Course Correction: Guiding Men Back to Their Core Truth

EP02 | The Pause Where Everything Changes: Why Men Skip the Most Important Step in Breaking a Pattern

19 min · 13. huhti 2026
jakson EP02 | The Pause Where Everything Changes: Why Men Skip the Most Important Step in Breaking a Pattern kansikuva

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You handle things. It's the same quality that makes you effective everywhere else. And it's exactly what makes this kind of change so hard. Capable men see a problem and move on it. But between recognizing a pattern and changing it, there's a step most men skip entirely. Not because they're undisciplined. Because pausing before acting feels like losing ground. In Episode 2, Stephen Rodi introduces Consider: the pause where your real power to choose actually lives, and what it looks like to use it when everything in you wants to react. For fathers, executives, veterans, and first responders dealing with anger, emotional shutdown, and patterns that keep coming back. Learn more at yourcoretruths.com [https://www.yourcoretruths.com/] ____ Show Notes You manage things. That's not a small thing. It's the same quality that makes you effective at work, dependable at home, and the person others count on. This is the exact reason why changing certain patterns is so hard. Because capable men don't pause. They execute. See the problem, move on it. That instinct serves you in almost every area of your life. But personal change doesn't work that way. Between recognizing a pattern and actually changing it, there's a step. Most men, the most capable men especially, jump straight over it. That step is called Consider. And without it, the pattern keeps running you no matter how clearly you see it or how much you want it to stop. In Episode 2 of Course Correction, Stephen Rodi breaks down what that step actually is, why the men most equipped to change are often the ones most likely to skip it, and what it looks like to use it in a real moment, when everything in you wants to just react. In this episode: * Why jumping straight from recognition to fixing is the most common failure mode for high-functioning men * The critical difference between a pattern and your identity (“this is what I do” vs. “this is who I am”) * Why changes made for someone else — your wife, your kids, your marriage — don’t hold, and what to do instead * A simple physical practice to create enough space to actually choose * Three specific questions to ask yourself in the moment that move you from autopilot to genuine agency Consider isn't therapy. It isn't processing your feelings or sitting with discomfort until something shifts. It's a specific practice, usable in a real moment, when the anger is already rising and everything in you wants to react. If you've ever seen a pattern clearly and still couldn't stop it, this is the episode that explains why. And what's actually possible when you don't skip the step. Find Stephen and learn more about working with Core Truths at yourcoretruths.com.

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jakson EP06 | The Legacy: The Pattern Running Your Life May Not Be Yours kansikuva

EP06 | The Legacy: The Pattern Running Your Life May Not Be Yours

You tell yourself the pattern is yours. You built it, you own it, you just need to fix it. What if it was already running long before you had any say in it? In Episode 6, Stephen takes you to a dining room, a seven-year-old boy, and the night he first witnessed what he would spend decades trying to understand. Where patterns actually come from. Intergenerational trauma, the fawn response, and what it means that the thing running your life may not have originated with you. For fathers, executives, veterans, and men ready to look at what they inherited, and what it will cost their children if they don't. This one is for you. yourcoretruths.com ~~~~ SHOWNOTES In this episode: Why unprocessed pain doesn't disappear. It relocates — into the way order is maintained, the weight certain silences carry, what everyone in a house understands without anyone naming it. The fawn response: the fourth survival strategy alongside fight, flight, and freeze. The one most men have never heard named. The agreeable kid. The easy kid. Reading the temperature of every room before walking into it, anticipating what it needs, providing it before anything escalates. Not compliance. A sophisticated nervous system response built by a child with no other tools available. The strategy worked. That is exactly why it stayed. Why the pattern feels like personality. The canyon doesn't feel carved. It just feels like the landscape. Why this is not about blame. Your parents weren't the origin either. They received it. The chain didn't begin with malice. It began with survival. Understanding that removes the accusation, which is what makes the work possible. What it actually takes for it to stop. Not a concept. Not a general intention. Someone seeing it clearly enough to act differently in the moment it arrives. If you're a father, an executive, a veteran, or a man ready to look at what you inherited — and what it will cost your children if you don't — this episode is for you. Find Stephen and learn more about working with Core Truths at yourcoretruths.com. Referenced in this episode: Gabor Mate, The Myth of Normal (2022) Judith Herman, Trauma and Recovery (1992)

