Chief Change Officer - #409 Sande Golgart: Climbing the Wrong Mountain — Part One
Episode Date: June 12, 2025Before he became a coach and founder, Sande Golgart was addicted to acceleration. He said yes to every challenge, thrived in high-stakes boardrooms, and made a name for himself as a relentless perform...er. But behind the energy and accolades, something didn’t sit right.In Part One, Sande retraces his early life as a dunk contest champion, his rise through the corporate ranks, and the moment he realized the game he was winning wasn’t one he wanted to keep playing. What started as hustle became habit. What looked like progress felt like pressure. And what came next was a reckoning.Key Highlights of Our Interview:Playing to Win—Even in a Suit“I approached sales the same way I approached dunk contests: high energy, no fear, go all in.”How a competitive spirit helped Sande rise fast—but also masked the cost.Yes Man Syndrome“I never said no. I didn’t even know what no sounded like.”Why overcommitment isn’t ambition—it’s avoidance in disguise.Movement as a Mask“As long as I kept moving, I didn’t have to think. Stillness scared the hell out of me.”When action becomes a coping mechanism, not a strategy.The Wrong Summit“You keep pushing for the top, then get there and realize… it’s not your mountain.”Sande explains the disorienting moment that sparked his pivot.Forgotten Self“I knew my job title. I knew my revenue targets. But I couldn’t tell you what I liked.”How busyness blurred his sense of identity—and what came next._____________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Sande Golgart --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.18 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 1.5% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>170,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today's guest is Sandy Gogard, former slam dunk champion, longtime corporate leader and which stands for Simple Easy Girls. In this two-part series,
Sandy opens up about chasing titles,
burning out, getting lost,
and realizing he has climbed the wrong mountain.
We talk about ego, clarity, and the live Pills method,
a way of becoming more of yourself
by stripping things away, not adding more on.
It's personal, it's short, it's philosophical, but it's also practical.
This episode might just change how you measure success.
Let's get into it. Good morning, Sandy.
Welcome to our show.
Welcome to Chief Change Officer.
Thank you very much.
It's a pleasure to be here, Vince.
Wow.
Your background is great.
It got you in the center with Albert Einstein right beside you.
It feels like I'm hosting not just one yesterday, but two. I know we'll
be talking about topics that even Albert might have appreciated, which is growth, energy, change,
and transition. Before we get into all of that, let's start with your story. Tell us a bit about yourself, your background, your journey, how you evolved over the years,
then we'll dive into different parts of your experience and your approach to growth.
Yeah, so I think as I look back, the best place to start is as a kid growing up in Denver, Colorado, I had this
growing obsession with the ability to fly.
And I would dream about it and really started to embody that.
And then one day as I'm watching the TV, Michael Jordan, basketball
player says, I can fly for a brief amount of time.
And I said, that's what I want to do.
fly for a brief amount of time.
And I said, that's what I want to do.
And like himself, Dr. J, Dominique Wilkins, I just said, that's exactly what I want to do.
I get to feel it in my heart.
That's what I wanted.
And from that moment forward, I would spend, every night we had 14 stairs in our
house and I would do a hundred toe raises on every stair,
1,400 every night before bed until I was able to dunk and then I went on to win the National Slam Dunk Championship in Lubbock, Texas.
Our basketball team won the national championship.
A lot of things started to unfold and then I became a four-year starter at the University of Colorado in Boulder, where I played college basketball.
Like was amazing, taking on these experiences and I was set to go to Sao Paulo, Brazil to
play professional basketball.
Then I had a skiing accident and that's when everything changed.
That basketball was no longer this dream of flying.
You are now grounded, so to speak, and you have to figure something out.
So I went with what I thought I knew at the time, which was in athletics,
you size up the competition, you outwork everybody and you get ahead.
So I picked an industry at the time that I thought I could make a lot of money.
I knew I wanted to be successful. I knew I wanted to make a lot of money. I knew I was an athlete. I knew I was kicked in industry at the time that I thought I could make a lot of money. I knew I wanted to be successful.
I knew I wanted to make a lot of money.
I knew I was an athlete.
I knew I was capable, but I applied those things to the business life.
So for the next almost three decades, I practiced sizing up the competition,
outworking others and trying to get ahead.
And that worked fairly well by most definitions.
