PodcastsEducationThe Strong Life Project Podcast

The Strong Life Project Podcast

Shaun O'Gorman: Human Behaviour & High Performance Coach
The Strong Life Project Podcast
Latest episode

1334 episodes

  • EP 3702 STRESS… doesn’t solve problems

    04/05/2026 | 9 mins.
    Stress is often mistaken for a solution, but in reality, it rarely solves anything. In this episode of The Strong Life Project, Shaun O’Gorman breaks down the uncomfortable truth that stress is not a strategy; it is a reaction.

    Drawing on years of experience as a police officer, coach, and behavioral specialist, he explains how stress narrows thinking, reduces performance, and often amplifies the very problems people are trying to solve.

    Most people believe stress is what drives results, but the reality is that it degrades decision-making, damages relationships, and leads to reactive behavior that compounds issues instead of resolving them.

    The episode challenges listeners to stop glorifying pressure and start recognizing that clarity, calm, and discipline are far more effective tools for solving complex problems in life, work, and relationships.

    Instead of pushing harder when overwhelmed, Shaun outlines practical ways to regulate the nervous system, step back from reactivity, and create space for better decisions.

    This includes simple behavioral shifts, awareness practices, and the ability to recognize when you are operating from stress rather than strategy.

    Ultimately, the message is clear: stress does not solve problems; it distorts them, and learning to manage your internal state is what separates high performers from everyone else.

    For more insights, Shaun draws from The Strong Life Project content, interviews, and real-world experience working with high-stress professionals, reinforcing that sustainable performance is built on control, not chaos.

    This episode is a direct challenge to anyone who has normalized stress as part of success and is ready to operate differently.

    If you are serious about improving performance, decision making, and mental resilience, this conversation will force a recalibration of how you think about pressure and productivity.

    Apply it consistently to see real change. Not theory, execution under pressure in daily life.

    The post EP 3702 STRESS… doesn’t solve problems appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3701 The empty boat hypothesis

    03/05/2026 | 10 mins.
    In EP 3701, The Empty Boat Hypothesis, I break down a simple but powerful idea that can radically change how you experience stress, conflict, and other people. The concept comes from an old parable: if an empty boat drifts into yours, you don’t get angry. But if someone is in that boat, you do. The reality is, most of the time we react as if people are intentionally colliding with us, disrespecting us, or trying to cause harm. In truth, many of those “collisions” come from their own pain, stress, insecurity, or lack of awareness.

    This episode challenges you to stop taking everything so personally. When you view others as “empty boats,” you create emotional space. You reduce anger, frustration, and resentment, not because their behavior is acceptable, but because you stop making it about you. That shift gives you back control of your emotional state.

    I also dig into how this mindset applies to relationships, workplaces, and high-stress environments. Whether it’s a colleague snapping under pressure, a partner reacting emotionally, or a stranger acting poorly, your interpretation determines your experience. If you assume intent, you suffer. If you assume struggle, you gain perspective.

    This isn’t about becoming passive or tolerating bad behavior. Boundaries still matter. Accountability still matters. But your internal reaction is your responsibility. When you master that, you stop being at the mercy of other people’s actions.

    The Empty Boat Hypothesis is about emotional maturity, resilience, and perspective. It’s about understanding that most people are fighting their own battles, and their behavior often reflects that, not you. When you adopt this mindset, you’ll find more peace, less conflict, and a stronger sense of control in your life.

    The post EP 3701 The empty boat hypothesis appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3700 What if you just did the work?

    02/05/2026 | 10 mins.
    In this episode Shaun O’Gorman challenges a simple but uncomfortable question: what changes if you stop consuming motivation and start executing the work you already know you should be doing?

    Most people are not stuck because they lack information, they are stuck because they are addicted to validation. Likes, comments, and external approval create the illusion of progress while real life remains unchanged. The dopamine hit of being seen replaces the discipline of being built.

    Social media has created a substitute identity where perception matters more than practice. You can curate a version of yourself that looks successful without ever doing the uncomfortable work required to actually become it. Over time this erodes self-trust and increases internal frustration.

