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00000A2
Success isn't about packing your calendar — it's about knowing your true capacity, planning for real-world conditions, and leaving space to breathe.
Show Notes: In this insightful Shark Theory episode, Baylor Barbee uses a cold morning on the golf course to explore one of life's most overlooked performance lessons: understanding your true "stock yardages." Just like golfers must know how far their clubs go in various conditions, you need to know your own capabilities — not what you hope to do, but what you can actually sustain.
Baylor discusses how overestimating your output and overscheduling your day can set you up for frustration and failure. He draws parallels between flexible structures in engineering, leeway in golf, and grace in personal growth to show why life works better when you build room to adapt.
What You'll Learn in This Episode:
Why knowing your personal "stock performance" helps you plan more effectively
How rigid schedules destroy creativity and increase burnout
Why contingency planning is key to long-term success
The difference between perceived capability and tested consistency
How to give yourself grace while still pushing for growth
Featured Quote: "A schedule with no room for error isn't a sign of discipline — it's a setup for disaster. Build leeway, plan for the wind, and trust your swing."
By Baylor Barbee5
4141 ratings
00000A2
Success isn't about packing your calendar — it's about knowing your true capacity, planning for real-world conditions, and leaving space to breathe.
Show Notes: In this insightful Shark Theory episode, Baylor Barbee uses a cold morning on the golf course to explore one of life's most overlooked performance lessons: understanding your true "stock yardages." Just like golfers must know how far their clubs go in various conditions, you need to know your own capabilities — not what you hope to do, but what you can actually sustain.
Baylor discusses how overestimating your output and overscheduling your day can set you up for frustration and failure. He draws parallels between flexible structures in engineering, leeway in golf, and grace in personal growth to show why life works better when you build room to adapt.
What You'll Learn in This Episode:
Why knowing your personal "stock performance" helps you plan more effectively
How rigid schedules destroy creativity and increase burnout
Why contingency planning is key to long-term success
The difference between perceived capability and tested consistency
How to give yourself grace while still pushing for growth
Featured Quote: "A schedule with no room for error isn't a sign of discipline — it's a setup for disaster. Build leeway, plan for the wind, and trust your swing."