3-Minute Reframe with Cameron Conaway

Steph Curry, Age 15

3 min · 7. maj 2026
episode Steph Curry, Age 15 cover

Description

Before the championships, before changing the game of basketball forever — Steph Curry spent the worst summer of his life deliberately getting worse. At 15, his father Dell Curry told him his shot had to be completely rebuilt. For three months he could barely make a basket. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, I use Curry's story to explore one of the most underrated growth skills there is — the willingness to get worse before you get better, and how to know whose feedback is actually worth that kind of sacrifice. Show Notes: It's More Than Just the Shot — Kevin O’Connor, The Ringer [https://www.theringer.com/2019/02/12/nba/steph-curry-warriors-2019-all-star-game-charlotte] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

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35 episodes

episode Seeking Feedback: Awareness | Card 01 | The Feedback Deck artwork

Seeking Feedback: Awareness | Card 01 | The Feedback Deck

Most of us assume we know how we come across — but the gap between our intent and our actual impact is often invisible to us. In this video, we explore Awareness, Card 01 of the Seeking Feedback suit from the Feedback Deck, and why cultivating self-awareness is important but only part of the equation. Drawing on thousands of years of contemplative practice and William James's foundational insight on attention, we unpack why seeking feedback from the right people is one of the most powerful growth moves you can make — and introduce The Impact Check, a simple but targeted practice to help you find out exactly where you can grow the most. Whether you're a leader, a professional, or someone committed to continuous improvement, this video will shift how you think about feedback, awareness, and growth. Learn more about the Feedback Deck: https://feedbackliteracy.com/ [https://feedbackliteracy.com/] #FeedbackLiteracy #Feedback #LeadershipDevelopment

2. juli 20262 min
episode The Skill That Builds All Others artwork

The Skill That Builds All Others

Whether Cameron Conaway was training as a professional mixed martial artist, writing poetry, leading teams at Cisco, or learning to deadlift — feedback was always the mechanism of improvement. Not just words from a coach or an editor, but every signal that told him what was working and what wasn't. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, he makes the case that feedback literacy — the ability to seek, receive, process, use, and give feedback — sits deeper than learning itself, and is the true prerequisite for growth in any domain. He traces the academic origins of the term through researchers Paul Sutton, Wendy Gill, David Carless, and David Boud, and explains why he expanded the framework beyond the classroom. Show Notes: Engaging Feedback: Meaning, Identity and Power — Sutton & Gill [https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1130410.pdf] The Development of Student Feedback Literacy — Carless & Boud [https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2018.1463354] The Feedback Deck Waitlist [https://feedbackliteracy.com] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

25. juni 20263 min
episode Our Good Bad Habits artwork

Our Good Bad Habits

In 2013, Cameron Conaway was living in Thailand training in Muay Thai — a form of kickboxing that is the country's national sport — when he went on his first meditation retreat. What surfaced in the silence wasn't peace. It was a familiar itch he'd been managing his entire life through brutal physical training, rooted in childhood abuse and a belief he'd never consciously chosen to hold. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, he shares what the retreat revealed: that not all bad habits are bad. Some of them got us through genuinely hard times. The question isn't whether to judge them — it's whether they're still serving the person you are right now. Show Notes: The Cage Fight in My Head — Cameron Conaway, Lion's Roar [https://www.lionsroar.com/the-cage-fight-in-my-head/] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

18. juni 20263 min
episode Shoes or Legs? artwork

Shoes or Legs?

About two thousand years ago, a Greek painter named Apelles of Kos hid behind his paintings in public to hear honest reactions from strangers. When a shoemaker pointed out an error in the sandals he'd painted, Apelles corrected it immediately. When that same shoemaker then critiqued the legs, Apelles stepped out and told him to stay in his lane. That story is the origin of the Latin expression ne supra crepidam — not beyond the shoe. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, Cameron weaves that ancient story together with a Brené Brown quote that makes the same essential point two thousand years later — and leaves you with one question to ask before your next feedback conversation. Show Notes: Ne Supra Crepidam & Feedback Communication — Cameron Conaway [https://cameronconaway.com/blog/power-lane-blurring-feedback/] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

11. juni 20263 min