Big Ideas Made Simple
You can have the clearest North Star, the most audited identity, and the most specific Big What on the planet, and still not be moving. Not because your strategy is wrong. Because the room you're trying to execute it in was built for someone you no longer are. That's the conversation this episode is having. Most productivity and self-help culture points at mindset, discipline, drive, or work ethic when something isn't working. Those things matter. But what gets skipped way too often is the environment itself. The physical space, the schedule architecture, the input filters, all of it is shaping your behavior whether you designed it or not. And if you've been using willpower to compensate for a poorly designed container, that's a gap that grit cannot close indefinitely. Jess shares the story of finding out she was pregnant the same week the world shut down in March 2020. Her fifth pregnancy, after four losses, meant the environment she had to build from scratch wasn't just about where her laptop lived. It was about protecting two lives at the same time. What she learned in that season became the foundation for how she built her business several years later, without clocking 40 hours a week, because she already understood how her brain, her body, and her environment needed to work together. This is not a Pinterest office episode. It's an architecture conversation. What You'll Learn: - Why willpower is a terrible long-term strategy (and what actually does the work instead) - The three layers of environmental design: physical space, schedule architecture, and input filters - What body-led scheduling looks like in practice, and why it's different from time blocking - How an unfiltered input environment turns curiosity into a distraction machine - Why your North Star and BEAT audit can't do their job if your environment keeps bypassing the filter - The one thing to change in your environment this week The Big Idea: A strategy that doesn't account for your environment isn't a strategy. It's a dream with a deadline. The people who seem to have extraordinary discipline aren't running on willpower. They've designed their environment so the right behavior is the default and the wrong behavior requires extra effort. That's architecture, not grit. "You are not behind on your goals because you lack discipline. You might just be operating in an environment that was designed for a person who no longer exists." Resources Mentioned: Willpower Doesn't Work by Benjamin Hardy BEAT Method Guide: beat.bigideasmadesimple.com Website: bigideasmadesimple.com Follow Jess on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube: @thejesswebber Website: bigideasmadesimple.com
16 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Big Ideas Made Simple community!