← The Knowledge Project

Dr. Julie Gurner (Part 1): Caring Deeply, Challenging Directly

Jun 27, 2023 57m 42s 40 insights
On the first of two special episodes, acclaimed executive performance coach and doctor of psychology Dr. Julie Gurner goes in-depth on a variety of strategies and actionable advice that will help you perform up to your potential. During this portion of her interview, Dr. Gurner discusses discipline, motivation, the imaginary rules we learned as children that hold us back today, setting boundaries, the advantages of caring deeply and challenging directly, and much more.   Dr. Gurner has spent the past 14 years working with top percentile executives, talent, and teams operating in fast-paced, competitive environments. She specializes in improving personal productivity, focus, and decision-making strategies, as well as developing high performance cultures, teams, and executives emphasizing ownership and leadership. Check out Dr. Gurner's lecture on Mental Health for Kids in the Time of Coronovirus for The Kids Are In Charge, and you can sign up Dr. Gurner's Substack here. -- Want even more? Members get early access, hand-edited transcripts, member-only episodes, and so much more. Learn more here: https://fs.blog/membership/ Every Sunday our Brain Food newsletter shares timeless insights and ideas that you can use at work and home. Add it to your inbox: https://fs.blog/newsletter/ Follow Shane on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ShaneAParrish Our
Actionable Insights

1. Replace Discipline with Motivation

Instead of relying primarily on discipline (push), cultivate internal motivation (pull) for sustained high performance. Discipline is useful for starting new habits or off days, but true high performers are driven by obsession and deep engagement, which is an endless source of fuel, whereas over-reliance on discipline leads to burnout and makes tasks feel laborious.

2. Cultivate Intentionality for Life Trajectory

Be intentional about how you want your life to look, what you’re willing to tolerate, and the standards you hold for yourself. Intentionality allows you to control your life’s trajectory, make conscious choices about your actions, and reflect your self-worth.

3. Practice Early Intervention

Address issues early on, whether small or large, instead of letting them escalate. Early intervention is worth the effort as it allows you to gain ground, shape your life, and define your standards, preventing prolonged unhappiness.

4. Challenge Imaginary Self-Limiting Rules

Actively identify and challenge the unspoken, unsubstantiated ‘imaginary rules’ you’ve internalized about your capabilities, potential earnings, or what’s possible for you. These rules, often reinforced by your immediate environment, keep you small and limit your potential unless you consciously expand your perspective and challenge them.

5. Set Boundaries for Freedom and Focus

Establish clear boundaries regarding what you take on, how you allocate your time, and how you operate, both professionally and personally. Boundaries provide freedom by allowing you to focus on your highest and best use, prevent over-commitment, reduce open loops, and protect time for personal life, ultimately enhancing performance and well-being.

6. Build Multiple Pillars of Stability

Cultivate multiple foundational ’legs of the stool’ in your life beyond just work (e.g., relationships, health, spirituality) to create stability and prevent identity collapse if one area falters. Relying on a single pillar makes you vulnerable; diverse foundations provide resilience and grounding, ensuring overall stability and well-being.

7. Cultivate “I’ll Figure It Out” Confidence

Develop an unwavering confidence that no matter what challenges or uncertainties arise, you will find a way to figure it out. This belief system, common among high performers, prevents the feeling of ‘burning boats’ and fuels audacious actions, as they trust their ability to adapt and learn new skills.

8. Embrace Bias to Action

Develop a bias towards taking action and making moves, starting with the first leap. Each successful action, even a small one, acts as a ‘shot in the arm,’ building confidence that stacks over time as you continue to take risks and figure things out.

9. Keep Goals Private for Motivation

Avoid publicly sharing your goals, especially before achieving them, to prevent premature praise from depleting your intrinsic motivation. Receiving early validation can provide a ‘reward center hit’ that reduces the drive to actually put in the work and achieve the goal.

10. Take Ownership of Your Response

Stop attributing current self-sabotaging or destructive behaviors solely to past events (e.g., childhood trauma) and take control of your responses as an adult. Continuously explaining away current behavior with past events cedes personal power and prevents moving forward, even if the past events were genuinely terrible.

