No Negative Energy Presents: The "Due To Expire" Podcast with Corey L. Kennard

Life Is Like A Carton Of Milk

17 min · 22. Juni 2026
Episode Life Is Like A Carton Of Milk Cover

Beschreibung

Text Us With This Link And Let Us Know How You Feel About This Episode! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592690/fan_mail/new] You can smell a carton of milk and panic over 24 hours, yet still treat your own life like it has no expiration date. We challenge that default setting and make a bold case: mortality is not a dark thought to avoid, it is the ultimate clarity tool for productivity, happiness, and intentional living. When we stop pretending time is infinite, we stop sleepwalking through the days that actually shape our lives. We dig into the psychology of why avoidance feels so natural, including terror management theory and the “cultural anxiety buffers” that keep us busy and distracted, like doomscrolling, status chasing, and spending money to impress people we do not even like. Then we flip the script with research on post traumatic growth and socioemotional selectivity theory, showing how a shorter time horizon can reduce shallow social games and pull us toward meaning, deep relationships, and real priorities. We also confront what people regret when the clock runs out, including the painful truth that many wish they had lived a life true to themselves instead of meeting everyone else’s expectations. From there, we offer a practical tool you can use immediately: a regret audit that looks at your calendar through the eyes of 90 year old you, plus a three step system to confront the numbers, filter the noise, and schedule the some days with real dates. If you’re ready to stop waiting for a crisis to wake you up, press play and take one action today. Subscribe, share this with a friend who keeps saying “someday,” and leave a review with the change you’re making next.

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22 Folgen

Episode Quiet Killers Of Human Progress Cover

Quiet Killers Of Human Progress

Text Us With This Link And Let Us Know How You Feel About This Episode! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592690/fan_mail/new] Your life probably will not fall apart in one dramatic moment. It will more likely drift off course through tiny habits that feel harmless: one more delay, one more comfortable yes, one more “quick” notification check that fractures your mind. We go straight at those quiet killers of progress and show how they quietly drain productivity, focus, and personal growth while you still feel busy and “fine.” We start with the safety of someday, the kind of procrastination that hides inside planning. You will hear why active inertia keeps you doing familiar prep work instead of the one vulnerable action that actually moves the needle, plus what regret research reveals about the risks we do not take. Then we get practical with a five-minute rule and a simple structure shift that separates planning from execution so you stop negotiating with yourself every morning. Next we tackle institutionalized isolation, the slow narrowing of your social world that makes comfort feel like peace while it quietly caps your potential. We connect conformity, social network contagion, and the “right room” idea, then map out challenge rooms, accountability rooms, diverse perspective rooms, vulnerability partners, and uphill rooms that force growth. Finally, we dismantle the multitasking myth with attention research and share a concrete deep work plan: 90-minute non-negotiable focus blocks and protecting the first hour of your day. If you want better habits, deeper work, and a clearer sense of urgency, hit subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a push, and leave a review telling us which quiet killer you are cutting first.

6. Juli 202618 min
Episode Can We Talk? - An Interview with Jermaine Ee Cover

Can We Talk? - An Interview with Jermaine Ee

Text Us With This Link And Let Us Know How You Feel About This Episode! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592690/fan_mail/new] Avoiding end-of-life planning is easy until you watch confusion and regret hit the people you love. We sit down with Jermaine Ee, founder of HeirLight.com, to talk about why so many families still don’t have a will and why the real obstacle usually isn’t legal knowledge, it’s avoidance, fear, and the belief that estate planning “isn’t for people like us.”  Jermaine shares how his immigrant family story and a near-failure moment in high school shaped his grit, and how a career spanning YouTube marketing, augmented reality ads, and political campaign finance taught him how systems really work. Then the conversation gets personal: the loss that pushed him to start asking better questions, documenting what matters, and building a guided, AI-driven will-making platform designed to help people start the first conversation. If you’ve been searching for estate planning help, a simple way to write a will, or a calmer approach to end-of-life planning, this is a powerful place to begin.  We also go beyond paperwork into the daily practice of meaning. Jermaine unpacks his line “clarity is love in practical form,” including a practical exercise with your credit card statement to spot what actually brings joy. From traveling through Albania and seeing how other cultures relate to contentment, to humanitarian logistics connected to Ukraine and lessons from Rotary International, we keep coming back to the same question: are we building a life that feels true, or just chasing titles.  Listen through, share it with someone who needs a gentle push to plan ahead, and then subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what conversation you’re finally ready to have.

