『Pain to Performance』のカバーアート

Pain to Performance

Pain to Performance

著者: Bradlee Morgan
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Pain shows up everywhere. In our bodies, in our work, and in the way we perform every day.

Pain to Performance is a weekly podcast featuring in-depth conversations with industry experts across health, pain reduction, sports, and workplace wellbeing. Each episode explores how pain actually functions in the body and mind, why it is often misunderstood, and how reducing it can unlock stronger, more sustainable performance.

Hosted by Bradlee Morgan, the show brings together clinicians, performance specialists, and business professionals to examine how physical stress, mental load, movement, and environment impact how we work, move, and live. Sometimes those perspectives align. Sometimes they challenge each other. Always, they provide insight you can apply.

This is not a podcast about pushing harder or ignoring discomfort. It is about understanding the signals your body and nervous system are sending and using that information to perform better at work, in sport, and in everyday life.

Because when pain is understood, performance follows.

2025 Bradlee Morgan
経済学 衛生・健康的な生活
エピソード
  • Skip the Ortho Maze: How One Doctor Is Fixing Orthopedic Care in America
    2026/06/17

    You got hurt. You called your doctor. The earliest appointment is three weeks out. You sit in a waiting room for two hours, pay your copay, and after all of that, you still do not know what is wrong. Sound familiar?

    In this episode of Pain to Performance, host Bradley Morgan sits down with Dr. Tom Weber, a board-certified orthopedic specialist who spent 25 years inside the traditional healthcare system before deciding to blow it up. Dr. Weber trained at the Medical College of Wisconsin, completed residency at the University of Virginia, and did a sports medicine fellowship at Ohio State. He has accumulated over 100,000 patient visits. And after watching patients get buried under copays, unnecessary imaging, coding audits, and weeks-long wait times, he built MD Ortho, a platform where you open an app and a specialist is looking at your injury the same day.

    Dr. Weber walks through the real story of a high school football player who tore his ACL on a Friday night. In the traditional system, that family would have spent four weeks and over $2,000 just to get a diagnosis. With MD Ortho, the mom opened the app Saturday morning, her son had a $450 cash-price MRI by that afternoon, and was sitting in front of the right surgeon by Monday. That is what healthcare can look like when you skip the maze.

    Brad and Dr. Weber also dig into why 80 to 90 percent of orthopedic issues do not require surgery, how pattern recognition after 100,000 visits means experienced doctors often know what is wrong before the exam even starts, why insurance billing drives providers out of healthcare, how employers bear the brunt of a $5 trillion system, and what concierge medicine looks like when it is done right.

    If you have ever been stuck waiting weeks for an answer about your own body while the system collects your money at every stop, this episode will make you angry and then give you hope.

    Topics covered: orthopedic care, virtual healthcare, telemedicine, concierge medicine, MD Ortho, sports medicine, ACL tear, rotator cuff, frozen shoulder, healthcare costs, insurance billing, workers compensation, employer health benefits, cash-price MRI, healthcare reform, direct primary care, musculoskeletal health, injury recovery, physical therapy, healthcare technology, AI in medicine, orthopedic specialist, same-day diagnosis, healthcare access

    To connect with Dr. Tom Weber and MD Ortho: mdortho.ai | info@mdortho.ai | Self-pay visits: mdortho.ai/selfpay

    Listen to Pain to Performance on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Website: paintoperformancepodcast.com

    Follow, subscribe, and leave a review. If this episode changed how you think about getting care for your body, send it to someone who has been stuck in the waiting room. They deserve to know there is another way. Pain is rarely a solo experience and a good conversation is better shared.

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    1 時間 1 分
  • Your Partner Changed. So Why Are You Still Angry? The 7 Relationship Fears Nobody Talks About
    2026/06/10

    You love them. You know you love them. And they love you. But you keep having the same fight, the same words, the same walls going up, and the same silence afterwards. And every time it happens, you wonder: is this who we are now?

    In this episode of Pain to Performance, host Bradley Morgan sits down with Jeff Shore, a licensed marriage and family therapist in San Francisco who may have the most interesting career path of any guest to ever sit in this chair. Before becoming a therapist, Jeff founded a national cocaine hotline that took over a million calls and was published in the Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine. He appeared on Good Morning America, the Today Show, and Time magazine. He lobbied Congress for the ASPCA. He worked as a recording engineer in a Manhattan studio staying up all night with rap artists. He taught sixth grade in Hawaii. He managed technology for a British bank from Tokyo. And then he walked away from all of it because he realized he had been chasing excitement instead of meaning.

    That search for meaning brought him full circle to the one thing that always mattered: helping people change. And today, his couples work is built around a framework he calls the four desires and the seven fears. Every person in a relationship is balancing four core desires: connection, autonomy, security, and adventure. One partner votes for more connection while the other votes for more autonomy. One craves security while the other needs adventure. And most of the fights couples have are not about the dishes or the schedule. They are about which desire gets priority.