11. Reframe Victimhood as Survivorship

When faced with circumstances that make you feel like a victim, reframe your narrative to one of survivorship and overcoming. This shift in cognitive position empowers you by focusing on your strength and ability to navigate challenges, rather than dwelling on helplessness and powerlessness.

12. Channel Negative Emotions Productively

When experiencing deep rage, anger, or resentment, learn to channel these powerful negative emotions properly. Channeled correctly, this energy can be a significant motivational force, akin to a ‘chip on your shoulder,’ driving you to overcome challenges and achieve goals, rather than being destructive.

13. Cultivate Positive Self-Talk

Actively manage your internal dialogue and how you conceptualize yourself, focusing on positive self-talk and a strong self-concept. Confidence is deeply rooted in how you speak to and think about yourself, and who you perceive yourself to be in the broader world.

14. Curate Your Social Circle Wisely

Be selective about your social circle, prioritizing relationships with people who will challenge your self-limiting beliefs and cheer you on, rather than reinforce imaginary rules that keep you small. Your social environment significantly influences your mindset and whether you break free from or remain constrained by internalized limitations.

15. Limit Validation-Seeking Circle

Restrict your circle for seeking validation to a very small, trusted group of individuals, such as your spouse, children, and perhaps one other person who genuinely has your best interests at heart. While seeking some validation is natural, limiting it to a select few prevents external opinions from derailing your goals and decision-making, especially in the age of social media.

16. Rewrite Your Personal Narrative

Actively rewrite your personal narrative, especially concerning past negative experiences, to focus on survivorship, overcoming, and the strengths and abilities you demonstrated. This practice helps you see your own power and capabilities, countering feelings of helplessness and preventing past events from dictating your present and future actions.

17. Focus on Present Self

When addressing personal challenges, focus on who you are today and your current capabilities, rather than dwelling on past traumas or powerlessness. The past cannot be changed, and revisiting moments of powerlessness can create a negative mindset, whereas focusing on the present empowers you to move forward.

18. Recall Past Successes for Confidence

When feeling hesitant or lacking confidence, intentionally recall and reflect on past instances where you took risks and achieved positive outcomes. This practice helps you remember your capabilities, counteracting the tendency to focus on negative experiences and building a stronger sense of self-efficacy.

19. Communicate and Enforce Boundaries

Be explicit about your boundaries, communicate them clearly to others, and consistently enforce them, even if it makes others uncomfortable. Consistent enforcement is crucial because others may test boundaries, but holding firm ensures you maintain control over your time and focus, enabling you to operate at your highest potential.

20. Nurture All Life Foundations

Intentionally identify, include, and nurture all foundational aspects of your life (e.g., relationships, health, spirituality) to ensure they are stable. Neglecting any area will create instability and pull at your energy, distracting you and reducing your overall effectiveness in other domains.

21. Prioritize and Resolve Relationship Conflicts

Actively prioritize and address high-conflict or unresolved issues in your personal relationships. Unresolved relationship conflicts consume mental energy and headspace, negatively impacting your focus and effectiveness at work.

22. Maintain Foundational Health Habits

Consistently maintain good habits around sleep, eating, and nutrition to establish a baseline of physical stability. These foundational elements are crucial for overall well-being and prevent health issues from consuming headspace and energy, which would otherwise detract from productivity.

23. Address Nagging Medical Issues Promptly

Do not postpone addressing nagging medical issues or physical pains; seek necessary treatment like physical therapy. Unresolved health problems consume mental energy (‘headspace’) and physical energy, distracting you and reducing your overall effectiveness.

24. Avoid False Compartmentalization

Recognize that personal issues (e.g., problems at home) inevitably seep into and affect your professional life, despite beliefs in compartmentalization. You cannot truly be effective at work if fundamental areas of your personal life are neglected or in disarray, as these issues consume mental and emotional energy.