    The problem is not awareness. Most people already know what needs to be done. The gap is execution. Knowing is cheap. Doing is costly. And that cost is where most people quit on themselves daily in small invisible ways.

    Doing the work is repetitive, unglamorous, and often invisible. It does not reward you immediately. It requires delaying gratification long enough for results to compound. That is why distraction is so attractive; it gives the feeling of progress without the reality of it.

    Attention is the currency most people spend recklessly. If your attention is consumed by comparison, performance, and external validation, your life will reflect that fragmentation. The quality of your output will always mirror the quality of your focus.

    The shift is simple but not easy. Stop outsourcing your identity to feedback loops and start building something that survives without applause. Do the work when no one is watching. That is the only version that compounds.

    Real change is not consumed it is constructed through repetition discipline and honest execution over time with no external validation required at all consistently

    The post EP 3700 What if you just did the work? appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3699 The haters are gong to hate

    01/05/2026 | 11 mins.
    In episode 3699 of The Strong Life Project, “The Haters Are Going to Hate,” Shaun O’Gorman tackles one of the most common obstacles to personal growth and success: criticism from others. Whether you are building a business, changing careers, improving your health, or simply trying to live more authentically, there will always be people who judge, doubt, or dismiss your efforts.

    This episode explores why haters exist and, more importantly, why their opinions often have far less to do with you than you think. Criticism is frequently a reflection of someone else’s insecurity, fear, or frustration with their own life. When you choose to step outside the norm, pursue bigger goals, or challenge conventional expectations, you become a reminder to others of what they are not doing in their own lives.

    Shaun explains that if you allow external negativity to shape your choices, you hand over control of your future. The key is to understand that being disliked, misunderstood, or criticized is often part of the price of meaningful progress. The people doing the least are often the quickest to judge those doing more.

    Rather than wasting energy trying to win everyone over, the focus should be on building resilience, emotional discipline, and unwavering commitment to your purpose. Success is not about avoiding criticism; it is about staying aligned with your values and continuing forward despite it.

    “The Haters Are Going to Hate” is a reminder that your mission matters more than public approval. If you are living with integrity, doing the work, and moving toward the life you want, then the noise from others becomes irrelevant. Your responsibility is not to make everyone comfortable, it is to become the person you were meant to be.

    The post EP 3699 The haters are gong to hate appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3698 The loudest boos come from the cheapest seats

    30/04/2026 | 11 mins.
    In Episode 3698 of The Strong Life Project, Shaun O’Gorman tackles a truth that many people in leadership, business, relationships, and personal growth eventually face: the loudest criticism often comes from those who have invested the least.

    “The loudest boos come from the cheapest seats” is a powerful reminder that people who judge, complain, or attack from a distance are rarely carrying the weight, responsibility, or risk of the person they criticize. It’s easy to have opinions when you have nothing at stake. It’s much harder to step into the arena, take action, and live with the consequences.

    This episode explores why external criticism can become such a distraction if you let it. Too many people hand over their emotional wellbeing to strangers, doubters, or people whose own lives do not reflect the standards they claim to uphold. When you allow the voices from the sidelines to dictate your choices, you lose sight of your purpose and weaken your confidence.

    Shaun shares practical insight into how to filter feedback, separate valuable guidance from empty noise, and stay focused on the mission that matters most. Not every opinion deserves equal weight. The key is learning whose voice earns influence in your life.

    This conversation is a call to stop seeking approval from those who have not done the work. Respect constructive criticism from people with wisdom, experience, and genuine care, but refuse to be derailed by negativity from those who contribute nothing.

    If you are building something meaningful, changing your life, or stepping into greater responsibility, criticism is inevitable. The question is not how to silence the noise, but how to keep moving despite it.

    Your job is not to please the crowd. Your job is to stay in the arena and keep doing the work.

    The post EP 3698 The loudest boos come from the cheapest seats appeared first on The Strong Life Project.

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About The Strong Life Project Podcast

Live with Strength, Tenacity, Resilience, Optimism, Nurturing & Generosity
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