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

1360 episodes

  • EP 3728 Not my circus, not my monkeys

    30/05/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode of The Strong Life Project, Shaun O’Gorman dives into the powerful lesson behind the phrase “Not my circus, not my monkeys.” Too many people spend their lives emotionally exhausted because they carry responsibility for other people’s drama, poor decisions, toxic behavior, and chaos. Whether it’s at work, in relationships, with family, or in friendships, constantly trying to rescue, fix, or manage other people will eventually drain your energy, focus, and peace of mind.

    Shaun shares why boundaries are critical if you want a calmer, stronger, and more fulfilled life. As a former police officer who lived through extreme stress, trauma, and burnout, he understands how easy it is to become consumed by other people’s problems. But he also explains that taking ownership of your own mindset, habits, emotions, and behavior is where real strength is built.

    This episode explores the difference between compassion and responsibility. You can care about people without sacrificing yourself. You can support others without becoming emotionally entangled in every crisis around you. Shaun explains how many people stay stuck in anxiety, resentment, and overwhelm because they never learn to separate what they can control from what they cannot.

    You’ll learn why protecting your energy matters, how to stop absorbing negativity from difficult people, and why peace often comes from letting go rather than trying harder. This episode is a reminder that your life improves dramatically when you focus on your own growth, values, purpose, and resilience instead of trying to carry everyone else’s burdens.

    If you constantly feel emotionally exhausted, frustrated, or overwhelmed by the people around you, this episode will help you reclaim your focus and build a stronger, calmer, and more intentional life.

    The post EP 3728 Not my circus, not my monkeys appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3727 Psychological strength isn’t always a good thing

    29/05/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode of The Strong Life Project, Shaun O’Gorman explores a difficult truth that many high performers, first responders, leaders, and resilient people eventually face: psychological strength is not always a good thing.

    Being mentally tough can help you survive adversity, pressure, trauma, and hardship. It can help you keep moving when other people quit. But the same strength that helps you push through pain can also become the thing that keeps you stuck in unhealthy patterns, toxic relationships, emotional suppression, burnout, and isolation.

    Too many people wear their resilience like armor. They pride themselves on never breaking, never slowing down, and never asking for help. The problem is that unresolved stress, emotional pain, and constant hypervigilance don’t disappear just because you ignore them. Eventually, the cost shows up somewhere in your life through anxiety, anger, exhaustion, poor relationships, loss of purpose, or emotional numbness.

    In this episode, Shaun breaks down the difference between true psychological health and simply enduring suffering for long periods of time. He explains why emotional awareness, vulnerability, self-reflection, and honest conversations require far more courage than pretending everything is fine.

    This episode is a reminder that strength is not just about how much pain you can tolerate. Real strength is being self-aware enough to know when your coping strategies are no longer serving you. It is having the courage to evolve, heal, and create a life that is peaceful instead of just survivable.

    If you are someone who constantly carries pressure, responsibility, or emotional weight for everyone else, this conversation will challenge you to rethink what genuine resilience actually looks like.

    The post EP 3727 Psychological strength isn’t always a good thing appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3726 You always feel better after it

    29/05/2026 | 9 mins.
    In this episode of The Strong Life Project, Shaun O’Gorman dives into a simple but powerful truth that most people ignore when life gets hard: you always feel better after it. Whether it’s training, having the difficult conversation, getting out of bed early, dealing with stress, facing conflict, or pushing through emotional discomfort, the things we resist most are often the things that create the greatest relief, confidence, and growth afterwards.

    Too many people are trapped in a cycle of avoidance. We avoid the workout because we feel tired. We avoid the conversation because it feels uncomfortable. We avoid taking action because fear convinces us it’s safer to stay stuck. But that short-term comfort creates long-term frustration, anxiety, resentment, and regret.

    Shaun shares practical insights from his own experiences in policing, PTSD recovery, high-performance coaching, and everyday life to explain why discipline and courage are emotional multipliers. The challenge is rarely as painful as the anticipation of it. Once you take action, your nervous system settles, your confidence grows, and your mindset shifts from helplessness to capability.

    This episode is a reminder that resilience is not built through motivation. It’s built through action despite resistance. Confidence comes after the effort, not before it. The gym session, the difficult decision, the honest conversation, the cold shower, the business risk, the therapy appointment, or the commitment to change all follow the same rule: you almost never regret doing the hard thing once it’s done.

    If you’ve been procrastinating, avoiding discomfort, or waiting to “feel ready,” this episode will challenge you to stop negotiating with yourself and start building momentum through action. Because the life you want is usually sitting on the other side of the things you keep avoiding.

    The post EP 3726 You always feel better after it appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3725 Why do we love to tear each other down?

    27/05/2026 | 10 mins.
    Human beings are wired for connection, yet so often we attack, criticize, judge, and undermine each other. In this episode, I dive into why people are so quick to tear others down and what it says about insecurity, fear, ego, and unresolved pain. Most criticism has very little to do with the person being targeted and everything to do with the emotional state of the person delivering it.

    I explore how comparison culture, social media, resentment, and low self-worth fuel negativity and why emotionally healthy people rarely need to destroy others to feel significant. When people feel powerless, unseen, or unhappy in their own lives, attacking someone else can become a temporary way to feel superior or regain control.

    This episode is also about accountability. If you constantly seek validation, fear judgment, or allow other people’s opinions to dictate your actions, you become emotionally vulnerable to criticism. You cannot build confidence through external approval. Real confidence is built through resilience, self-awareness, discipline, and living in alignment with your values.

    I discuss the importance of emotional maturity, boundaries, and focusing on your own growth instead of becoming distracted by negativity from others. Whether it is in relationships, workplaces, families, or online environments, learning how to rise above toxic behavior is critical for peace of mind and long-term success.

    The strongest people are not those who dominate others. They are the people who can stay grounded, focused, and compassionate without needing to diminish anyone else. If you want more fulfillment, stronger relationships, and a better life, stop tearing people down and start doing the internal work to build yourself up.

    The post EP 3725 Why do we love to tear each other down? appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3724 The more peace I create, the less chaos I can tolerate

    26/05/2026 | 10 mins.
    The more work you do on yourself, the more sensitive you become to unnecessary drama, conflict, and emotional dysfunction. In this episode, I explore why personal growth changes your tolerance for chaos and why protecting your peace is not weakness, selfishness, or avoidance. It is self-respect.

    For many people, chaos becomes normal because they have lived in survival mode for years. Stress, conflict, toxic relationships, overcommitment, and emotional volatility can feel familiar, even addictive. But when you start building emotional resilience, self-awareness, discipline, and inner calm, you begin to recognize how destructive constant chaos really is.

    Creating peace in your life requires difficult choices. It means setting boundaries people may not like. It means walking away from relationships, environments, habits, and behaviors that drain your energy and compromise your wellbeing. It also means taking responsibility for your own emotional state instead of expecting external circumstances to make you happy.

    In this episode, I discuss how high performers, first responders, business owners, and everyday people often confuse chaos with purpose or intensity with meaning. But sustainable success, mental health, and fulfillment are built from clarity, consistency, and emotional control—not constant emotional firefighting.

    You will learn why protecting your peace is essential for performance, relationships, leadership, and long-term happiness. The calmer and more grounded you become, the more obvious it is that many people are trapped in cycles of stress they never question. You cannot build an exceptional life while constantly surrounded by emotional noise and dysfunction.

    Peace is earned through discipline, self-awareness, courage, and the willingness to let go of what no longer aligns with the life you want to create.

    The post EP 3724 The more peace I create, the less chaos I can tolerate 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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