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

1290 episodes

  • EP 3658 Stop wasting time explaining yourself

    21/03/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode, we tackle a habit that quietly drains your confidence and your time: over explaining yourself to people who have already decided to see you the wrong way. If someone is committed to misunderstanding you, clarity will not convert them. Your extra words do not create connection. They create leverage for the other person to twist, nitpick, and keep you on the defensive.

    We break down the difference between healthy communication and self abandonment. Healthy communication is when there is goodwill, curiosity, and shared intent. Self abandonment is when you keep performing explanations to earn fairness from someone who is not offering it. That is not maturity. That is fear dressed up as reason.

    You will learn how to spot the patterns early: constant moving goalposts, selective hearing, moral grandstanding, and the subtle baiting that pulls you into a never ending trial where you are both defendant and witness. If you keep trying to prove you are a good person to someone who benefits from seeing you as the villain, you will lose. Not because you are wrong, but because the game is rigged.

    This episode gives you a practical response framework. When a conversation is in good faith, you can clarify once, ask a direct question, and look for mutual understanding. When it is not, you set a boundary, keep your message tight, and exit cleanly. No arguments. No essays. No emotional pleading. You do not need to convince everyone. You need to lead yourself.

    The goal is not to become cold. The goal is to become disciplined. Save your explanation for people who are capable of hearing you. Keep your energy for your relationships, your work, and the life you are building.

    The post EP 3658 Stop wasting time explaining yourself appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3657 It costs more to replace good people than keep them

    20/03/2026 | 9 mins.
    In EP 3657, “It costs more to replace good people than keep them,” the message is simple: if you treat your best people like they are replaceable, you will eventually pay the bill. And it is never just the salary. The real cost shows up in the gaps nobody budgets for: lost trust, lost momentum, lost client confidence, increased mistakes, and the slow erosion of standards as the team watches how loyalty gets rewarded. When a high performer leaves, the workload does not disappear. It gets dumped on the remaining good people, which is how you turn one resignation into a culture problem.

    This episode is a practical audit for leaders, business owners, and anyone responsible for a team. Are you managing people like numbers, or leading humans like they matter. Replacing talent often costs multiples of salary once you include recruitment, onboarding time, lost productivity, and the hit to morale. The fix is not “be nicer.” It is to get serious about what keeps good people: clear expectations, consistent standards, feedback that helps them grow, recognition that is specific, and pay that matches value. It also means having the hard conversations early, so resentment does not become an exit strategy.

    If you want to keep great people, stop waiting for them to be halfway out the door before you listen. Run retention like you run performance: measure it, talk about it, and act on it. Good people do not leave “jobs.” They leave confusion, disrespect, and leaders who talk about values but do not live them. This is leadership without fluff: keep your people by earning the right to lead them.

    The post EP 3657 It costs more to replace good people than keep them appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3656 It’s a long road but it’s worth it

    19/03/2026 | 10 mins.
    EP 3656, It’s a long road, but it’s worth it, is a blunt reminder that the results you want are rarely built in a week, a month, or a single burst of motivation. They are built in boring reps. Quiet decisions. Doing the work when nobody is watching. Most people quit because they expected the road to be short. They confuse discomfort with failure, and slow progress with no progress. Then they start negotiating with themselves, lowering standards, making excuses, and calling it “being realistic”.

    This episode is about staying in the game long enough for your effort to compound. If you want stronger relationships, better health, a calmer mind, more money, or more confidence, you do not need a perfect plan. You need a minimum standard you can repeat, even on your worst days. The people who win are not the most talented. They are the most consistent. They do the basics relentlessly. They tell the truth about what they are doing, what they are avoiding, and what they are tolerating.

    You will be challenged to stop waiting until you feel ready. Readiness is built through action. Confidence is a byproduct of keeping promises to yourself. So pick one area of your life that matters. Define a daily minimum. Schedule it. Do it. Track it. Review it. Repeat. When you miss, treat it as data, not identity. Adjust, and go again.

    It is a long road. That is the point. The road forces you to earn the version of you that can actually hold the life you say you want.

    The post EP 3656 It’s a long road but it’s worth it appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3655 Overthinking makes you feee like you’re stuck

    18/03/2026 | 9 mins.
    In EP 3655 of The Strong Life Project Podcast, Shaun O’Gorman breaks down the real reason overthinking makes you feel stuck: it creates the illusion of progress while keeping you safely out of the arena. You can rehearse a decision for weeks, run every worst case scenario, and call it “being responsible,” but nothing changes until you move.

    This episode reframes overthinking as a nervous system strategy. When your brain is scanning for threat, it will try to protect you with analysis, delay, reassurance seeking, and endless “what if” loops. The problem is that the protection becomes the prison. The longer you wait for certainty, the more your mind learns that action is dangerous and avoidance is relief. That cycle shrinks your confidence, your relationships, and your capacity to lead.

    Shaun gives you a practical reset: name what you are actually afraid of, decide what matters more than comfort, and take one clear action within the next 24 hours. Not a dramatic overhaul. One phone call. One honest conversation. One training session. One email. One boundary. One step that creates feedback and momentum.

    You will also learn how to separate preparation from procrastination. Preparation produces a plan and a deadline. Procrastination produces more thinking, more research, and more stories about why now is not the right time.

    Finally, Shaun challenges you to aim your thinking at what you want to build, not only what you want to avoid. Overthinking the best is rehearsal. It trains your attention to look for options and next steps. You respect risk, but you do not worship it. Action beats perfect thinking every time.

    If you have been feeling trapped or paralysed by your own mind, this episode will help you build clarity through movement, calm through repetition, and confidence through keeping promises to yourself.

    The post EP 3655 Overthinking makes you feee like you’re stuck appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3654 Sometimes a crisis triggers the genius within

    17/03/2026 | 9 mins.
    EP 3654, Sometimes a crisis triggers the genius within, is a straight conversation about what happens when life punches you in the mouth and you finally stop pretending. A crisis can break you, or it can force you into the kind of clarity you have been avoiding. Most people do not suddenly “find” strength in hard times. They reveal what they have trained. And if you have not trained anything, the crisis becomes the moment you start.

    In this episode, we unpack why pressure can become a catalyst for your best thinking, leadership, and self respect. When the stakes rise, the noise drops. You stop negotiating with distractions. You stop waiting for motivation. You start doing what matters. That is where genius lives for most people, not in talent, but in decisions made under discomfort.

    You will hear practical ways to turn crisis into momentum: stabilise the basics first (sleep, food, movement, routine), reduce your world to the next controllable action, and build a simple plan you can execute even when you feel wrecked. The goal is not to “stay positive.” The goal is to stay effective. Crisis does not require drama. It requires ownership.

    This is general advice for anyone navigating uncertainty, relationship strain, business stress, grief, or burnout. If you are in a hard season, this episode is a reminder that you do not need a new personality. You need standards, structure, and the willingness to do the next right thing until you are out. The crisis might not be here to destroy you. It might be here to reveal who you can become.

    The post EP 3654 Sometimes a crisis triggers the genius within 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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