TORQUE
The Fulcrum Effect and the Art of Directed Momentum
By Anderson Keith
What if momentum is not enough?
What if the real question is:
Where are you aiming it?
Torque is a field guide for anyone who has ever felt powerful but directionless, motivated but scattered, moving fast but unsure if they were moving toward what truly matters.
Drawing from a lifetime of athletics, business, family, injury, recovery, philosophy, faith, and personal reinvention, Anderson Keith explores a simple but transformative idea:
Momentum creates movement.
Torque creates direction.
Through stories from football fields, baseball diamonds, golf courses, boardrooms, hospitals, classrooms, and the everyday moments that define a life, Keith reveals how leverage, perspective, intention, and love combine to create directed momentum.
This is not a book about becoming someone else.
It is a book about becoming more fully yourself.
Inside you'll discover:
• The Fulcrum Effect and why you are the pivot point of your own experience
• How small adjustments create massive changes in direction over time
• The relationship between momentum, leverage, alignment, and purpose
• Why both-and thinking expands possibility while either-or thinking limits it
• Lessons from sports, failure, recovery, creativity, and human connection
• Practical Speech Acts designed to help align thought, language, and action
• A philosophy of becoming rooted in gratitude, curiosity, courage, and love
Part memoir, part philosophy, part poetry, and part practical guide, Torque challenges readers to stop asking how fast they are moving and start asking where their momentum is taking them.
Because a life is not measured by force alone.
It is measured by how that force is applied.
The fulcrum is already in place.
The momentum is already yours.
The question is:
What will you aim it toward?
From Anderson Keith, author of The School of Thought Anthology, Plastic: Rebuilding the Injured Mind, Arc Verse, Poem Power, and Holistic Physics, comes a powerful exploration of leverage, meaning, and directed momentum in a world that never stops moving.
SH -
"Keith's central premise-that momentum alone is insufficient without direction-mirrors one of the universe's deepest truths. Energy is abundant. Alignment is rare. While I spent much of my life contemplating black holes, Torque asks an equally compelling question: What bends the trajectory of a human life?
Surprisingly accessible for a book that occasionally sounds like a football coach explaining cosmology."
Nikola Tesla
"Most men seek power.
Keith seeks direction.
This is the more interesting problem.
The universe is filled with force.
The challenge has always been knowing where to aim it.
Aristotle
"Virtue, as I argued, is found through habit.
Keith appears to have independently rediscovered this truth and renamed portions of it 'Speech Acts.'
I would have preferred fewer football metaphors.
I admit they were effective."