The Real Reason You Keep Falling Off Track (It's Not Discipline)
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If you've ever found yourself cycling on and off, relying on sheer willpower to hold your habits together, or feeling like you have to start over every time life gets hard — this episode is for you.
In this solo episode, I'm sharing a framework I call the behavior triad: identity, mindset, and behavior. All three are required for lasting change, and they don't work in a straight line. They work in a loop, each one reinforcing or eroding the others.
This is a sneak peek inside one of my Fit + Fueled group coaching calls, and it's a conversation I think every woman needs to hear.
IN THIS EPISODE:
- Why willpower is a finite resource and why building your habits on it sets you up for the cycle of starting over
- The research on all-or-nothing thinking and why it's one of the most documented barriers to long-term behavior change
- How identity shapes behavior beneath conscious awareness, and why that works in your favor once you understand it
- What mindset actually means at two levels: the background stories running beneath awareness and the active thought work you practice in the moment
- Why small, consistent action is more powerful than dramatic overhauls
- How identity, mindset, and behavior work together as a loop, and what that means for the days when you fall off
- Practical steps to start building all three this week
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
1. Behavior change is more sustainable when it's aligned with your identity and supported by mindset work, not just willpower and motivation.
2. Relying on willpower alone is not a long-term strategy. Willpower is finite. Identity is not.
3. All-or-nothing thinking actively sabotages progress. The neutral middle ground — not crushing it, not blowing it, just continuing — is where the most sustainable behavior lives.
4. Changing your self-concept doesn't have to come before action. Small behaviors build identity. You don't have to feel ready first.
5. Thought work isn't about eliminating the negative voice. It's about learning not to let it run the show.