CONSISTENT by Primal Potential

Elizabeth Benton

Why are we so stressed & overwhelmed? Why do we have clear & compelling goals but fail to reach them? How can we want to change so desperately yet make choices that keep us from that change? Because we keep focusing on the habits we want instead of building the skill of consistency that allows us to achieve them. Consistency is a skill. It's a superpower. It isn't one-size-fits all. It unlocks any door and makes every goal achievable. A more effective, realistic approach starts here.

  1. 6 hr ago

    1426: You're Manufacturing Your Worst Days. Here's How to Stop.

    div]:bg-bg-000/50 [&_pre>div]:border-0.5 [&_pre>div]:border-border-400 [&_.ignore-pre-bg>div]:bg-transparent [&_.standard-markdown_:is(p,blockquote,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6)]:pl-2 [&_.standard-markdown_:is(p,blockquote,ul,ol,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6)]:pr-8 [&_.progressive-markdown_:is(p,blockquote,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6)]:pl-2 [&_.progressive-markdown_:is(p,blockquote,ul,ol,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6)]:pr-8"> _*]:min-w-0 gap-3 standard-markdown"> Get in before the cart closes June 30: elizabethbenton.com/defense Most of the bad days you have, the overwhelmed ones, the stressed ones, the ones where you check out and tell yourself you don't care, you had more of a hand in creating than you think. That's not a criticism. It's the best news you'll hear all week. Because the things you manufacture, you can stop manufacturing. In this episode, Elizabeth takes you somewhere she rarely goes: inside a live coaching session from DEFENSE Foundations. You'll hear the real question she asked the room, the answers that came pouring back, and the work of building defense before you need it, not white-knuckling your way through the moment after it's already on top of you. Inside the episode: The fly trap on Elizabeth's door, and why we keep walking into the same one The difference between in-the-moment defense and preemptive defense, and why almost no one teaches the second one Real answers from real members naming exactly where they fall apart (you'll hear yourself in at least one) Why the goal isn't a better response to hard moments. It's manufacturing fewer of them. The warrior mindset: scanning for what's coming before it takes you out Gift or a tax: how the smallest choices either help tomorrow's you or rob her Here's the truth at the center of it. You already know where you fall apart. You could name it right now. The question is whether you'll keep walking into that same spot on your own, or finally build the thing that stops it. That's the work we do in DEFENSE, and the door is open right now. This is the last episode before the July cohort closes. Two things are on the table this week, and one of them you won't see again: a redo guarantee (join for July, get August free, two full rounds), plus pay what you can. The cart closes Monday, June 30th. Get in: elizabethbenton.com/defense

    21 min
  2. You Might Also Like: Stuff Matters with Ed Conway

    6 hr ago ·  Bonus

    You Might Also Like: Stuff Matters with Ed Conway

    Introducing LEDs: How a little blue light changed the world from Stuff Matters with Ed Conway. Follow the show: Stuff Matters with Ed Conway A flashing wristband at an NFL game sends Ed Conway down an unexpected economic rabbit hole. To listen without ads, get new episodes a week early, exclusive bonus episodes and much more, become a Sky News Insider. Find out more and subscribe at skynews.com/stuffmatters. LEDs were supposed to be one of the great technological and environmental success stories: a revolutionary technology that uses a fraction of the energy of traditional light bulbs. But is that what they've become? Or are they just an example of humankind’s insatiable desire for stuff? After all - we’ve just started lighting up more of the world than ever before. Ed’s journey takes us from a small chemical factory in rural Japan where inventor Shuji Nakamura spent years battling explosions in pursuit of the world's first blue LED, all the way to Victorian Britain and the economist William Stanley Jevons whose ideas still shape the way we think about energy and consumption today. Along the way, Ed explores one of the biggest questions in economics and climate policy: The Jevons Paradox. When technology becomes more efficient, do we actually use less of it, or simply find new ways to consume more? Sky News Insider requires a paid subscription and is available to UK listeners aged 18 and over. Find out more and subscribe at skynews.com/stuffmatters. The Stuff Matters series producer is Jake Otajovic. The production team includes assistant producer Valeria Rocca, specialist producer Aoife Yourell, and video producer Charlie Bell. Our bonus episodes are produced by Soila Apparicio. The editor is Philly Beaumont, and the commissioning editor is Paul Stanworth. Sound design and mixing by Luke Hatten. Original music for the series composed by Klong and Ed Conway. DISCLAIMER: Please note, this is an independent podcast episode not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in conjunction with the host podcast feed or any of its media entities. The views and opinions expressed in this episode are solely those of the creators and guests. For any concerns, please reach out to team@podroll.fm.

