Billede af showet The Rebuild

The Rebuild

Podcast af Dillon Phaneuf

engelsk

Sundhed & personlig udvikling

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The Rebuild with Dillon PhaneufAt some point, we all have to rebuild.Sometimes it’s after everything falls apart, loss, failure, identity collapse. Sometimes, life is good on paper, but something’s still missing. Either way, the work is the same: look inward, take ownership, and start again, brick by brick.This show is about that process.I’ve been coaching full-time for nearly  15 years. I’ve walked people through physical transformation, emotional healing, relapse, addiction, growth, success, and pain that doesn’t show up in check-ins. And right now, I’m walking through my rebuild.This podcast is where I bring the rawness of that to the surface. You’ll hear conversations with people building something real, solo episodes where I process what I’m learning in real time, and moments that hopefully remind you you’re not alone.Whether you’re at your best and want to go higher or on the bathroom floor trying to figure out what’s next, this space is for you.Because even when it feels like checkmate, there’s always a better move.

Alle episoder

62 episoder

episode My Story of Obesity, Addiction, and Rebuilding cover

My Story of Obesity, Addiction, and Rebuilding

In this episode, Dillon sits down with Sean for a deep conversation about fitness, psychology, coaching, and the patterns underneath physical transformation. What starts as a conversation about the body quickly becomes something much bigger: identity, pain, behavior, and the invisible architecture driving most people’s lives. Dillon shares the story behind how fitness became more than aesthetics for him. From a devastating fall in his early twenties, addiction struggles, personal loss, and years of trying to regain control through his body, the conversation explores how pain became the entry point into coaching and eventually into working with more than 1500 clients over the last 15 years. The episode also dives into Dillon’s years owning a supplement store and what he learned watching consumer behavior from behind the counter. Why people buy what they buy. Why most products fail to solve the real issue. And why convenience, emotional regulation, and identity matter more than most people realize. A major focus of the conversation is the shift from retail into coaching and the realization that the body is almost never the true problem. The body is simply where stress, shame, trauma, disconnection, and broken systems eventually show up. This is where Dillon breaks down the differences between protocol-based and needs-based coaching, and why working with large volumes of people changes what a coach can recognize. The conversation also covers body image, family health history, behavior patterns, emotional eating, and why most people fail not because they are lazy, but because their internal structure cannot yet hold the life they are trying to build. This episode is not about hacks, supplements, or motivation. It is about understanding why the body changes when the deeper layers finally do. What We Cover • Why fitness first became a source of control and agency • What owning a supplement store revealed about consumer behavior • The hidden patterns most coaches never get close enough to see • Why the body is often the symptom, not the source • The psychology underneath fat loss, body image, and self sabotage • What 1500 clients teaches you about human behavior and change • The difference between protocol-based coaching and needs based coaching Key Takeaways • The body often reflects deeper unresolved patterns • Sustainable change requires psychological alignment, not just information • Coaching fails when it only addresses surface level behavior • Family history is data, not destiny • Transformation is less about intensity and more about internal structure This is one of the deepest conversations yet on The Rebuild for understanding why physical change is rarely just physical.

19. maj 2026 - 1 h 12 min
episode Keto cover

Keto

Keto is one of the most polarizing nutrition approaches in the fitness and health world. Some people treat it like a miracle. Others dismiss it completely. And like most nutrition debates, both sides usually become ideological instead of practical. In this episode, I break down where keto genuinely works, where it often fails, and why individual physiology matters far more than online nutrition tribes. For some people, ketogenic dieting dramatically reduces food noise, improves appetite control, stabilizes blood sugar, and creates adherence that they never had with higher carbohydrate diets. That matters. A diet that someone can consistently follow will outperform a “perfect” diet they constantly abandon. At the same time, keto is not magic. A lot of people use ketosis to mask poor calorie awareness, avoid behavioral work, or justify excessive restriction. Others force themselves into a low-carb approach that leaves them flat, exhausted, socially isolated, or unable to train at a high level. This episode also breaks down the reality that training demands, stress load, digestion, hormonal status, and lifestyle all influence how well someone tolerates lower carbohydrate intake. Some people feel mentally sharp and stable on keto. Others feel anxious, depleted, and constantly under-recovered. Neither experience is universally right or wrong. The bigger issue is that most people are trying to force ideology onto physiology instead of paying attention to feedback. Nutrition should be adaptive, not religious. Your body composition, energy, recovery, digestion, relationship with food, and long-term sustainability matter more than belonging to a dietary camp. What We Cover • Why keto works extremely well for some people • How appetite suppression changes adherence • Common mistakes people make on ketogenic diets  • Why training performance recovery matter • The psychological side of restrictive dieting • Why physiology should drive food decisions, not internet identity Key Takeaways • Adherence matters more than ideology • Appetite control is powerful, but it is not behavior change • A diet only “works” if your body and lifestyle can sustain it • Dogma creates blind spots. Awareness creates results If you’ve ever felt confused by the extreme opinions around keto, this episode will help you think about it in a more practical, grounded way.