8. kesä 202618 min
jakson EP05 | The Mirror: What the People Closest to You Are Actually Showing You kansikuva

EP05 | The Mirror: What the People Closest to You Are Actually Showing You

You tell yourself a story about the kind of man you are. The steady one. The one who shows up differently than where he came from. Then one afternoon, in one ordinary moment, you see something that doesn't match that story. In Episode 5, Stephen Rodi shares the most personal story he has ever told publicly. An afternoon with his sons that became the clearest mirror he has ever looked into. What he saw changed how he understood himself as a father, and it opens a multi-episode arc about where patterns come from, why they run, and what it actually takes to see them clearly. For fathers, executives, veterans, and men doing the real work of becoming who they actually are. ~~~~~~ SHOW NOTES You carry a story about the kind of father you are. The steady one. The one who shows up differently than the environments you came from. You've held that story for years because it felt true, and because you needed it to be. Then something happens. Not a crisis. Not a dramatic failure. Something small enough that you could have missed it entirely. A look on your child's face. A movement their body makes before their mind has time to decide. And in that moment, the story you've been telling yourself and the truth of how you're actually showing up don't line up anymore. That's what Episode 5 is about. Stephen Rodi tells the most personal story he has ever shared publicly: an ordinary afternoon with his twin sons that became the clearest and most painful mirror he has ever looked into. What started as a disagreement about a messy bedroom became the moment he saw himself through his son's fear, and recognized that fear as something he had felt himself, as a boy, in rooms not so different from that one. The episode introduces a concept that sits at the center of Stephen's work: the people closest to us are our mirrors. They reflect back how we are actually showing up, not the version we carry in our heads. The clearest picture of where you are is almost never found inside your own thinking. It's found in the people around you, in what they're doing, how they're responding, and what their bodies are telling you when you walk into the room. This is also the beginning of a multi-episode arc. Over the coming episodes, Stephen will walk through what that afternoon opened up: where the pattern came from (not just in his life, but in the lives that came before his), why it ran the way it did, why willpower alone could not have stopped it, what he had to learn to see it clearly, and what it has produced in his relationships since. The proof he offers: for over a decade, Stephen and his sons have shared the same words when they say goodbye. They look each other in the eyes. "I see you. I love you." He could not have said those words and meant them the way he means them now without first seeing his reflection in that room. If you've ever wondered whether the people closest to you are seeing someone different than the man you believe yourself to be, this is where that conversation starts. Find Stephen and learn more about working with Core Truths at yourcoretruths.com [https://yourcoretruths.com].

26. touko 202610 min
jakson EP04 | Why It Keeps Coming Back: What the Pattern Is Actually Trying to Tell You kansikuva

