
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When motivation stops working, it’s easy to assume something is wrong with us.
But what if motivation was never the right starting point?
In this episode, Julie Johnson explores why motivation often fails — not because people lack discipline, but because nervous systems need orientation and capacity before choice is possible.
Drawing from polyvagal theory, somatic UX, and years of working inside digital health and wellness systems, Julie introduces a different sequence for sustainable change: orientation → capacity → choice.
This conversation is for anyone who feels burned out by “trying harder” — and for anyone who designs systems, programs, or tools meant to support human behavior.
Nothing to fix.
Why motivation is an unreliable starting point for change
How nervous systems orient before they engage
The difference between effort and capacity
Why repetition matters more than intensity
How choice emerges when conditions are right
From a polyvagal lens, lasting change follows a predictable sequence:
Orientation
Capacity
Choice
When systems skip orientation and capacity, choice feels forced.
If motivation has felt unreliable lately, there is nothing wrong with you.
You can explore these ideas through short, predictable practices designed to support orientation and capacity inside the Let’s Integrate app.
→ Learn more about the app
If you design apps, wellness programs, learning experiences, or lead teams, this episode names a common design failure — and offers a different way to think about engagement, trust, and retention.
Julie teaches this framework more deeply through her Somatic UX work and practitioner-focused learning spaces.
→ Explore Somatic UX & practitioner resources
As you move through your day, notice one thing that already feels predictable — not productive, not impressive, just steady.
That steadiness is orientation.
By integratenetworkWhen motivation stops working, it’s easy to assume something is wrong with us.
But what if motivation was never the right starting point?
In this episode, Julie Johnson explores why motivation often fails — not because people lack discipline, but because nervous systems need orientation and capacity before choice is possible.
Drawing from polyvagal theory, somatic UX, and years of working inside digital health and wellness systems, Julie introduces a different sequence for sustainable change: orientation → capacity → choice.
This conversation is for anyone who feels burned out by “trying harder” — and for anyone who designs systems, programs, or tools meant to support human behavior.
Nothing to fix.
Why motivation is an unreliable starting point for change
How nervous systems orient before they engage
The difference between effort and capacity
Why repetition matters more than intensity
How choice emerges when conditions are right
From a polyvagal lens, lasting change follows a predictable sequence:
Orientation
Capacity
Choice
When systems skip orientation and capacity, choice feels forced.
If motivation has felt unreliable lately, there is nothing wrong with you.
You can explore these ideas through short, predictable practices designed to support orientation and capacity inside the Let’s Integrate app.
→ Learn more about the app
If you design apps, wellness programs, learning experiences, or lead teams, this episode names a common design failure — and offers a different way to think about engagement, trust, and retention.
Julie teaches this framework more deeply through her Somatic UX work and practitioner-focused learning spaces.
→ Explore Somatic UX & practitioner resources
As you move through your day, notice one thing that already feels predictable — not productive, not impressive, just steady.
That steadiness is orientation.