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

1327 episodes

  • EP 3695 You learn everything you need to know about someone when things get tough

    27/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    EP 3695 You learn everything you need to know about someone when things get tough

    When life is easy, almost anyone can look like a great partner, leader, or friend. Pressure is the filter. In this episode, I break down a simple but confronting truth: people reveal their real character when things get hard.

    Stress strips away the masks. When someone is under pressure, tired, challenged, or not getting what they want, you see their default patterns. Do they take responsibility or blame others? Do they lean in or check out? Do they support you or make it about themselves? These moments are not anomalies. They are the most honest data you will ever get about a person.

    The mistake most people make is ignoring that data. We explain away poor behavior, we justify red flags, and we stay in situations hoping people will change. That costs you time, energy, and often your peace. If someone consistently shows you who they are under pressure, believe them. Then make a conscious decision about whether that aligns with the life you want.

    This isn’t just about judging others. It’s about owning your own behavior when things get tough. Who are you when you are stressed, overwhelmed, or challenged? Are you the person your family, team, and friends can rely on? Or do you become reactive, withdrawn, or defensive? High performance isn’t about who you are on your best day. It’s about who you are on your worst.

    If you want better relationships and stronger outcomes in life and work, stop listening to words and start watching behavior under pressure. That’s where the truth lives. Then do the work to become the person others can trust when it matters most.

    The post EP 3695 You learn everything you need to know about someone when things get tough appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3694 Is it resilience or emotional suppression?

    26/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode, I unpack a question that most high performers get wrong for years: is what you’re calling resilience actually emotional suppression? On the surface, they can look identical. You keep going, you don’t complain, you push through pressure and stress. But underneath, the outcomes are very different.

    True resilience is the ability to feel, process, and recover from adversity while still moving forward with clarity and purpose. Emotional suppression, on the other hand, is about burying what you feel so you can function in the moment. That might work short-term, especially in high-stress environments, but it comes at a cost. Over time, suppressed emotion builds pressure. It leaks out in anger, disconnection, poor decision-making, and damaged relationships.

    I talk about how many people, particularly in demanding careers, are conditioned to shut down emotionally to survive. The problem is that survival mode becomes your default. You stop communicating effectively with the people closest to you. You lose your ability to switch off. You carry the weight of your experiences without ever putting it down.

    This episode challenges you to be honest about where you sit. Are you actually resilient, or are you just numbing out and calling it strength? I share practical ways to start processing what you feel, building genuine emotional control, and creating a version of resilience that improves your life instead of slowly breaking it down.

    If you want to perform at a high level without sacrificing your relationships, your health, or your peace of mind, you need to understand the difference. Because doing the work on your internal world is not optional. It is the foundation of everything else.

    The post EP 3694 Is it resilience or emotional suppression? appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3693 External validation doesn’t fill an internal void

    25/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode, EP 3693 External validation doesn’t fill an internal void, I break down one of the most destructive patterns I see in people’s lives. The constant chase for approval, recognition, and reassurance from others that never actually delivers the peace or confidence they think it will. Whether it’s praise at work, attention in relationships, or validation on social media, the hit is temporary. Then the emptiness returns, often stronger than before.

    I explain why this cycle exists and how it’s driven by deeper insecurity, unprocessed emotional pain, and a lack of self-worth. If you don’t address what’s going on internally, no amount of external success, attention, or achievement will ever feel like enough. You’ll keep moving the goalposts, chasing more, and wondering why you still feel disconnected or dissatisfied.

    This episode challenges you to take responsibility for your own sense of value. It’s about doing the internal work most people avoid. Building self-respect through consistent action, developing emotional awareness, and learning to sit with discomfort instead of escaping it. When you rely less on others to validate you, you take back control of your life.

    I also discuss how this pattern affects relationships and leadership. When you need validation, you compromise your standards, tolerate poor behavior, and lose authenticity. When you build internal certainty, you show up stronger, calmer, and more grounded in every area of your life.

    If you want real confidence and fulfillment, it doesn’t come from outside. It comes from doing the work on yourself every day.

    The post EP 3693 External validation doesn’t fill an internal void appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3692 The curse of being the strong one

    24/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    Episode 3692 dives into a reality many people quietly live with: being “the strong one” is not a badge of honor—it’s often a burden that slowly erodes your wellbeing, relationships, and sense of self. When you are the person everyone relies on, the one who holds it together, solves problems, and supports others, you can easily fall into a pattern of emotional suppression and chronic self-neglect.

    In this episode, I unpack how strength can become a trap. You learn early that being dependable gets you approval, respect, and a sense of identity. But over time, that same identity can stop you from asking for help, showing vulnerability, or even recognizing your own pain. The result is disconnection—from yourself and from the people you care about most.

    I explore how this pattern shows up in high-pressure environments like policing, business, and family life, where resilience is expected but emotional honesty is often avoided. You’ll hear why constantly “holding it together” leads to burnout, resentment, and isolation, even if everything looks fine on the surface.

    More importantly, this episode is about breaking that cycle. True strength is not about carrying everything alone. It’s about having the courage to face your own struggles, communicate openly, and create boundaries that protect your energy and mental health. When you stop trying to be invincible, you give yourself the chance to live a more authentic, connected, and sustainable life.

    If you’ve always been the one others lean on, this conversation will challenge you to rethink what strength really means—and why letting people see the real you might be the strongest move you can make.

    The post EP 3692 The curse of being the strong one appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3691 The sad clown is suffering

    23/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode, I break down the reality behind “the sad clown” — the person who shows up strong, positive, and reliable for everyone else while quietly struggling underneath. It’s a pattern I’ve seen repeatedly in high performers, first responders, and people who carry responsibility for others. On the outside, they look like they have it handled. On the inside, they’re exhausted, disconnected, and often suffering in silence.

    The problem isn’t strength. The problem is misdirected strength. When you become the person everyone relies on, it’s easy to build an identity around being the one who copes, who pushes through, who doesn’t complain. But that same identity can trap you. You stop asking for help. You suppress what’s really going on. You convince yourself that your pain is just part of the deal.

    Over time, that suppression turns into emotional shutdown, relationship breakdown, and a loss of meaning in your life. You can be surrounded by people and still feel completely alone. You can be achieving externally while falling apart internally.

    This episode is a direct challenge to that pattern. Being strong doesn’t mean ignoring your own needs. Real strength is having the courage to face what’s actually going on for you and doing something about it. It’s about building a life where you don’t have to hide behind the mask.

    If you see yourself as the sad clown, it’s time to change the role you’re playing. You don’t need to carry everything on your own. You need honesty, accountability, and the willingness to do the work to rebuild connection with yourself and the people who matter most.

    The post EP 3691 The sad clown is suffering appeared first on The Strong Life Project.

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