EP04 | Why It Keeps Coming Back: What the Pattern Is Actually Trying to Tell You

You've been recognizing the pattern, pausing, adjusting. And the pattern keeps coming back. At some point, the question shifts from "how do I manage this" to "why is this still here?" That question isn't defeat. It's the door to the deeper work. In Episode 4, Stephen Rodi gets into why your pattern exists in the first place, what it was built to protect, and why that changes everything about how you approach what's ahead. This one gets personal. For fathers, executives, veterans, and men who are done managing the surface and ready to look underneath. yourcoretruths.com [https://yourcoretruths.com] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SHOW NOTES You’ve been doing the work. Recognizing the pattern. Pausing before you react. Making the adjustment. And still — it comes back. Same trigger. Same pull. Same moment of falling into something you thought you were past. That isn’t failure. But it is a sign that you’re at the edge of what adjustment alone can reach. In Episode 4 of Course Correction, Stephen Rodi answers the question most men are afraid to ask out loud: why does this pattern keep coming back, even when I’m trying this hard? The answer reframes everything — and points toward a kind of work that goes deeper than anything the first three episodes asked of you. The centerpiece of this episode is the candle story — a three-stage model of how human beings actually learn. Stage one is experience: you touch the flame and get burned. That burn is information. Stage two is knowledge: you see the next candle, you pause, you consider, you sometimes choose differently. This is where the men in this audience are living right now — in the Stage 2 work of recognizing, pausing, and adjusting. Stage three is wisdom: you no longer need the deliberate pause because you genuinely understand what you’re dealing with, where it came from, and what it costs. Stage 3 isn’t available through adjustment alone. It requires a different question: not how do I stop this, but why is this pattern mine in the first place. Stephen shares the story of a client who executed the framework perfectly in a grocery store checkout line — recognized the rising tension, paused, made a completely different choice — and walked out to the parking lot in tears asking why he felt so much rage over a five-year-old wanting candy. That question, born from doing everything right, is the most important question a man can ask at this stage of the work. He also shares a personal story — the shared bedroom, the corner he claimed as his own, the tape he put on the carpet to mark his territory, and what happened when his family moved and he got his own door to close. It’s the story of how a solution gets built. How a pattern that once kept you safe becomes the tape that’s still on the carpet of a completely different life. IN THIS EPISODE * Why patterns repeat even after you’ve recognized them, paused, and adjusted — and what that repetition is actually telling you * The three-stage candle model: how experience becomes information, information becomes knowledge, and knowledge becomes wisdom * Why Stage 2 feels like failure from the inside — and why that feeling is evidence the work is doing exactly what it’s supposed to * The difference between asking “how do I stop this” and asking “where did this come from” — and why only one of those questions leads somewhere new * Why the pattern isn’t a flaw — it was a solution, built for something real, still running in a life it was never designed for * The connection between Episode 2’s question (“what matters enough to me to change this”) and the deeper ask this episode makes: you answered what. You haven’t answered why. * One specific practice for this week — not to fix the pattern, but to look underneath it for the first time This episode is for the man who has been doing the work and hitting a wall. The man who pauses, adjusts, resets — and lies awake wondering what is wrong with him. Nothing is wrong with him. He’s at Stage 2, and Stage 2 is exactly where the next question lives. Find Stephen and learn more about working with Core Truths at yourcoretruths.com [https://www.yourcoretruths.com/].

11. touko 202621 min
jakson EP03 | The Adjustment: Why One Small Correction Proves Everything Can Change kansikuva

