#3644: You Haven’t Collapsed Your Identity
If you feel like you’re doing too much, it’s not just about workload, it’s about identity. I see this all the time, when your identity isn’t clear, you try to […]
play_arrow
What I Wish I Knew Sooner podcast
play_arrow
Money Hungry | Episode 29 podcast
play_arrow
604: Homecoming podcast
play_arrow
Episode 518 | Hovchella podcast
ODM Mondays Cuhmunity EP 347 podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
The Kenny Burns Show | Ep. 195: A Conversation with Young Dro podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
The Arrington Gavin Show Ep. 627 “AFTER PLATNER: WHO CAN TAKE ON SUSAN COLLINS?” podcast
I don’t run from boredom. I see it as a signal that things are under control. When everything is working the way it should, it often feels repetitive, stable, and even a little boring.
In this episode, I explain why boredom is not a problem, it’s a sign of disciplined execution. What feels dull is usually what’s actually working and compounding over time. If you always need stimulation, you might be chasing activity instead of real progress.
Show Notes:
[04:06]1 Boredom reflects system stability.
[08:42]#2 Stimulation competes with depth.
[13:30]#3 Those who tolerate boredom outlast those who chase excitement.
[19:17] Recap
Episodes Mentioned:
1254: Inches And Miles
Next Steps:
—
Execution is not a talent.
It is a measurable standard.
If your results don’t match your ability, you are not lacking information—you are lacking execution reliability.
The Execution Reliability Index (ERI) identifies exactly where your discipline breaks, where your standards drop, and where your results are leaking.
This is not theory.
This is a system.
Get your ERI score here:
→ http://www.WorkOnYourGame.com/ERI
This show is the public record of standards.
Measurement and enforcement happen elsewhere.
All episodes and the complete archive:
→ WorkOnYourGamePodcast.com
If you feel like you’re doing too much, it’s not just about workload, it’s about identity. I see this all the time, when your identity isn’t clear, you try to […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025