When I laced up for the GWOT 100 in February, I thought I was signing up for a 100βmile fitness challenge. By the end of the month, I realized Iβd actually signed up for a master class in resilience, incremental progress, and the quiet satisfaction of sticking with a hard thingβon the trail and with my money.β
More than 25,000 of us moved through February, a total of 1.6 million miles across all 50 states and around the globe. All together under the GWOT 100 banner, logging miles in honor of those who served in the Global War on Terror. What I learned over those miles has everything to do with how ordinary people can dig out of debt, build savings, and buy back their financial independence.β
1. Resilience Is Built One Small βRepβ at a Time
There were days in the GWOT 100 when the miles came easyβcool mornings, good legs, and a clear head. Then there were days when everything felt heavy: the pack, the schedule, the weather, and the βwhy.β On those days, resilience didnβt look heroic; it looked like putting on shoes, stepping out the door, and doingβ―somethingβ―instead of nothing.ββ
Money works the same way. You donβt become financially resilient because you had one great month or one big bonus. You build resilience by choosing, again and again, not to quit on your plan:β
- Making the payment evenΒ whenΒ youβdΒ rather spend the money somewhere elseΒ
- Saying βnot todayβ to the upgrade, the impulseΒ click, or the extra subscriptionΒ
- Coming back to your budget after a bad week instead of throwing it awayΒ
The GWOT 100 reminded me that resilience is less about how fast you move and more about whether you keep moving. The same is true for debt relief: the families who win are not the ones who never struggleβtheyβre the ones who keep getting back up and sending in the next payment.ββ
2. The Deep Satisfaction of Incremental Progress
One of the most surprising parts of the GWOT 100 was how satisfying it became to log each dayβs miles, no matter how small. Watching my total creep from 7.3, to 24.9, to 51.0, to 83.6 did something important in my head: it proved that the plan was working, even when any given day felt unimpressive.ββ
Debt relief and saving money rarely feel exciting in the moment. A 20βdollar extra payment doesnβt look like much against a 10,000βdollar balance. But when you track itβwrite it down, see the number changeβyou give your brain what the daily mileage log gave me during GWOT 100: evidence that progress is happening.β
You can create that same satisfaction in your financial life by treating dollars like miles:
- Each 20βdollar extra payment is a βmileβ toward debt freedomΒ
- Each 50βdollar transfer to savings is another βlapβ toward your emergency fundΒ
- Each month you stay onΒ budgetΒ is like adding another completed segment to your route mapΒ
Over time, you stop asking, βIs this even doing anything?β and you start thinking, βIβm closer than I was yesterday.β That mindset shift is powerfulβnot just for your legs, but for your wallet.ββ
3. Big Outcomes Come from Boring Consistency
From the outside, the GWOT 100 looks like a big number: 100 miles in a single month. From the inside, though, it is nothing more than stacked days of ordinary effortβtwo miles here, four miles there, a longer effort when time and energy line up.β
Financial independence is the same. When we talk about people becoming debtβfree or building sixβmonth emergency funds, it sounds dramatic. But if you zoom in on their daily lives, you donβt see drama. You see boring consistency:β
- The family that eats at home one more night a week and sends the difference to their credit cardΒ
- The veteran who sets up an automatic transfer every payday andΒ letsΒ compound interest work quietly in the backgroundΒ
- The couple that reviews their spending once aΒ week,Β finds one small leak, and patches itΒ
The GWOT 100 proved that ordinary effort, applied consistently, produces extraordinary totals. The same math applies to your debts and savings balances. You donβt need a windfall; you need a system youβre willing to repeat.β
4. Community Makes the Hard Work Stick
One of the best parts of the GWOT 100 was knowing I was not out there alone. Across the country, tens of thousands of veterans, family members, and supporters were lacing up, rucking, running, and logging miles with me. On days when motivation ran low, the thought of others grinding it out too was often enough to get me moving.β
You can bring that same βsquad effectβ into your financial life:
- Share yourΒ debtβfreeΒ mission with a trusted friend, spouse, or battle buddyΒ
- Join a communityβonline or in personβthat talks openly about budgeting, paying off debt, and building wealthΒ
- Celebrate milestones together: first 500 dollars saved, first card paid off, first month without using the credit lineΒ
In uniform, we learned that we are stronger together than we are alone. The GWOT 100 brought that truth back to life in a fitness context; smart debt relief and disciplined saving bring it to life in the financial realm.ββ
5. Turning Februaryβs Lessons into a Financial βGWOT 100β
If Februaryβs GWOT 100 taught me anything, itβs that the muscles you build on the trail are the same ones you need to win with money. You can harness those lessons right now by setting up your own financial βGWOT 100β:ββ
- Pick a clear mission: pay off 1,200 dollars of debt in 12Β months, orΒ build a 1,000βdollar emergency fundΒ
- Break it into βmilesβ: 25 dollars a week toward that targetΒ
- Log every payment the wayΒ youβdΒ log every workoutΒ
- Recruit your squad to keep you honest and encouragedΒ
By the time the next GWOT 100 rolls around, you could be miles down the roadβnot just in your physical fitness, but in your financial health as well. You donβt have to be perfect. You just have to keep movingβone mile, one payment, one good decision at a time.β
GWOT 100 is sponsored by Team RWB (www.TeamRWB.org). Look them up in your local community to get connected with other military and veterans for regular activities. I have been a member for 12 years and have participated in runs, hikes, community service and social time in cities around the United States. One of their upcoming challenges is Memorial Minutes, a 25-day challenge in May to honor the 1.3 million Americans who have given their lives in service to our nation over the past 250 years. See you on the trail.