  3. 2 days ago

    1425: The Only Episode On Procrastination You'll Ever Need

    The most expensive sentence I've ever said is "I'll start tomorrow." Not because I said it once, but because I said it every day for years, quietly, in the area of my life that mattered most. When I recently asked you on Instagram what keeps you from following through, more than half of you named the same thing I struggled with: procrastination. So this is the one episode I want you to never need another one for. In this episode I'm breaking down why you actually procrastinate (it's simpler than you've been told), why putting something off doesn't relieve it but ages it, and the two moves that get you out: make later loud, and make starting cheap. I'll show you why the task was never the hard part, why starting is, and the one skill that beats procrastination almost every time. And I'll give you something to do in the next two minutes, because I refuse to let listening to this be the way you procrastinate today. If you've ever wanted something badly and still handed it to tomorrow, this one's for you. In this episode: Why listening to procrastination advice can be a form of procrastination Why ease wins in the moment (loud vs. silent) and what to do about it The difference between relieving a task and avoiding it Why you pay for the thing whether you do it or not, and how to pay only once Activation energy: why starting costs more than continuing The lie of "do it or don't do it," and the creative third option that's always there How to be a two-minute person Why momentum is its own kind of rest A few lines worth sitting with: "You're going to pay for this task whether you do it or not. The only question is how many times." "When you put it off, you didn't get rid of it. You aged it." "What I was missing wasn't discipline. It was creativity." "I don't want to call you out. I want to call you up." Ready to stop losing the negotiation? Procrastination is the conversation you have with yourself in the seconds before a choice, where you talk yourself into "not right now" and win, against yourself. DEFENSE Foundations is four weeks of guided practice for exactly those seconds. The cart is open now and we begin July 1st. Join us: elizabethbenton.com/defense/

    27 min
  4. 22 Jun

    1424: Fixing the Reason Good Plans Fall Apart

    Get on the list for the July cohort of DEFENSE Foundations: elizabethbenton.com/defense You've made good plans before. Plans that made sense. Plans you wanted. And you've watched them fall apart anyway, in the same place they always do. This episode is about why that happens, and it has almost nothing to do with what you think. It started with an email from a regenerative farm I follow. They bought a beautiful, heavy duty gate to replace their old crooked one. Great idea in theory. In practice, the post it hung on was too weak to hold it, and that gorgeous gate has been slowly pulling itself over into the gravel since day one. That's the whole thing. That's why most of us never get where we want to go. We are all offense and no defense. The gate is the plan. The program, the protocol, the fresh Monday, the pledge to get up early and work out. It looks amazing. It makes sense. We want it. But as good as the plan is, without the right support holding it up, it falls apart. And instead of reinforcing the weak spot we already know is there, we just go buy a prettier gate. In this episode: Why your plan was never the problem, and what actually is The reason your morning workout really died the night before, on the couch, at 10:45 How to find the specific, predictable spots where you come undone every single time Why "I just need more discipline" keeps failing you, and what to build instead What to do when your first fix doesn't work (most people quit here and blame themselves) Why hope is what you reach for when you don't have the right tool Here's the truth at the center of it. You already know exactly where you fall apart. You've known for years. You've just never built anything there. That's not a character flaw. It's a post problem. And post problems get fixed. If you've spent years collecting beautiful plans and watching them sag into the mud, this is your episode. We're not here to sell you another gate. We're here to build the post. DEFENSE Foundations opens for the July cohort this week. Get on the list: elizabethbenton.com/defense

