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

1308 episodes

  • EP 3676 Life happens for me, not to me

    08/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode, I break down a mindset shift that has the power to change everything in your life: moving from a victim mentality to one of ownership and growth. When you believe life is happening to you, you give away your power. You become reactive, frustrated, and stuck in a cycle of blame. But when you start to see that life is happening for you, every challenge becomes an opportunity to learn, grow, and evolve.

    This perspective isn’t about ignoring pain or pretending difficult situations don’t hurt. It’s about choosing a response that serves you, rather than one that keeps you trapped. In my own journey through policing, trauma, and personal adversity, this shift was critical. It allowed me to take responsibility for my mindset, my actions, and ultimately my future.

    When you adopt this approach, setbacks become lessons. Stress becomes a tool for growth. Conflict becomes a chance to build resilience and emotional strength. It requires honesty, accountability, and the courage to look at your role in every situation, even when it’s uncomfortable.

    Most people stay stuck because it’s easier to blame external circumstances than to do the hard internal work. But the truth is, your perspective determines your reality. If you want a better life, stronger relationships, and more control over your future, you need to take that power back.

    Life will always present challenges. The difference is how you interpret and respond to them. Choose a mindset that empowers you, and you will start to see opportunities where others only see obstacles.

    The post EP 3676 Life happens for me, not to me appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3675 I just didn’t want to say anything

    07/04/2026 | 10 mins.
    In this episode, I unpack a simple but damaging habit: staying silent when you know you should speak. “I just didn’t want to say anything” sounds harmless, but in reality, it’s often driven by fear—fear of conflict, rejection, judgment, or rocking the boat. Over time, that silence builds pressure. It erodes your self-respect, damages relationships, and creates a life where you’re constantly compromising who you are just to keep the peace.

    I share how this pattern shows up in high-stress environments like policing, corporate leadership, and everyday life. When you avoid difficult conversations, you don’t eliminate problems—you delay and amplify them. The longer you hold things in, the more resentment builds, and the more explosive the outcome eventually becomes. Silence isn’t neutral. It’s a choice, and it often comes at a cost.

    This episode challenges you to take ownership of your voice. Speaking up doesn’t mean being aggressive or confrontational. It means being honest, respectful, and clear about what matters to you. It’s about setting boundaries, addressing issues early, and having the courage to be uncomfortable in the short term to avoid long-term damage.

    I also explore practical ways to start shifting this behavior, how to build confidence in communication, manage emotional responses, and approach tough conversations with clarity instead of fear. Like any skill, it takes practice. But the payoff is massive: stronger relationships, greater self-respect, and a life that feels more aligned with who you really are.

    If you’ve been holding back, this is your reminder, your voice matters. Use it.

    The post EP 3675 I just didn’t want to say anything appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3674 Your perspective determines everything

    06/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    Your perspective shapes the way you experience every part of your life. It influences how you handle stress, how you interpret setbacks, how you respond to other people, and whether you see challenges as things that break you or build you.

    In this episode, I talk about why your perspective is one of the most powerful tools you have when it comes to your happiness, resilience, and success. Life will always throw adversity, disappointment, pressure, and pain your way. That part is unavoidable. What changes everything is the meaning you attach to those experiences.

    If you constantly look at life through the lens of fear, frustration, blame, or victimhood, then even small problems can feel overwhelming. But when you train yourself to see challenges as opportunities for growth, learning, and strength, your whole life changes. The circumstances may not be different, but your ability to navigate them becomes far more powerful.

    This episode is a reminder that you are not always in control of what happens to you, but you are in control of how you choose to see it. That mindset can be the difference between a life filled with resentment and struggle, or one built on purpose, resilience, and peace.

    Your perspective impacts your relationships, your work, your confidence, and your emotional well-being. When you change the lens, you change the outcome.

    If you want to live a stronger, calmer, and more fulfilled life, it starts with taking ownership of your perspective and asking yourself one simple question: “Is the way I’m looking at this helping me or hurting me?”

    The post EP 3674 Your perspective determines everything appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3673 Time heals and scars make us stronger

    05/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    Time doesn’t erase pain, but it does change your relationship with it.

    In this episode, I unpack a truth most people only understand after they’ve been through enough hardship: healing is rarely clean, quick, or comfortable. Whether it’s heartbreak, betrayal, failure, trauma, loss, or the slow grind of stress and pressure, the wounds life leaves behind can feel permanent when you’re in the middle of them. But with time, perspective, and the right choices, those same wounds can become the scars that remind you of your strength—not your suffering.

    Too many people live as if their pain is proof they are broken. It isn’t. Pain is part of being human. The real danger comes when you let your hurt become your identity. If you stay attached to the story of what happened to you, you can spend years unconsciously building a life around self-protection, fear, anger, or emotional shutdown.

    Scars tell a different story. They say you survived. They say you adapted. They say life hit hard, but you didn’t stay down.

    That doesn’t mean you ignore the pain or pretend it didn’t matter. Real healing takes ownership. It takes honesty. It takes doing the work to process what happened instead of numbing it with distractions, avoidance, or resentment. Time helps, but only if you use it well.

    This episode is about learning to respect your scars without living from your wounds. It’s about recognizing that the hardest seasons in your life may be the very things that forged your resilience, sharpened your character, and deepened your capacity for empathy, courage, and purpose.

    You don’t have to love what happened to you.

    But if you do the work, one day you may realize the thing that nearly broke you also built the strongest parts of who you are.

    The post EP 3673 Time heals and scars make us stronger appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3672 The lonely chapter

    04/04/2026 | 9 mins.
    As you grow in life, it can feel lonely.

    That’s one of the hardest truths about real personal development. When you start changing your standards, your habits, your mindset, and the way you see yourself, you often outgrow people, environments, and behaviours that once felt normal. What used to fit no longer does. And in that gap between who you were and who you’re becoming, loneliness can creep in.

    In this episode, I talk about the lonely chapter—that season of life where you’re doing the work, trying to become a better person, and yet it can feel like fewer people understand you than ever before. You may find yourself spending less time in shallow conversations, stepping away from unhealthy relationships, or feeling disconnected from people who are still committed to comfort while you’re committed to growth.

    That loneliness doesn’t mean you’re broken. It doesn’t mean you’re failing. More often than not, it means you’re evolving.

    Growth requires separation. Discipline can be isolating. Integrity can cost you connection with people who preferred the old version of you. But if you keep chasing short-term belonging over long-term alignment, you’ll stay stuck in a life that feels safe but slowly destroys your peace.

    The key is not to panic in the lonely chapter. Use it. Build yourself there. Strengthen your routines, protect your energy, get clear on your values, and trust that the right people will meet you at the level you’re willing to rise to.

    Not everyone is meant to come with you into your next season.

    Sometimes the loneliness is not punishment. It’s preparation.

    And if you can stay the course through that chapter, you’ll come out stronger, clearer, and far more connected to who you really are.

    The post EP 3672 The lonely chapter appeared first on The Strong Life Project.

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