daily—and their friends mock them. Their family doesn’t get it. The old world calls, but it doesn’t fit anymore.
This chapter is about holding the line. Malcolm changes his name again, this time to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz. This is more than identity—it’s integration. He’s no longer Malcolm the preacher or Detroit Red the hustler. He is both. Elevated. Integrated. Whole. That’s what I guide clients through when they stop seeing their past as shame and start seeing it as strength. Your old self wasn’t your enemy. It was your assignment.
Every great transformation comes with backlash. But if you don’t integrate, you’ll always fracture under pressure. Malcolm’s new mission was global. Bigger than Black nationalism. Bigger than religion. It was about human rights, economic sovereignty, mental liberation. Your fitness mission should be just as deep—bigger than your abs, your weight, your numbers. It should reflect your lineage, your future, your legacy.
This chapter shows what it means to live in alignment even when it’s unpopular. Even when it’s unsafe. Malcolm no longer feared death, because he had already died to his illusions. That’s the level I train my clients toward. When fear leaves. When alignment takes over. When the mission outweighs the noise.
Chapter 19: 1965
Malcolm knows his time is running out. He’s under constant surveillance. He’s a marked man. But he never backs down. He keeps speaking, keeps traveling, keeps building. That’s legacy. That’s what I teach. You don’t stop because it’s hard. You accelerate because you know your time is limited. Malcolm didn’t have decades. He had urgency. And that urgency built empires.
This chapter is haunting because it’s real. We see Malcolm as a father, a husband, a teacher, a strategist. He’s no longer just a speaker—he’s a system. A movement. A force. This is what happens when you stop treating your life like a project and start treating it like a protocol. His days were planned. His energy was conserved. His actions were mapped. That’s how you train when your purpose is bigger than vanity.
In fitness, this is the moment when you stop waiting. You stop overplanning. You execute. Because every delay is a missed opportunity to lead. Malcolm lived like every day mattered. That’s how I teach clients to eat, train, sleep, recover. Not randomly—but with intention. With fire. With legacy in mind.
His assassination wasn’t the end—it was the consequence of living with full intensity. The systems he threatened had to respond. And they did. But they couldn’t kill what he created. His body died. His mission multiplied. That’s the level of transformation I demand from every client. Build so deep that even death can’t cancel it.
The Malcolm X Training Protocol (DX Version)
Malcolm X’s life is a complete training model. Not just for the body—but for the soul. Every phase of his evolution maps to a phase of physical mastery. Here’s how I break it down in the DX coaching system:
Phase One – The Prison Mindset (Months 1–3):This is where we strip everything down. You learn your body. You stop guessing and start tracking. You study form, function, food, and failure. It’s monk mode. No fluff. Just structure. Like Malcolm copying the dictionary, you’ll learn your macros, your movements, your breath.
Phase Two – The Minister Phase (Months 4–12):Now you lead. You start coaching others. Teaching family. Sharing what you’ve learned. You become a temple—people follow you not for your body, but your order. Workouts are no longer punishment—they’re protocol. This is when your discipline starts attracting attention.
Phase Three – Mecca Transformation (Month 13 and Beyond):You evolve beyond your program. You challenge what you thought was true. You test new methods, question old dogma, and expand into mastery. Now you can coach anyone, adapt to anything, and teach principles, not just routines. This is where you live beyond fitness—into legacy.
Savage Doctrine: “Transform Yourself to Transform Your People.”
Malcolm X didn’t just change himself—he changed the structure of power. He went from reactive to revolutionary. From victim to visionary. His life is the proof that personal transformation is the beginning of societal evolution.
Your training must reflect that same seriousness. You’re not just building a body. You’re building a message. A fortress. A movement.
Self-Reflection Questions:
What false identities or names have you been living under? Are you still moving as your “Detroit Red,” or have you taken your “X”?
What systems—diet, family, gym culture—need to be questioned or abandoned for your growth to continue?
Are you training for aesthetics or for legacy? Would your current routine matter if your kids inherited your mindset?
What is your Mecca? What new reality are you afraid to experience because it challenges your old beliefs?
How would you train if you knew the clock was ticking on your life’s impact?
Explore More:
Train your “Minister Malcolm” phase with DX Program Design: dxthetrainer.com/plans-pricing
Read more book reviews with strategic breakdowns: dxthetrainer.com/blog/book-reviews
Learn your body archetype to avoid training misalignment: dxthetrainer.com/quiz
Author Link:Visit Malcolm X’s official estate foundation: https://malcolmx.comFollow the Malcolm X Legacy Project on Instagram: @malcolmxlegacy



Comments