In the Tried & Approved Faith. Fight. Heal. Series, Gregory Jacob Jr. shares his powerful journey from a toxic upbringing to overcoming prostate cancer. This transformational workbook empowers men to reclaim their health, lead their families with spiritual purpose, and build resilient legacies rooted in faith and healing. Through personal reflection, spiritual insight, and actionable tools, Tried & Approved invites readers to step into restoration, redemption, and unwavering hope.
“Greg Jacob gives much-needed counsel to the 1 in 8 Christian men who will face prostate cancer, helping them navigate the physical, emotional, and spiritual effects of that dreaded diagnosis.”
— Doug Keesewetter, CEO, Cogency Power
“I’m captivated.”
— Jerel Bryant, CEO, Collegiate Academies
“This book saves lives.”
— Pastor Cummings
“God isn’t finished with you yet. From adversity to success. Touching. I encourage all to read this book.”
— Betty Banks-Joseph
“Love it. You have been tried and approved, Greg!”
— Kent Satterlee, Executive Director, Gulf Offshore Research Institute
“Gregory’s mission is clear: to build a brotherhood of men who are informed, supported, and spiritually rooted, because health is not just physical; it’s emotional, mental, and sacred.”
— Dr. Laura Kromann-Martin
When I was diagnosed with cancer, people showed up with prayers, casseroles, and one consistent message: stay positive, stay motivated. And I appreciated every bit of it. But nobody handed me a map. Nobody told me what to do when the motivation ran out — when the chemo fog settled in, when the fatigue made standing feel like a victory, when the road ahead looked longer than the road I'd already walked.
That's when I learned something that has since become the foundation of everything I teach through Tried & Approved: motivation is a feeling. Systems are a decision. And decisions outlast feelings every single time.
We live in a culture that sells men the idea that enough passion, enough fire, enough grit will carry you through anything. Watch enough motivational videos. Read enough inspirational quotes. Tell yourself you're a warrior — and you'll become one.
There's truth in the idea that mindset matters. But here's what that narrative leaves out: motivation is episodic. It spikes after a diagnosis, after a doctor's hard conversation, after a funeral of a friend who didn't make it. Then life normalizes — even life in the middle of illness — and the spike fades.
The men I've watched struggle most in survivorship weren't lacking heart. They were lacking structure. They didn't have a system that could carry them when their heart felt empty.
A system is not a complicated spreadsheet or a 40-step protocol. It is simply a set of repeatable actions, attached to specific triggers, that move you toward a defined outcome — whether you feel like it or not.
In my own healing, my system was built around three pillars. I now call them the Tried & Approved framework: Meals, Movement, and Mission.
Every Sunday, I prepared. I didn't decide what to eat when I was hungry and exhausted. I made those decisions in advance — alkaline foods that supported healing, groceries already stocked, meals prepped so that the right choice was also the easy choice. The decision cost me energy once. It saved me energy seven times over.
I set a minimum, not a goal. On the hardest days, my minimum was a 10-minute walk. Not five miles. Not a gym session. Ten minutes. The purpose wasn't fitness — it was proof. Proof that I could still move, still commit, still show up for myself even when everything hurt.
This is the one most men skip. But without mission — without a clear sense of why you are fighting — the system has no engine. My mission was my daughter. My mission was becoming a voice for the men who would come after me. My mission was not wasting the second chance I had been given.
The key insight: When you build a system aligned with your mission, you stop relying on how you feel. You start relying on what you've decided. And that's a far more reliable foundation.
I am a man of faith, and I won't pretend otherwise. For me, faith wasn't separate from my system — it was the scaffolding the whole thing was built on. James 1:12 says the one who perseveres under trial will receive the crown of life. That verse didn't promise the trial would be easy. It promised that endurance itself was the point.
Faith gave me a reason to build the system. The system gave me a way to practice the faith. They aren't in tension — they reinforce each other. When I prayed, I was renewed. When I acted on the structure I had built, I was proving the prayer wasn't passive. Both mattered. Neither was enough alone.
You don't need to have cancer to need a system. Every man navigating recovery — whether from illness, loss, divorce, failure, or simply a decade of neglecting himself — needs the same thing: a reliable structure that outlasts motivation.
Here's how to begin:
The system will not save you from hard days. But it will ensure that on hard days, you still move. You still show up. You still become, incrementally, the man you are meant to be.
That is what Tried & Approved is about. Not perfection. Proven repetition. Not motivation. Mission-driven systems. Faith, fight, and a framework that carries you when you can't carry yourself.
The Survivor's Roadmap is a 16-week coaching program designed to give you exactly the structure this article describes — with accountability, community, and faith at the center.
Learn About the Survivor's Roadmap →