    16 min
  5. 20 Jun

    1423: When You Don't Want to Stop

    Sometimes you know exactly what the better move is, and in the moment, you just don't want to do it. Not the binge, not the fight with your husband, not the screw-it-I'll-start-tomorrow. You're not confused about the right answer. You just don't want it. Most people read that feeling as proof they don't want it badly enough. It isn't. In this episode I'll show you what's actually going on, why "I don't want to stop" gets built upstream in places that look nothing like the moment itself, and the difference between defending yourself in the moment and defending yourself before you ever get there. I'll walk you through three real examples from my own life, including one variable affecting your decisions that you would never guess and could never think your way to on your own. In this episode: Why "I don't want to stop" is not proof you don't care or aren't motivated The two kinds of defense, and why nobody builds the one that matters most How the moment you can't control gets built long before the moment What's quietly loading you up in your marriage, your eating, and your environment The hidden contributor most people never find by themselves Work with me in DEFENSE: The next DEFENSE cohort starts July 1, and the timing is on purpose. July is when this hits hardest. You're out later, more social, more tempted, and the routines you lean on get loose. It's the exact season where offense isn't enough and you find out whether you've built any defense at all. This is the work we do together inside DEFENSE. Not my list of what carries me to "I don't care," but yours, found, named, and built into something that holds. Join us at elizabethbenton.com/defense

    21 min
  6. 13 Jun

    1421: 10 Things That Make Eating Clean Easier

    If you've ever watched someone make clean eating look effortless and quietly assumed they were just born with more discipline than you, this episode is going to reframe the whole thing. Because easier was never about having more willpower. It was about needing it less often. In this one I'm walking through ten specific things that genuinely made eating clean easier for me. Five that changed it for me, and five that changed it as a mom with young kids. And no, this is not nutrition 101. I'm not going to tell you to eat more vegetables. I'm going to show you how to build a life that stops asking you to fight the same battles over and over again. We get into why the meals you "should" eat keep failing you, the one assumption that quietly keeps you eating out, what tired-you actually needs from past-you, and a practice I lean on that runs completely against everything wellness culture tells you to want. That last one might be the most important thing I say all week. If you don't have young kids, don't skip the second half. The principle was never really about the kids. They just make it impossible to miss. Come listen, then go look at your own kitchen a little differently. If this episode lights you up, the DEFENSE waitlist is open. DEFENSE is where we take this exact way of thinking, protecting the plan instead of white-knuckling the moment, and build it into something that actually holds. Get on the list at elizabethbenton.com/defense/ Stop negotiating against the woman you could be.

    35 min
  7. 8 Jun

    1420: I Finally Did It! Years In The Making...

    This week I did something I'd been telling myself for over a year I couldn't do. Not wouldn't. Couldn't. It was too complicated, I didn't know where to start, I didn't have time, and the first time I asked, I got told no. And then I finally did it. In a matter of weeks. In this episode, I walk you through the whole thing. What I was telling myself for that year of not doing it. The story (from a real estate book I cannot for the life of me name) that finally moved me. The actual chain of small, almost embarrassing steps that got me from sitting on this for over a year to having it done. And what I've taken out of it that I think will help you with whatever your version of this is. Because if you've got a thing in your life right now that you keep meaning to do, keep thinking about, keep telling yourself you'll get to when life calms down, this is for you. We get into: Why "I don't have time" and "it's too complicated" are almost never the real reason we're not moving The clarity problem underneath most procrastination (and why it's not what you think) Why you don't get to see the whole staircase before you start, and what to do instead The truck-vacuuming move, and what it actually looks like in real life How to break a giant overwhelming thing into pieces small enough that one of them stops feeling like a thing What to do when you hit the part you genuinely don't understand (this is where most people stop, and it's the easiest thing in the world to solve) Real-world examples for weight loss, starting a business, the hard conversation you've been avoiding, and the work project that's been sitting open in a tab for three weeks The one question to ask yourself this week that will get you unstuck If this episode resonates and you're realizing that your version of this isn't a farm number, it's the way you want to show up, the woman you want to be, the consistency you've been chasing for years, get on the waitlist for DEFENSE at elizabethbenton.com/defense. We're opening a new round soon, and the work we do inside is exactly this. It's the work of becoming the person who actually does the thing, instead of the person who keeps almost doing it. Your only job this week: pick one thing, find the smallest piece you can actually see, and do that. Not the whole plan. Not the whole staircase. Just the one step. The rest will reveal itself.

    26 min

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About

Why are we so stressed & overwhelmed? Why do we have clear & compelling goals but fail to reach them? How can we want to change so desperately yet make choices that keep us from that change? Because we keep focusing on the habits we want instead of building the skill of consistency that allows us to achieve them. Consistency is a skill. It's a superpower. It isn't one-size-fits all. It unlocks any door and makes every goal achievable. A more effective, realistic approach starts here.

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