I would say I was very successful in the corporate world.
Then my kids reached a point
where they were now out of college.
They were debt-free off in the world.
And I started to finally have some time to focus on me.
And I started asking myself,
is this everything that this was meant to be?
My whole focus was on my kids, making sure they were successfully launched into the world.
And I just had this kind of feeling in the pit of my stomach that this wasn't Apex Mountain.
There is more here.
And I was getting some signs and signals that I looked back on that caused me to clean up my diet, stop drinking alcohol.
I really started to strip away layers of interference to help me get in tune with nature and really listen to what was going on.
And it was started to point me in a direction. It was like tracking these opportunities
to allow the best version of myself to come out
and see if I could drop my ego,
if I could resolve my identity,
not put these outside pressures
on who I thought I needed to be,
but let who I am really surface,
come to the surface and flourish.
What would that be like?
How amazing could life be?
And I learned so much from that pursuit.
Then I launched two companies and that has led me to really understand
what true success is for me.
And of course it has to do with money and success and doing the things you want,
but I've been able to rewire myself to think as wealth in terms of being able to
do what I want, when I want with minimal effort, that's wealth to me.
And that can have a monetary component.
Absolutely.
It could involve a private jet or it could involve just being so content with the miracles
happening all around you that you can sit in peace and just know that this alone is
an unbelievable miracle.
This is all I want to do today is sit and enjoy the miracles going on around me.
And that kind of turns what my priorities were going into those three decades as an
executive was money, success, power, and ego.
Those were the things I was focused on.
I thought I want to be this.
Now my number one most important thing is my health.
Taking care of my mind, my body, being fully in tune, managing
stress levels and letting amazing things, I'd say,
allowing amazing things to happen to me and for me.
And then to have the awareness so that I'm experiencing them
as they happen.
And now I have this kind of calling or feeling there's
nothing I get more pleasure from than helping other
people be the best at whatever it is that they do.
And that's a big part of what we do at Segway Consulting.
You talked about spending three decades as an executive, climbing the corporate ladder,
chasing money, power, recognition.
What was it really like for you, being in the thick of it all?
I imagine on one hand, there was pride, getting promoted,
landing big roles, earning a great paycheck.
But on the other hand, did you ever feel something was missing?
Maybe stress building up, or a sense that you were not really fulfilled.
Even if you couldn't quite name it at the time.
Yeah.
Yeah, it wasn't like it was this miserable time.
It was just that I thought that's the way that the world worked.
Thought we're here.
I grew up Catholic as a kid.
We're taught you're here to suffer, don't want too much,
and life is supposed to be hard.
And so I just thought that's just the way that it was.
And as a man, oftentimes we're not taught that it's okay to feel.
So I would say I spent a big part of those three decades numbing myself a bit to what
was going on around me and not allowing myself to feel anything.
I just had to suffer through it, go get the next thing, and I was accomplishing things.
So it felt like the harder I worked, the more worthy I was, the more I would get rewarded. And that was something that in my upbringing was taught to me that you get rewarded when
you do well, something I had to unlearn later in life.
But through those times I was, I started as a sales rep and quickly
ascended to a manager position.
I've always had a propensity, a desire, and I'm very good at leading people, but
more importantly, teams.
I love the idea that we can get more accomplished as a group than we can as
any individual, and I'm very good at bringing those elements out of a
team to get great results.
So I was working for a company called Regis.
People mostly know of WeWork.
Regis was WeWork back in the 2000s.
So I was running, I ran everything from the Western US, Canada to the Northern US,
about 250 locations, hundreds of millions of dollars in budget.
And it was my job to go and take over different teams, make sure that they
came together and that we produced great results.
And probably the thing I look back on during that career was when I was put in
charge of the Western US, which was the least performing, lowest performing,
terrible culture, terrible everything. And I had the chance to turn it around and get people to work together.
And we ended up achieving amazing results and outperforming everyone else and being able to get promoted and take another step forward.
And I had just been amazing career there, but I was still chasing what's next,
what's next.
And so after 14 years, I felt this kind of anxiousness that the rest of the world was
passing me up.
Not everyone is really into office space.
There's all these technologies and I felt like there would have to be more.
So I left to pursue more.
That taught me a really great life lesson that what I've now learned to appreciate in through the teachings of yoga is that you stop wanting.