25. Don’t Escape Home Issues with Work

Avoid using work as an escape or a compensatory mechanism for difficulties or failures in your personal life (e.g., being a less-than-ideal parent or spouse). While work can offer competence and reward, neglecting personal areas creates a negative cycle, preventing you from addressing fundamental issues and achieving holistic well-being.

26. Practice Daily Intentionality in Roles

Daily, identify one intentional action you can take to be your best self in each significant role (e.g., husband, dad, CEO), even if it’s a small gesture. This practice fosters intentional growth and improvement across multiple spheres of your life, preventing neglect and contributing to overall fulfillment.

27. Embrace Your Quirky Individuality

Embrace your unique quirks and individuality rather than trying to conform. Being resolutely yourself can act as a ‘forcing function,’ pushing you towards your unique path and potential, especially if you don’t easily fit in.

28. Cultivate Love for Risk, Winning

Develop an enjoyment for taking calculated risks and setting up situations where you can win. This mindset is common among outliers and fuels their drive to make big bets and achieve significant successes.

29. Make Big Bets, Accept Losses

Be prepared to make significant bets and accept the possibility of substantial losses. Outliers are characterized by their willingness to take large chances, understanding that big risks can lead to big rewards.

30. Avoid Hesitancy, Prevent Confidence Erosion

Actively counter the tendency to hesitate on ideas or opportunities. Prolonged hesitancy leads to watching others succeed, creating a negative feedback loop that erodes self-confidence and leaves you feeling behind.

31. Embrace Personal Evolution as Compliment

View ‘you’ve changed’ as a compliment, actively seeking to evolve, grow, and become different from your past self. Personal growth necessitates change, and resisting it means stagnation, so embracing evolution is essential for continuous development.

32. Disregard Critics Who Undermine Growth

Ignore or dismiss people who try to ‘set you straight’ or tell you why your ambitious goals won’t work, especially those who haven’t achieved similar things themselves. Such criticism often comes from a place of their own struggle or limited mindset and can undermine your confidence and growth.

33. Seek Inspiration from Others’ Success

When observing others’ significant achievements, choose to see them as inspiration rather than finding ways to discredit their success due to envy or a belief that it’s not possible for you. Discrediting others’ accomplishments reinforces self-limiting beliefs, whereas seeking inspiration helps you identify potential paths and strategies for your own growth.

34. Balance Gratitude with Aspiration

Maintain gratitude for your current situation while also continuously questioning if you could do more or be happier by pursuing other goals. This balance prevents complacency by fostering a healthy aspiration for growth and greater fulfillment, without making you uncomfortable or ungrateful.

35. Practice Low-Stakes Risk-Taking

To build confidence in risk-taking, start by challenging yourself with small, low-stakes personal goals that don’t involve public scrutiny or career implications (e.g., training for a 5k). Successfully achieving these small, private wins translates into a mindset of capability and confidence that can then be applied to larger professional or personal risks.

36. Use a Progress Board

Instead of a vision board focused solely on the end goal, create a ‘progress board’ that visually tracks your incremental steps and achievements towards a goal. A progress board provides ongoing, internal validation for effort and movement, sustaining motivation by showing you getting closer, rather than prematurely hitting the reward center with just the end goal.

37. Work in Private, Reveal Public

Adopt a strategy of working on your plans and goals privately, keeping them ‘dark and impenetrable as night,’ and only reveal your achievements or failures after the fact. This approach prevents external interference, feedback, or premature praise from impacting your focus and motivation during the critical building phase.

38. Hire for Internal Drive

When hiring, prioritize candidates who demonstrate internal hunger and drive, as this quality cannot be taught. Internal drive is a fundamental, untrainable trait that fuels engagement and high performance.

39. Align Work with Employee Drivers

For internally motivated employees, understand their personal goals and drivers through one-on-one conversations, then align company goals and opportunities with these individual motivations. This approach taps into their internal pull, fostering deep engagement and releasing their drive in the company’s direction.

40. Release Employee Drive by Alignment

Align company goals with individual employee goals to release their internal drive and direct it towards organizational success. This creates a powerful synergy where employees are motivated to push harder because their personal and generational investments are tied to the company’s win.