Healthy Ever After

7.0: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kavana: Feel Your Why; the Practice

10 min · 1. juni 2026
episode 7.0: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kavana: Feel Your Why; the Practice cover

Description

You say you want better health. Better labs. Less pain. More energy. But what if those aren't the things you actually want? In this companion practice to Feel Your Why, we're going beyond goals and outcomes to uncover the feeling underneath them. Because lasting change isn't driven by numbers on a scale or lab report. It's driven by the emotional meaning those things represent. Through guided reflection, you'll begin identifying the deeper feeling you're truly seeking, and the reason it matters enough to move through discomfort when motivation fades. Because when life gets hard, it's not the goal that keeps you moving. It's the meaning. In This Practice 00:00 – Introduction: returning to Kavana 03:00 – Bringing your current health goal into awareness 07:00 – What are you actually trying to build? 11:00 – How does this health challenge make you feel right now? 17:00 – Moving beyond outcomes and results 22:00 – The question: "How do I want to feel?" 28:00 – Exploring freedom, confidence, peace, strength, and hope 34:00 – Going deeper: "What would that give me?" 40:00 – Identifying your true Kavana 45:00 – One intentional choice for the week ahead Your Avodah (Practice for the Week) Whenever you find yourself focused on a goal, pause and ask: How do I want to feel? Why does that feeling matter to me? What would that give me? And what would that give me? Keep asking until you reach something that feels emotionally true. Then ask: "What is one choice I can make today that moves me closer to that feeling?" Key Takeaway Goals tell you what you want. Kavana helps you understand why it matters. Anchor Thought When motivation fades, return to the feeling. That feeling is your Kavana. Reflection Prompt If your health journey was moving in the direction you truly wanted, how would you feel? Free? Confident? Strong? Peaceful? Alive? Connected? Choose the feeling. Then build from there.

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18 episodes

episode 8: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kavua: Stop Collecting Rules and Start Creating Standards artwork

8: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kavua: Stop Collecting Rules and Start Creating Standards

Why is it that every Monday, every New Year, every birthday, and every scary doctor's appointment feels like the moment everything is finally going to change? We buy the planner. Download the app. Start the diet. Make the promise. And for a little while, it works. Then life happens. In this episode, we explore why fresh starts feel so powerful, why motivation eventually fades, and what actually creates lasting change. Because transformation isn't built on inspiration. It's built on the standards, structures, and systems that remain when motivation disappears. If you've ever found yourself starting over again and again, this episode will help you understand why. --- Show Notes * Why Mondays, birthdays, New Year's, and health scares feel so motivating * The psychology behind the Fresh Start Effect * Why motivation is powerful but unreliable * The difference between goals and standards * Why habits succeed when they become part of your identity * How structure reduces decision fatigue * Why lasting change requires more than inspiration * The role of Kavua in creating a Healthy Ever After Key Takeaway *Motivation gets you started. *Standards keep you going. Reflection Question What am I relying on right now: motivation, or structure? Research & References * Dai, H., Milkman, K. L., & Riis, J. (2014). *The Fresh Start Effect: Temporal Landmarks Motivate Aspirational Behavior.* Management Science, 60(10), 2563–2582. * Kahneman, D. (2011). *Thinking, Fast and Slow.* Farrar, Straus and Giroux. * Wood, W., & Neal, D. T. (2007). *A New Look at Habits and the Habit-Goal Interface.* Psychological Review, 114(4), 843–863. * Lally, P., van Jaarsveld, C. H. M., Potts, H. W. W., & Wardle, J. (2010). *How Are Habits Formed: Modelling Habit Formation in the Real World.* European Journal of Social Psychology, 40(6), 998–1009. * Oyserman, D. (2015). *Identity-Based Motivation.* Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences, 1–11.

