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In this episode of The Inner Circle, Mike and Kevin explore the hidden pattern of constructive self sabotage.
Prompted by Mike’s story of losing $1.5 million in a failed acquisition, the conversation dives into identity, ego, and the quiet pressure that builds after a lifetime of achievement.
They unpack:
• Why high performers subconsciously engineer failure
• The psychological cost of never losing
• The difference between a midlife crisis and a midlife chrysalis
• Why failure can feel unexpectedly liberating
• How to minimize collateral damage when you feel the urge to blow it up
This episode reframes failure not as destruction, but as initiation. A shedding of identity that creates space for something more aligned.
If you’ve ever felt restless despite outward success, this conversation will help you understand why.
Connect with Kevin & Mike on X for more from The Inner Circle:
Kevin Dahlstrom: https://x.com/Camp4
Mike Brown: https://x.com/mbrown_co
By Mike Brown/Kevin DahlstromIn this episode of The Inner Circle, Mike and Kevin explore the hidden pattern of constructive self sabotage.
Prompted by Mike’s story of losing $1.5 million in a failed acquisition, the conversation dives into identity, ego, and the quiet pressure that builds after a lifetime of achievement.
They unpack:
• Why high performers subconsciously engineer failure
• The psychological cost of never losing
• The difference between a midlife crisis and a midlife chrysalis
• Why failure can feel unexpectedly liberating
• How to minimize collateral damage when you feel the urge to blow it up
This episode reframes failure not as destruction, but as initiation. A shedding of identity that creates space for something more aligned.
If you’ve ever felt restless despite outward success, this conversation will help you understand why.
Connect with Kevin & Mike on X for more from The Inner Circle:
Kevin Dahlstrom: https://x.com/Camp4
Mike Brown: https://x.com/mbrown_co