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

1374 episodes

  • EP 3742 You’re not an overthinker

    13/06/2026 | 9 mins.
    Most people label themselves as overthinkers, but that label hides something deeper. Overthinking is not a personality trait. It is a protection strategy your nervous system learned when safety, clarity, or control were not consistently available. In this episode I break down why your mind never learned to switch off, and why the goal is not to think less but to build internal safety so thinking is no longer driven by threat.

    This changes everything. If you try to stop overthinking you end up fighting your own biology, which only increases internal pressure. Instead, we look at what created the loop: uncertainty, past stress load, unresolved emotional memory, and environments where mistakes had consequences. Your brain is doing its job too well. The problem is not the thinking. The problem is the perceived danger underneath it.

    You don’t fix this with more control. You fix it by building capacity in your nervous system so uncertainty doesn’t automatically equal threat. That means regulating your physiology, reducing unnecessary cognitive load, and training attention back into the present instead of projected futures. Small consistent practices matter more than insight alone.

    Overthinking is not the enemy. It is a signal. And when you learn to work with the signal instead of attacking it, your system starts to settle. That’s where clarity returns, decisions get easier, and action becomes cleaner and faster.

    If you’ve spent years believing you are just an overthinker, this episode challenges that identity. You are not broken. You are patterned. And patterns can be changed when you stop moralising them and start understanding the conditions that created them.

    This is about building internal safety, not self-criticism. Because once safety increases, overthinking naturally decreases without force. And that shift is where real change actually begins in daily life consistently forward.

    The post EP 3742 You’re not an overthinker appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3741 No, I’m fine

    12/06/2026 | 10 mins.
    In this episode of The Strong Life Project, Shaun O’Gorman unpacks the phrase ‘No, I’m fine’ and what it really signals in high performers, leaders, first responders, and everyday people under pressure. On the surface, it sounds harmless, even polite. Underneath it is often avoidance, emotional suppression, and a slow drift toward burnout, breakdown, or broken relationships.

    Shaun challenges the listener to look at the gap between what is said and what is true. Drawing from lived experience in law enforcement, coaching conversations, and patterns seen across thousands of hours of work with clients, he explores how people normalize stress, dismiss early warning signs, and convince themselves they are coping when they are actually just surviving.

    The episode breaks down how ‘I’m fine’ becomes a default identity rather than a real statement, and how that impacts decision-making, sleep, relationships, and performance.

    Shaun also highlights the cost of emotional dishonesty – not in moral terms, but in practical outcomes like reduced resilience, increased reactivity, and long-term health consequences.

    More importantly, he outlines a way forward.

    This is not about oversharing or emotional dumping.

    It is about building self-awareness, learning to tell the truth internally first, and developing the capacity to communicate honestly without collapsing into chaos.

    Small, consistent honesty creates stronger performance, better relationships, and clearer thinking under pressure.

    This episode is a direct challenge to stop outsourcing your truth and start owning what is actually going on beneath the surface.

    Because ‘I’m fine’ is rarely the truth – and the cost of pretending it is always shows up eventually.

    True strength is not pretending to be unaffected, it is having the capacity to be honest under pressure, regulate yourself effectively, and take action early before small internal issues become major external consequences in work, relationships, leadership, and health over time.

    The post EP 3741 No, I’m fine appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3740 Don’t be the clown trying to impress the circus

    11/06/2026 | 9 mins.
    One of the fastest ways to lose yourself is to spend your life trying to impress people who were never going to value you in the first place.

    In this episode, I dive into a trap that catches far too many people: performing for approval, chasing validation, and constantly changing who they are to fit into environments that don’t deserve their energy.

    Whether it’s at work, in relationships, with friends, or on social media, many people find themselves acting like a clown trying to impress the circus. They work harder, say yes when they mean no, tolerate poor treatment, and sacrifice their values in the hope that acceptance, recognition, or respect will eventually come.

    The problem is that it rarely does.

    The more you seek approval from people who don’t genuinely care about you, the more disconnected you become from your own purpose, confidence, and authenticity. Real strength comes from knowing who you are, standing by your values, and being willing to disappoint others rather than betray yourself.

    In this episode, I explore why people become trapped in validation-seeking behaviour, how fear of rejection drives poor decisions, and what it takes to build genuine self-worth. I also share practical insights on setting boundaries, developing self-respect, and focusing your energy on the people and opportunities that truly matter.

    Stop performing for the crowd. Stop chasing applause from people who wouldn’t stand beside you when things get tough. Build a life based on authenticity, courage, and self-respect instead.

    Because the moment you stop trying to impress the circus is the moment you start creating a life that actually belongs to you.

    The post EP 3740 Don’t be the clown trying to impress the circus appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3739 I hate the I told you so

    10/06/2026 | 10 mins.
    One of the hardest things in life is watching people you care about make choices that you know are likely to hurt them.

    You’ve seen the warning signs. You’ve had the conversations. You’ve shared your experience. You’ve tried to help them see the challenges ahead. Then they ignore the advice, continue down the same path, and eventually end up facing the exact consequences you hoped they could avoid.

    In those moments, it’s tempting to say, “I told you so.”

    But what does that really achieve?

    In this episode, I explore the frustration, sadness, and helplessness that can come from watching other people learn lessons the hard way. Whether it’s in relationships, careers, health, finances, or personal growth, there are times when people simply aren’t ready to hear what we have to say.

    The reality is that wisdom cannot be forced on anyone. People change when they are ready, not when we are ready for them to change. No amount of advice, persuasion, or concern can replace someone’s own lived experience.

    I discuss why letting go of the need to rescue people is essential for your own peace of mind, how attachment to outcomes creates unnecessary suffering, and why compassion is often more powerful than being right.

    This episode is a reminder that your responsibility is to offer support, share your perspective, and lead by example. What others choose to do with that information is ultimately up to them.

    Sometimes the greatest act of love is allowing people to walk their own path, even when you can clearly see where it leads.

    The post EP 3739 I hate the I told you so appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
  • EP 3738 Chop wood, carry water

    09/06/2026 | 8 mins.
    In a world obsessed with shortcuts, hacks, and overnight success, there is one truth that remains unchanged: sustainable success comes from doing the simple things consistently.

    In this episode, I explore the timeless principle of “Chop Wood, Carry Water”—the idea that real growth, happiness, resilience, and achievement are built through daily discipline rather than dramatic breakthroughs.

    Too many people spend their lives waiting for motivation, certainty, or the perfect opportunity before taking action. The reality is that the people who create extraordinary lives are often doing very ordinary things every day. They focus on the fundamentals. They show up when they don’t feel like it. They keep moving forward when progress feels slow.

    Whether it’s improving your health, strengthening relationships, building a business, recovering from adversity, or developing greater mental toughness, success is rarely about one big moment. It’s about thousands of small choices repeated over time.

    This episode is a reminder that the work you are avoiding is often the work that will transform your life. The mundane habits, the uncomfortable conversations, the daily commitment to becoming a better version of yourself—these are the things that create lasting results.

    If you’re feeling frustrated, stuck, or impatient with your progress, this episode will help you refocus on what truly matters. Stop searching for the magic answer. Return to the basics. Do the work. Trust the process.

    Chop wood. Carry water. Repeat.

    The simple path is often the most powerful one.

    The post EP 3738 Chop wood, carry water appeared first on The Strong Life Project.
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Live with Strength, Tenacity, Resilience, Optimism, Nurturing & Generosity
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