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You trying to get into a routine, pushing yourself to try harder, telling yourself you just need more discipline. But no matter how many times you start over, a few weeks later you’re back where you started, only more exhausted. In this episode of Engineered Miracles, Annmarie Bhola explains why that’s not a character flaw — it’s a design problem — and why real change comes from changing your conditions, not beating yourself up.
A simple phase‑change analogy (water turning to steam, overloaded equipment tripping) that explains why “more effort” eventually breaks systems — including you, not just machines
How willpower became Annmarie’s default setting: push harder, act tougher, bury emotions, and keep working until her body finally said, “We’re done here,” and cancer forced a shutdown
The four hidden systems under your behavior — body, emotional load, mental loops, and environment — and why trying to overpower all of them with sheer effort is like swimming against a current you won’t admit is there
A real‑life story of building habits, reading the right books, and still burning out whenever projects heated up because key conditions (workload, boundaries, belief about never letting anyone down) never changed
A practical engineering lens for your life: instead of asking “Why am I so lazy?”, start asking about load, inputs, maintenance, and design
Three realistic examples of changing conditions — cutting one draining commitment, improving your morning inputs, and adding tiny “maintenance” blocks that actually recharge you
“If you were the mechanic in charge of your own life, would you sign off on the way you’re running yourself right now?”
This week, pick one area where your willpower keeps failing you — sleep, how you react at home, or how you eat on shift.
Instead of making another promise, change one condition around it:
Move your phone charger out of the bedroom
Put your most draining task earlier in the day, when you have more bandwidth
Set one small, specific boundary like, “I’m off my phone from 9:00–9:30 pm”
Then watch what happens to your willpower when the conditions are just a little less hostile.
You’re not being weak; you’re finally doing preventative maintenance on the most critical system you operate: you.
Website & resources: annmariebhola.com
Connect with Annmarie:
Instagram: @engineered_miracles
LinkedIn: Annmarie Bhola
In the next episode, we’ll talk about how to get your body out of permanent emergency mode long enough to think clearly — and how to protect your nervous system when the world feels like one nonstop alarm.
By Annmarie Bhola5
22 ratings
You trying to get into a routine, pushing yourself to try harder, telling yourself you just need more discipline. But no matter how many times you start over, a few weeks later you’re back where you started, only more exhausted. In this episode of Engineered Miracles, Annmarie Bhola explains why that’s not a character flaw — it’s a design problem — and why real change comes from changing your conditions, not beating yourself up.
A simple phase‑change analogy (water turning to steam, overloaded equipment tripping) that explains why “more effort” eventually breaks systems — including you, not just machines
How willpower became Annmarie’s default setting: push harder, act tougher, bury emotions, and keep working until her body finally said, “We’re done here,” and cancer forced a shutdown
The four hidden systems under your behavior — body, emotional load, mental loops, and environment — and why trying to overpower all of them with sheer effort is like swimming against a current you won’t admit is there
A real‑life story of building habits, reading the right books, and still burning out whenever projects heated up because key conditions (workload, boundaries, belief about never letting anyone down) never changed
A practical engineering lens for your life: instead of asking “Why am I so lazy?”, start asking about load, inputs, maintenance, and design
Three realistic examples of changing conditions — cutting one draining commitment, improving your morning inputs, and adding tiny “maintenance” blocks that actually recharge you
“If you were the mechanic in charge of your own life, would you sign off on the way you’re running yourself right now?”
This week, pick one area where your willpower keeps failing you — sleep, how you react at home, or how you eat on shift.
Instead of making another promise, change one condition around it:
Move your phone charger out of the bedroom
Put your most draining task earlier in the day, when you have more bandwidth
Set one small, specific boundary like, “I’m off my phone from 9:00–9:30 pm”
Then watch what happens to your willpower when the conditions are just a little less hostile.
You’re not being weak; you’re finally doing preventative maintenance on the most critical system you operate: you.
Website & resources: annmariebhola.com
Connect with Annmarie:
Instagram: @engineered_miracles
LinkedIn: Annmarie Bhola
In the next episode, we’ll talk about how to get your body out of permanent emergency mode long enough to think clearly — and how to protect your nervous system when the world feels like one nonstop alarm.