14. juni 202633 min
episode 7.0: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kavana: Feel Your Why; the Practice artwork

7.0: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kavana: Feel Your Why; the Practice

You say you want better health. Better labs. Less pain. More energy. But what if those aren't the things you actually want? In this companion practice to Feel Your Why, we're going beyond goals and outcomes to uncover the feeling underneath them. Because lasting change isn't driven by numbers on a scale or lab report. It's driven by the emotional meaning those things represent. Through guided reflection, you'll begin identifying the deeper feeling you're truly seeking, and the reason it matters enough to move through discomfort when motivation fades. Because when life gets hard, it's not the goal that keeps you moving. It's the meaning. In This Practice 00:00 – Introduction: returning to Kavana 03:00 – Bringing your current health goal into awareness 07:00 – What are you actually trying to build? 11:00 – How does this health challenge make you feel right now? 17:00 – Moving beyond outcomes and results 22:00 – The question: "How do I want to feel?" 28:00 – Exploring freedom, confidence, peace, strength, and hope 34:00 – Going deeper: "What would that give me?" 40:00 – Identifying your true Kavana 45:00 – One intentional choice for the week ahead Your Avodah (Practice for the Week) Whenever you find yourself focused on a goal, pause and ask: How do I want to feel? Why does that feeling matter to me? What would that give me? And what would that give me? Keep asking until you reach something that feels emotionally true. Then ask: "What is one choice I can make today that moves me closer to that feeling?" Key Takeaway Goals tell you what you want. Kavana helps you understand why it matters. Anchor Thought When motivation fades, return to the feeling. That feeling is your Kavana. Reflection Prompt If your health journey was moving in the direction you truly wanted, how would you feel? Free? Confident? Strong? Peaceful? Alive? Connected? Choose the feeling. Then build from there.

1. juni 202610 min
episode 7: Hitkavnut MiniSerie - Kavana: Feel Your Why artwork

7: Hitkavnut MiniSerie - Kavana: Feel Your Why

You think you're chasing weight loss, better health, more money, or greater success. But what if you're actually chasing a feeling? In this episode of Healthy Ever After, we explore Kavana, the deeper emotional intention beneath our goals. Because lasting change doesn't happen when we simply know what to do. It happens when we're emotionally connected to why it matters. If you've ever wondered why some people change while others stay stuck, this episode may change the way you think about motivation forever. Show Notes 00:00 – Why two people can want the same thing but only one changes 06:00 – What Kavana really means and the connection between intention and choice 13:00 – Why logic alone doesn't create behavior change 20:00 – The Rider and the Elephant: emotion vs. rational thinking 28:00 – You're not chasing the outcome, you're chasing a feeling 36:00 – The motivational triad: pleasure, pain, and energy conservation 44:00 – Why the brain prefers familiar discomfort over unfamiliar change 51:00 – Finding the emotional meaning beneath your goals 58:00 – The role of identity, alignment, and inner peace 1:05:00 – Your avodah: discovering your true Kavana Key Takeaway Beneath every goal is a feeling. And that feeling becomes the emotional fuel for transformation. Research & References Damasio, A. R. (1994). Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. Panksepp, J. (1998). Affective Neuroscience: The Foundations of Human and Animal Emotions. Haidt, J. (2006). The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom. Breuning, L. G. (2015). Habits of a Happy Brain: Retrain Your Brain to Boost Your Serotonin, Dopamine, Oxytocin, & Endorphin Levels. Martin Ginis, K. A., & Bassett, R. L. (2012). Exercise and Changes in Body Image. In Encyclopedia of Body Image and Human Appearance. Academic Press.

31. maj 202639 min
episode 6.0: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kivun; the Practice artwork

6.0: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kivun; the Practice

Most people think they are moving toward health. But if you listen closely, their entire nervous system is organized around avoiding what they fear. Avoiding weight gain. Avoiding food. Avoiding aging. Avoiding failure. Avoiding becoming “that person.” In this companion practice episode of the Hitkavnút miniseries, we take the concept of Kivun (direction) and bring it into real life through a practice called Pivot Positive. This is not fake positivity. It is not pretending problems do not exist. It is about changing the direction your mind, attention, and nervous system are organized around. Because what you focus on shapes your emotional experience of health. And over time, that direction becomes your life. In this episode, we practice: identifying anti-goals hidden inside common health goals noticing how certain goals create contraction, panic, or desperation understanding the emotional difference between avoidance and construction shifting from “what do I need to stop?” to “what am I trying to build?” pivoting from restriction-based thinking into support-based thinking reframing goals around vitality, strength, resilience, and function calming the nervous system through awareness and intentional focus using breath and affirmations to reinforce a new direction Your Avodah (Practice for the Week): Every time you notice yourself focusing on an anti-goal, pause and ask: What am I actually trying to build? What direction is my nervous system organizing around? Is this goal rooted in fear… or construction? Then gently rewrite the goal from a place of support instead of punishment. Key Takeaway Restriction says: “I can’t.” Construction asks: “What can I build?” Anchor Thought You move in the direction of your focus. Make sure your focus is pointed toward the life you actually want to build.