    But the part of this conversation that will stop you in your tracks is the seven fears. Jeff explains that when a partner actually starts to change, something unexpected happens. The other partner gets scared. They think it is not really happening, or it is not authentic, or it is only because the therapist said to do it, or they will just go back to the way they were, or what about all the years they were not like this. Those fears ride shotgun with every hope you carry into a relationship.

    Jeff also walks through somatic exercises he uses in sessions, including having couples sit close enough to touch, look into each other's eyes, and rate how open their heart feels on a scale of one to ten. He explains why having hard conversations in a car triggers a primitive danger response in the brain, why giving advice is actually a subtle power play, and why the most important shift he ever made as a sixth-grade teacher in Hawaii (catching kids being good instead of catching them being bad) is the exact same tool he uses with couples today.

    Topics covered: couples therapy, marriage counseling, relationship advice, four desires in relationships, connection vs autonomy, security vs adventure, seven fears of change, negative cycle, empathic listening, somatic therapy, attachment styles, love languages, communication in relationships, power dynamics, conflict in relationships, imposter syndrome, career change, finding meaning, mind-body connection, radical acceptance, relationship cycles, catching your partner being good, emotional intelligence, couples exercises, eye contact therapy

    To connect with Jeff Shore: jeff@sfshore.com

    Listen to Pain to Performance on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Website: paintoperformancepodcast.com

    Follow, subscribe, and leave a review. If this episode made you think of the person you love, send it to them. Better yet, listen to it together. Pain is rarely a solo experience and a good conversation is better shared.

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    1 時間 8 分
  • The Messy Middle: Why You Stopped Loving Work and How to Get It Back
    2026/06/03

    You used to love your job. You remember what that felt like. The energy, the purpose, the feeling that what you were building actually mattered. And then somewhere along the way, it all changed. The meetings got heavier, the people got harder, and one day you realized you were surviving work, not enjoying it.

    In this episode of Pain to Performance, host Bradlee Morgan sits down with Jenn Whitmer, keynote speaker, TEDx presenter, and author of "Joyosity." Jenn is not someone who studied joy from a distance. She lost it. She was a music teacher and school administrator who genuinely loved her work, had her kids at the same school, and felt lucky every single day. Then a leadership change turned her workplace toxic. Her body started breaking down with unexplained pain. She stopped being present at home. She kept telling herself "it's not that bad" while everything eroded around her. It took a colleague sitting her down and naming it before Jenn could see the damage clearly enough to leave. She resigned on a Tuesday and received a consulting offer at four times her salary by Friday.

    That experience launched a deep dive into why joy disappears from work and what it actually takes to get it back. Jenn breaks down the joy ratio: 35% of your time spent doing work that brings you joy, 10% or less in toil, and the remaining 55% managed in what she calls the messy middle. She walks through the three markers of joy (feeling lucky, a sense of belonging, and purpose that impacts others), explains why teams in the joy ratio are 25% higher performing and 30% more productive, and shares one of the most powerful lines from the entire conversation: when you avoid conflict, you manufacture fake peace. And fake peace is exhausting to maintain.

    Brad and Jenn also dig into hustle culture, why tying your worth to your productivity is a trap, how emotions are energy in motion that maps into the body, the "it's not that bad" trap that keeps people stuck in toxic situations for years, and why joy is not the reward for getting through the hard part. Joy is the reason you get through it.

    The episode ends with a five-minute exercise anyone can do tonight: grab a piece of paper, make two columns, joy and toil, and write down what fills you up and what drains you. That is the first stop on the Joyosity Explorer Map, and it changes how you see your entire week.

    Topics covered: workplace culture, toxic workplace, leadership, joy at work, conflict resolution, conflict avoidance, fake peace, joy ratio, Joyosity, keynote speaker, burnout, hustle culture, employee engagement, team performance, productivity, emotional health, mind-body connection, workplace toxicity, career change, quitting your job, purpose at work, work-life balance, TEDx, leadership development, organizational culture, messy middle, toil, self-awareness, corporate culture, team building

    To connect with Jenn Whitmer: jennwhitmer.com | Instagram and LinkedIn: @jennwhitmer | Joyosity Explorer Map: jennwhitmer.com/explorer-map | Waitlist for new leadership program: jennwhitmer.com/waitlist

    Listen to Pain to Performance on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Website: paintoperformancepodcast.com

    Follow, subscribe, and leave a review. If this episode made you feel something, send it to the person in your life who is manufacturing fake peace right now. They need to hear this. Pain is rarely a solo experience and a good conversation is better shared.

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    1 時間 9 分
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