EP03 | The Adjustment: Why One Small Correction Proves Everything Can Change

There’s a pattern that comes up with many of us. You made an adjustment. You chose differently. And then three days later, the pattern came roaring back.   So you think the framework doesn't work. That nothing sticks for you. That's not true, and this episode shows you why. When the pattern returns, it's proof that there's a choice between the trigger and your reaction. In this episode, Stephen walks through what adjustment actually is, why the pattern comes back even after you've chosen differently, and how real change happens in perception first, not in willpower or discipline.   The pattern will resurface. Here's what that means, and what to do when it does. Connect with Stephen at yourcoretruths.com [http://yourcoretruths.com] ~~~~~~~~~ Show Notes You did the work. You recognized the pattern, paused, asked the three questions, and sat with what it's costing you. Then you tried to adjust — and the pattern came back anyway. Most men interpret this as proof that nothing works, that the framework is flawed, that they're fundamentally broken. That interpretation is wrong, and it's costing you. What Adjustment Actually Is Adjustment looks nothing like what capable men expect. Your operating system is built for completion: see problem, solve problem, done. It's what built careers and sustained families. So when you try to adjust a pattern, the brain translates that to: fix it, eliminate it, finish it. One adjustment should erase the pattern. That's not how this works. An adjustment is not completion. It's a single moment where you express your choice as action — the first time you see the pattern trigger and choose differently. Over years or decades, a single choice doesn't erase the pattern. What it does is prove something critical: between the trigger and the reaction lives space. In that space lives choice. And you made it once. Why the Pattern Returns (And Why That Matters) This episode walks through two real stories. A client who stayed present for 15 minutes instead of shutting down, then three days later shut down completely. And Stephen's own experience with his partner Ali — frustrated when she didn't follow his renovation sequence, then stopping to reconsider what was actually true. Both men made an adjustment. Both had the pattern return. Neither had failed. The pattern comes back because it's been with you for years or decades. One choice doesn't pull the roots. The work isn't in the return of the pattern. It's in recognizing that it returned, sitting with why, and making the choice again. Where the Actual Shift Happens This is the breakthrough: adjustment happens in perception first, not behavior. You don't manage the reaction and then act differently. You change how you're seeing the moment, and then the action follows naturally. Managing reactions takes willpower. Willpower runs out. Changing perception creates a different response without force. In the renovation story, Stephen didn't eliminate the frustration. He changed how he was seeing it — from disruption to contribution. That shift in perception made the gratitude genuine, not performed. What's Next The deeper work — understanding why the pattern exists in the first place — is coming. For now, you're building the awareness and the muscle you'll need to go deeper. Every time you recognize, pause, and choose differently, you're getting closer to your core truth. You can begin this week. Find Stephen and learn more about working with Core Truths at yourcoretruths.com [http://yourcoretruths.com/] ~~~~~~~~~ HIGHLIGHTS 01:40 Adjust Is Not Fixing 09:43 Define Small Corrections 11:14 Perception Before Behavior 12:03 Renovation Control Trigger 20:37 Patterns Return Deeper Why 22:58 Weekly Challenge and Reset

27. huhti 202625 min
jakson EP02 | The Pause Where Everything Changes: Why Men Skip the Most Important Step in Breaking a Pattern kansikuva

EP02 | The Pause Where Everything Changes: Why Men Skip the Most Important Step in Breaking a Pattern

You handle things. It's the same quality that makes you effective everywhere else. And it's exactly what makes this kind of change so hard. Capable men see a problem and move on it. But between recognizing a pattern and changing it, there's a step most men skip entirely. Not because they're undisciplined. Because pausing before acting feels like losing ground. In Episode 2, Stephen Rodi introduces Consider: the pause where your real power to choose actually lives, and what it looks like to use it when everything in you wants to react. For fathers, executives, veterans, and first responders dealing with anger, emotional shutdown, and patterns that keep coming back. Learn more at yourcoretruths.com [https://www.yourcoretruths.com/] ____ Show Notes You manage things. That's not a small thing. It's the same quality that makes you effective at work, dependable at home, and the person others count on. This is the exact reason why changing certain patterns is so hard. Because capable men don't pause. They execute. See the problem, move on it. That instinct serves you in almost every area of your life. But personal change doesn't work that way. Between recognizing a pattern and actually changing it, there's a step. Most men, the most capable men especially, jump straight over it. That step is called Consider. And without it, the pattern keeps running you no matter how clearly you see it or how much you want it to stop. In Episode 2 of Course Correction, Stephen Rodi breaks down what that step actually is, why the men most equipped to change are often the ones most likely to skip it, and what it looks like to use it in a real moment, when everything in you wants to just react. In this episode: * Why jumping straight from recognition to fixing is the most common failure mode for high-functioning men * The critical difference between a pattern and your identity (“this is what I do” vs. “this is who I am”) * Why changes made for someone else — your wife, your kids, your marriage — don’t hold, and what to do instead * A simple physical practice to create enough space to actually choose * Three specific questions to ask yourself in the moment that move you from autopilot to genuine agency Consider isn't therapy. It isn't processing your feelings or sitting with discomfort until something shifts. It's a specific practice, usable in a real moment, when the anger is already rising and everything in you wants to react. If you've ever seen a pattern clearly and still couldn't stop it, this is the episode that explains why. And what's actually possible when you don't skip the step. Find Stephen and learn more about working with Core Truths at yourcoretruths.com.

13. huhti 202619 min