17. maj 202617 min
episode 6: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kivun: The Direction of Your Healthy Ever After artwork

6: Hitkavnut MiniSeries - Kivun: The Direction of Your Healthy Ever After

You think your problem is discipline. But what if the real problem is direction? In this episode of Healthy Ever After, we begin the Hitkavnút miniseries by exploring the concept of Kivun, the Hebrew word for direction. Because wellness is not just about what you do. It is about what your mind, attention, identity, and nervous system are organized around. We talk about why so many people unknowingly organize their health around avoidance: avoiding weight gain, avoiding food, avoiding symptoms, avoiding failure, avoiding becoming “that person.” And over time, the brain becomes fixated on the very thing it is trying to escape. This episode explores the neuroscience of attention, food noise, restriction, identity loops, approach vs. avoidance motivation, and why “pivoting positive” can completely change the emotional experience of health. Because your brain moves toward what you repeatedly focus on. And perspective quietly creates direction. In this episode, we explore: the meaning of Kivun and why direction matters more than destination how perspective shapes behavior and life trajectory why the brain filters reality based on what it believes is important the reticular activating system (RAS) and selective attention why restriction and avoidance can intensify obsession and food noise the ironic process theory: why resisting thoughts keeps them active dopamine, anticipation, and emotionally charged focus how repeated “failed attempts” become identity loops the difference between anti-goals and approach-based goals why wellness built around avoidance often leads to burnout the shift from “what am I trying to avoid?” to “what am I trying to build?” the principle that “form follows function” and what that means for health why Healthy Ever After is not a destination, but a direction Your Avodah (Practice for the Week): This week, do not overhaul your life. Do not start another extreme plan. Instead, notice: What are your goals actually organized around? Are they rooted in building… or avoiding? What are you constantly focusing on? What direction is your attention facing? When you notice an anti-goal, gently pivot positive and ask: What am I trying to build instead? What kind of life am I trying to support? Who am I becoming? Key Takeaway Your nervous system organizes around what you repeatedly focus on. Perspective creates direction. Direction shapes behavior. Anchor Thought Wellness is not a destination. It is a direction. Research & References Posner, M. I., & Rothbart, M. K. (2007). Research on attention networks as a model for the integration of psychological science. Annual Review of Psychology, 58, 1–23. Wegner, D. M. (1994). Ironic processes of mental control. Psychological Review, 101(1), 34–52. Berridge, K. C., & Robinson, T. E. (1998). What is the role of dopamine in reward: Hedonic impact, reward learning, or incentive salience? Brain Research Reviews, 28(3), 309–369. Elliot, A. J. (2006). The hierarchical model of approach-avoidance motivation. Motivation and Emotion, 30, 111–116. Elliot, A. J., & Covington, M. V. (2001). Approach and avoidance motivation. Educational Psychology Review, 13, 73–92. Oyserman, D. (2011). Identity-based motivation: Implications for intervention. The Counseling Psychologist, 39(7), 1007–1043. Verplanken, B., & Sui, J. (2019). Habit and identity: Behavioral, cognitive, affective, and motivational facets of an integrated self. Frontiers in Psychology, 10, 1504. Bandura, A. (1977). Self-efficacy: Toward a unifying theory of behavioral change. Psychological Review, 84(2), 191–215. Dweck, C. S. (2006). Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Random House. Fishbach, A. (2022). Get It Done: Surprising Lessons from the Science of Motivation. Little, Brown Spark. Sullivan, L. H. (1896). The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered. Lippincott’s Magazine.

15. maj 202628 min