13. maj 2026 - 9 min
episode Plant Based Diets cover

Plant Based Diets

Few nutrition topics create more emotional debate than plant-based eating. One side treats it like the healthiest path for everyone. The other side acts like it is automatically deficient, weak, or unsustainable. The truth is that both sides often argue ideology while ignoring the thing that matters most: individual physiology. In this episode, I break down the real conversation around plant-based eating without the tribalism. A well-structured plant-based diet can absolutely support health, body composition, performance, and longevity. But it requires intention. Protein quality, amino acid completeness, calorie sufficiency, and key micronutrients need more attention than many people realize. At the same time, critics often oversimplify the issue. Some people genuinely digest better, feel lighter, and improve certain health markers when animal products are reduced or removed. This is where nuance matters. High-fiber diets can help one person and wreck another. Some people thrive on legumes and grains. Others deal with bloating, digestive distress, or appetite issues. Some lose body fat and gain energy. Others under-eat, lose muscle, and blame the philosophy instead of the execution. We also discuss how ethical and environmental motivations can be completely valid, while still being separate from whether a specific diet is the best fit for your body. Your beliefs around food matter. But they should not override your biology. The goal is not to win a nutrition debate. The goal is to eat in a way that supports your body, your goals, and your real life. What We Cover • Why plant-based eating can work extremely well when structured properly • Common mistakes that lead to low protein and muscle loss • Why digestion response to fiber is highly individual • Predictable nutrient gaps and how to manage them • Separating ethical beliefs from physiological outcomes Key Takeaways • What you believe about food affects how you eat it • Protein is non-negotiable regardless of source • Alignment matters. Dogma doesn’t If you’ve ever felt confused by the noise around plant-based eating, this episode will help you think clearly.

29. apr. 2026 - 8 min
episode You’re Rewarding Yourself for Bare Minimum cover

You’re Rewarding Yourself for Bare Minimum

One of the sneakiest ways people stall their progress is by rewarding themselves too early. This episode breaks down a pattern that shows up again and again in fat loss, behavior change, and personal growth: premature celebration. A lot of people are not actually inconsistent because they “don’t care.” They’re inconsistent because they keep giving themselves emotional permission to let off the gas before real momentum has been built. One decent week turns into a cheat weekend.  A few days of hitting protein becomes a reward meal.  One stretch of better choices gets treated like proof that “I’m back.” And then the cycle resets. The problem is not the celebration itself. The problem is celebrating effort before the effort has actually become stable enough to produce meaningful change. In this episode, I break down how early dopamine kills long-term drive, why people often over-identify with tiny bits of progress, and how low standards quietly keep them trapped in the same loop. Because if every small attempt gets treated like a major breakthrough, your nervous system never learns what real consistency actually feels like. The answer is not to be miserable or to never acknowledge wins. The answer is raising the standard. When your bar for “doing well” becomes more honest, your progress becomes more stable. What We Cover • Why premature celebration stalls momentum  • How one good stretch often turns into self-sabotage  • Why early dopamine can quietly reduce follow-through  • The difference between trying and actually building consistency  • How to raise your standards without becoming obsessive Key Takeaways • Minimum effort gets minimum results  • Celebrate outcomes, not attempts  • Standards create stability If you feel like you’re always “almost getting back on track,” this episode will probably hit close to home.

8. apr. 2026 - 6 min
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