29. Juni 202645 min
Episode Life Is Like A Carton Of Milk Cover

Life Is Like A Carton Of Milk

Text Us With This Link And Let Us Know How You Feel About This Episode! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592690/fan_mail/new] You can smell a carton of milk and panic over 24 hours, yet still treat your own life like it has no expiration date. We challenge that default setting and make a bold case: mortality is not a dark thought to avoid, it is the ultimate clarity tool for productivity, happiness, and intentional living. When we stop pretending time is infinite, we stop sleepwalking through the days that actually shape our lives. We dig into the psychology of why avoidance feels so natural, including terror management theory and the “cultural anxiety buffers” that keep us busy and distracted, like doomscrolling, status chasing, and spending money to impress people we do not even like. Then we flip the script with research on post traumatic growth and socioemotional selectivity theory, showing how a shorter time horizon can reduce shallow social games and pull us toward meaning, deep relationships, and real priorities. We also confront what people regret when the clock runs out, including the painful truth that many wish they had lived a life true to themselves instead of meeting everyone else’s expectations. From there, we offer a practical tool you can use immediately: a regret audit that looks at your calendar through the eyes of 90 year old you, plus a three step system to confront the numbers, filter the noise, and schedule the some days with real dates. If you’re ready to stop waiting for a crisis to wake you up, press play and take one action today. Subscribe, share this with a friend who keeps saying “someday,” and leave a review with the change you’re making next.

22. Juni 202617 min
Episode Structure Eats Stress For Lunch! Cover

Structure Eats Stress For Lunch!

Text Us With This Link And Let Us Know How You Feel About This Episode! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592690/fan_mail/new] Discipline has a branding problem. The moment we hear the word, many of us picture restriction, punishment, and a rigid life that squeezes out joy. But when we avoid structure, “going with the flow” often turns into three hours of doom scrolling, a messy kitchen, and the sinking feeling that we spent our day reacting instead of living. We unpack the behavioral science behind why that happens, starting with decision fatigue and why willpower is such a fragile strategy. Your brain makes hundreds of micro decisions daily, and self-control runs on limited fuel. So if your plan depends on feeling motivated at the right moment, you are setting yourself up to lose. I explain the comfort loop too: your brain craves safety and efficiency, so it will talk you into staying comfortable with convincing lies like “start tomorrow” or “you’re too tired today.” The goal is not to argue with the lie, it’s to expect it and build around it. Then we get practical with three tools you can use immediately: anchor habits (habit stacking) to attach new behaviors to routines you already do, environmental design and friction management to make good habits easy and bad habits inconvenient, and the two minute rule to beat activation energy and create momentum fast. We also talk about overcrowded calendars, time tracking, and why “no” is a complete sentence when your life is filled with other people’s priorities. If you want more focus, calmer days, and a system that supports your goals, press play now, then subscribe, share this with a friend who feels “too busy,” and leave a review with the one habit you’re anchoring tomorrow.

15. Juni 202613 min
Episode Failing Forward Cover

Failing Forward

Text Us With This Link And Let Us Know How You Feel About This Episode! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592690/fan_mail/new] Think back to the most spectacular mess you’ve ever made. The one that still makes you wince. Now imagine that moment wasn’t proof you’re broken, but proof your brain is learning. Host Corey Kennard walks through why failure hurts so much, why we get stuck, and how to turn a setback into a launch pad without pretending it didn’t happen. We dig into the behavioral science behind the sting, including how the anterior cingulate cortex functions like an internal alarm system that reacts fast when you blow it. From there, we name the psychological traps that quietly keep smart people frozen: avoidance that buries feedback, the blame game that protects ego, and rumination that turns a single event into a personal identity. If you’ve ever replayed a mistake at 3 a.m., you’ll recognize the pattern. Then we build the rebound. We talk cognitive reframing and Carol Dweck’s growth mindset research, plus a practical “failure file” approach that treats missteps like experiments: distance the ego, isolate the one variable that broke, and keep what still works. We also explore psychological safety and why teams and individuals recover faster when mistakes can be surfaced without humiliation. Finally, we lay out a simple comeback sequence you can use immediately: acknowledge, analyze, act, and get back in the game. If this helped you, subscribe to Due To Expire, share the episode with someone who’s being too hard on themselves, and leave a quick review so more people can learn to fail forward. What’s one mistake you’re ready to turn into data today?

8. Juni 202616 min