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Failure isn’t a moral verdict—it’s data. And if you don’t track it, you’ll keep reliving the same patterns on repeat.What you’ll learn in this video:• How to use a daily “Where did I fail today?” review without self-criticism• Why tracking mistakes helps you spot patterns faster (and change them)• How dopamine habits (games, social media, scrolling) can quietly derail your day• A simple 7-day experiment to refine your routine and improve follow-through• How to treat failure like feedback instead of a personal flawMost people don’t actually have a discipline problem—they have a pattern-recognition problem. If you keep starting your mornings the same way, reaching for the same easy dopamine, or repeating the same “small” decisions that snowball, you’ll keep getting the same outcomes. In this episode, I break down a practice I’ve used for years with myself and with clients: write down where you failed today, then look at it with zero condemnation. Just information. That’s how you figure out what’s not working—and what to change next.Real change doesn’t come from beating yourself up. It comes from noticing the pattern and choosing a better one tomorrow.Subscribe for more practical tools and honest conversations about growth, clarity, and momentum.
By James Henson5
2727 ratings
Failure isn’t a moral verdict—it’s data. And if you don’t track it, you’ll keep reliving the same patterns on repeat.What you’ll learn in this video:• How to use a daily “Where did I fail today?” review without self-criticism• Why tracking mistakes helps you spot patterns faster (and change them)• How dopamine habits (games, social media, scrolling) can quietly derail your day• A simple 7-day experiment to refine your routine and improve follow-through• How to treat failure like feedback instead of a personal flawMost people don’t actually have a discipline problem—they have a pattern-recognition problem. If you keep starting your mornings the same way, reaching for the same easy dopamine, or repeating the same “small” decisions that snowball, you’ll keep getting the same outcomes. In this episode, I break down a practice I’ve used for years with myself and with clients: write down where you failed today, then look at it with zero condemnation. Just information. That’s how you figure out what’s not working—and what to change next.Real change doesn’t come from beating yourself up. It comes from noticing the pattern and choosing a better one tomorrow.Subscribe for more practical tools and honest conversations about growth, clarity, and momentum.