The Rebuild

The Truth About Why People Never Actually Change

1 h 31 min · 8. juli 2026
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🎙 The Truth About Why People Never Actually Change Why do some people change for a few weeks while others transform for a lifetime? In this episode, Sean turns the tables and asks me some of the hardest questions we've ever discussed on the podcast. We challenge popular ideas around self improvement, behavior change, therapy culture, identity, and what it actually takes to create lasting transformation. This isn't a conversation about quick fixes or motivation. It's about why most people keep solving problems at the wrong level. We break transformation down into three interconnected layers. The first is physiology. Your nervous system, stress load, sleep, hormones, nutrition, and physical health all influence the choices you're capable of making. The second is behavior. Habits, routines, environments, and repeated actions determine whether change actually becomes visible in your daily life. The third is identity. Your beliefs about yourself, your worldview, and the stories you carry quietly dictate what feels normal, possible, and sustainable. Most people only coach behavior. The Rebuild works across all three. Throughout the conversation, Sean pushes back on many of my ideas, asks the uncomfortable questions, and challenges me to explain why I believe so much of modern personal development keeps people stuck. Some of the answers will probably make people uncomfortable. That's okay. Growth usually starts where comfort ends. What We Cover • Why lasting change requires more than better habits • The relationship between physiology, behavior, and identity • Why information alone rarely changes anyone • The biggest misconceptions about personal development • Why coaching should teach people how to think, not just what to do • The questions Sean asked that forced deeper conversations about transformation Key Takeaways • You cannot permanently change behavior without addressing identity • Your physiology either supports or sabotages your decision making • Sustainable transformation happens when all three levels work together • Better thinking creates better behavior, but only when your nervous system can support it • Lasting change is built from the inside out If you've ever wondered why you've succeeded for a few weeks only to fall back into old patterns, this episode explains why the problem may not be your discipline at all. It may simply be that you've been trying to rebuild your life from the wrong level.

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episode The Truth About Why People Never Actually Change artwork

The Truth About Why People Never Actually Change

🎙 The Truth About Why People Never Actually Change Why do some people change for a few weeks while others transform for a lifetime? In this episode, Sean turns the tables and asks me some of the hardest questions we've ever discussed on the podcast. We challenge popular ideas around self improvement, behavior change, therapy culture, identity, and what it actually takes to create lasting transformation. This isn't a conversation about quick fixes or motivation. It's about why most people keep solving problems at the wrong level. We break transformation down into three interconnected layers. The first is physiology. Your nervous system, stress load, sleep, hormones, nutrition, and physical health all influence the choices you're capable of making. The second is behavior. Habits, routines, environments, and repeated actions determine whether change actually becomes visible in your daily life. The third is identity. Your beliefs about yourself, your worldview, and the stories you carry quietly dictate what feels normal, possible, and sustainable. Most people only coach behavior. The Rebuild works across all three. Throughout the conversation, Sean pushes back on many of my ideas, asks the uncomfortable questions, and challenges me to explain why I believe so much of modern personal development keeps people stuck. Some of the answers will probably make people uncomfortable. That's okay. Growth usually starts where comfort ends. What We Cover • Why lasting change requires more than better habits • The relationship between physiology, behavior, and identity • Why information alone rarely changes anyone • The biggest misconceptions about personal development • Why coaching should teach people how to think, not just what to do • The questions Sean asked that forced deeper conversations about transformation Key Takeaways • You cannot permanently change behavior without addressing identity • Your physiology either supports or sabotages your decision making • Sustainable transformation happens when all three levels work together • Better thinking creates better behavior, but only when your nervous system can support it • Lasting change is built from the inside out If you've ever wondered why you've succeeded for a few weeks only to fall back into old patterns, this episode explains why the problem may not be your discipline at all. It may simply be that you've been trying to rebuild your life from the wrong level.

8. juli 20261 h 31 min
episode How Your Beliefs Shape Your Behavior (And Why That's What I Coach through) artwork

How Your Beliefs Shape Your Behavior (And Why That's What I Coach through)

🎙 How Your Beliefs Shape Your Behavior (And Why That's What We Actually Coach) Most people think coaching is about nutrition, training, and accountability. Those things matter. But after coaching for more than fifteen years, I've become convinced that behavior is rarely the real problem. Behavior is the visible expression of something much deeper. Your worldview shapes your beliefs. Your beliefs shape your identity. And your identity shapes your behavior. That's the chain. In this episode, I explain why two people can be given the exact same nutrition plan, training program, and level of accountability, yet produce completely different results. The difference isn't knowledge. It's the lens they're interpreting their life through. If someone believes they're the kind of person who always quits, they'll find evidence to support that belief. If they believe food is their only comfort, their behavior will continue to reinforce that story. If they believe they're capable of change, they'll begin making decisions that confirm a different identity. This is why so much of my coaching is spent teaching people how to think, not simply what to think. I'm not interested in creating clients who can memorize information. I'm interested in helping people build a worldview that naturally produces healthier decisions. That's why our conversations go beyond macros and workouts. We examine stories, assumptions, emotional patterns, relationships, stress, and the beliefs quietly driving every decision they make. When beliefs change, behavior becomes easier. When identity changes, consistency becomes natural. The body simply follows. What We Cover • How worldview influences every decision you make • Why beliefs become self fulfilling patterns • The relationship between beliefs, identity, and behavior • Why information alone rarely creates transformation • How The Rebuild coaches the person beneath the behaviors • Why lasting change starts with learning how to think differently, not just what to do Key Takeaways • Your behavior is usually the symptom, not the source • Beliefs create identity, and identity drives behavior • You cannot consistently outperform your self concept • Teaching someone what to do creates compliance. Teaching them how to think creates autonomy. • The deepest transformation happens when your worldview changes, because everything built on top of it changes too. If you've ever wondered why lasting change feels so difficult, this episode explains why the real work isn't simply changing your habits. It's rebuilding the beliefs that created them in the first place.

1. juli 20269 min
episode You're Probably Not Busy. You're Running Out of Capacity artwork

You're Probably Not Busy. You're Running Out of Capacity

🎙 You're Probably Not Busy. You're Running Out of Capacity. "Busy" has become one of the most accepted excuses in modern life. We say it when we miss workouts. When we stop meal prepping. When we abandon our routines. When we don't call people back. When we put our goals on hold. But after studying high performers since I was a kid, coaching for more than fifteen years, and watching thousands of clients navigate careers, families, businesses, and health, I've come to a different conclusion. Most people aren't actually too busy. They're exceeding their current capacity. In this episode, I break down the difference between having a full life and having an overloaded internal operating system. The people who consistently build great bodies, great businesses, and great relationships aren't given more hours in the day. They've simply developed the skills, systems, and emotional capacity to carry more without collapsing. We explore why busyness is often a symptom rather than the root problem. Poor boundaries. Weak systems. Decision fatigue. Emotional overload. Constant distraction. Saying yes to everything. None of those create more time, but they dramatically reduce your ability to use the time you already have. The solution isn't finding another productivity hack. It's becoming the kind of person who can carry more responsibility without losing themselves in the process. Capacity can be trained. Just like strength. Just like endurance. Just like resilience. What We Cover • Why most people don't actually have a time problem • The difference between being busy and exceeding your capacity • How high performers build the ability to carry more responsibility • The hidden costs of poor boundaries and constant distraction • Why better systems reduce overwhelm more than better motivation • How to expand your capacity instead of constantly reorganizing your schedule Key Takeaways • Busyness is often a capacity problem, not a time problem • Your systems determine how much life you can sustainably carry • Great achievers build capacity long before they build results • Productivity is a skill, not a personality trait • The goal isn't to do more. It's to become someone who can handle more without breaking If you've been telling yourself you're too busy to change, this episode may completely reframe the way you think about time, performance, and personal growth.

25. juni 202610 min
episode Reverse Dieting artwork

Reverse Dieting

Reverse dieting has become one of the most misunderstood concepts in nutrition. Some people treat it like a metabolic superpower. Others think it's completely useless. The reality is that reverse dieting is simply a strategic process of gradually increasing food intake after a prolonged period of dieting. It is not magic, but it can be a valuable tool when used in the right context. In this episode, I break down what reverse dieting actually is, where it came from, and why so many people misunderstand its purpose. For physique athletes and individuals coming off long periods of aggressive calorie restriction, reverse dieting can help manage hunger, improve training performance, restore energy levels, and create a smoother transition into maintenance. But for the average person, it is often overcomplicated and unnecessarily romanticized. We also discuss the difference between repairing adherence and repairing metabolism. Many people are not dealing with a broken metabolism. They are dealing with diet fatigue, reduced activity, increased hunger, and unrealistic expectations after prolonged restriction. The goal of a reverse diet is not to avoid all weight gain at any cost. The goal is to create a sustainable bridge between dieting and normal life. As with most things in nutrition, the answer is context. Some people need a structured reverse diet. Others simply need to stop crash dieting, increase calories responsibly, and learn how to maintain their results. What We Cover • What reverse dieting actually is  • Who benefits most from reverse dieting  • Common myths surrounding metabolic damage  • The difference between fat gain and normal weight fluctuations  • Why hunger, energy, and training performance matter  • How to transition from fat loss to maintenance successfully  • When reverse dieting is helpful and when it is unnecessary Key Takeaways • Reverse dieting is a tool, not a magic solution  • Maintenance is a skill that must be learned  • Hunger and adherence matter just as much as calories  • Most people need better habits, not more complicated protocols  • Long term success depends on what happens after the diet ends If you've ever wondered whether you should reverse diet, or you've been confused by the conflicting information online, this episode will help you understand where the strategy fits and how to think about it practically.

17. juni 20268 min
episode Client Spotlight W/ Stacey Vanberg artwork

Client Spotlight W/ Stacey Vanberg

In this episode of The Rebuild, I sit down with my client Stacey Vanberg to talk about what real transformation looks like beyond the scale. Stacey is down more than 35 pounds, but what makes her story worth sharing is not just the weight loss. It is the consistency, mindset shifts, and lifestyle changes that made those results possible. We dive into the challenges she faced before getting started, the habits that created momentum, and what changed when she stopped looking for quick fixes and started focusing on sustainable progress. This conversation is an honest look at what happens when someone commits to the process, stays patient through the ups and downs, and learns how to build a life that supports long term success. What We Cover • Stacey's journey before coaching  • The habits that helped her lose over 35 pounds  • Mindset shifts that made the biggest difference  • Navigating setbacks and staying consistent  • What sustainable fat loss actually looks like  • How confidence changes when you start keeping promises to yourself Key Takeaways • Long term success is built through consistency, not perfection  • Small habits compound into massive results over time  • Confidence comes from keeping your word to yourself  • Sustainable change requires lifestyle change, not temporary effort  • The scale is only one part of the transformation story Whether you're just getting started or have been struggling to stay consistent, Stacey's story is a powerful reminder that lasting change is possible when you focus on the fundamentals and trust the process

9. juni 202653 min