You just do what's right in front of you the best you can.
And you let life, your life energy pull you in the direction.
And when you jump off that path, life will become typically
much more difficult for you.
The more you're trying to force something to happen and not use the energy
that the world is giving you.
And I jumped off to try to pursue disruptive technologies, chase a bunch of stock
options, and try to make an even greater life for myself with more accomplishments,
more ego, more power.
And that was just met with a ton of resistance.
Startup world is very difficult, but on top of that, you've got other
people's egos, venture capital.
I jumped into a world that I didn't know a lot about.
I learned a ton about, but we were constantly being met with resistance.
And watching the way people would react to that was disheartening.
I think businesses and situations, you go as fast and as high as the leader allows.
And that's the importance of having great leadership.
And so I could observe when you didn't, when you have not so great leadership,
what are the consequences?
And I could see a very clear lack of clarity, major lack of alignment for the
company and for everybody involved.
And then of course, not the results that you would want.
And it helped me really internalize like what things need to be in place for
companies to really grow and grow easily.
You know, when you have clarity, you have alignment.
I've seen and been a part of organizations and run large teams where
the growth becomes very easy, but the
clarity is the hardest thing to get.
And then building alignment around that clarity, it makes it easy for everybody
to contribute and that's kind of part of what I was pulling away from these
experiences, the most important thing I pulled away as I felt as I launched
into this disruptive technology world and we
missed on our first attempt, I could feel a sense of failure.
Oh shoot.
Maybe I'm not as good as I thought I was.
Maybe I'm not as smart as I thought I was.
And I could feel my own energy lowering.
And then I was attracting worse environments, worse cultures, worse
leaders, because that's where my frequency was going.
I was starting to blame, shame, criticize more than I ever had.
And I was now finding myself attracting other cultures where people blame,
shame, and do those kinds of things.
So my last corporate job, I found myself in this highly toxic, super low vibrating culture.
But again, I still thought I could help change.
I could help bring this somewhere.
And that's where I learned another really important lesson that you can only help
people with an open mind who want the change.
No matter how hard you want someone to want something.
And I was giving, really leaning in and trying to give a group of people, everything
that I had to help them see how much better a life and experience, a company
a better life, an experience, a company they could experience.
But I learned really quickly that people have to approach that with an open mind.
They have to want it or it doesn't matter what you're willing to do for them.
They have to be willing to do it for themselves.
They learned that lesson.
They also learned to lean in to what's right in front of you, which
was one of the lessons I had learned six years previous when I left Regis.
You really owe it to yourself to lean into what's right in front of you and not
chase something you think you want.
And it was right about that time.
I actually read a quote from Rumi that changed my life forever.
Like it's what my core mission of being here from today moving
forward and that is Rumi said, when I chase what it is I think I want,
my life becomes a world of stress and anxiety.
I think he says a furnace of stress and anxiety.
When I sit in silence, I realize that what I want also wants me. It's looking for me and it will find me.
And to the man that can understand this, great things.
There's a great lesson.
And I, something when I read it, like I got a surge of energy and it was like,
there's something to that.
You have to explore that and start to figure that out.
It's like, there's something to that. You have to explore that and start to figure that out.
And I've now dedicated my life to understanding what exactly that means.
What a lot of the great Buddhist teachers and there has to be something amazing to
that, that you can actually sit in silence and there's the law of attraction.
But I want to find out and understand how does it actually work when we have
bills to pay, mortgages, the real life stuff.
Like it sounds beautiful to read it on paper.
How does it work in real life?
So I've dedicated myself to finding it out, document everything along the way.
So I've dedicated myself to finding it out, document everything along the way.
It's led me on an unbelievable, amazing journey.
And I'm looking forward to sharing it
at some point with others who are interested
in finding a lower stress way of managing their life,
but not giving up anything.
In fact, attracting more of what they really want into their life.
Because I believe we're not here to suffer, we're here to have an amazing experience.
And so many of us are numbing ourselves to how amazing this opportunity is, that we're
missing this opportunity.
I think the earth is a giant playground inside the universe.
We're so lucky to be here, but so many of us are walking around
shuffling, complaining, or trying to figure out our purpose for being here.
Our purpose for being here is to enjoy the heck out of it.
Like it's here.
Just enjoy it.
Lap it up.
Do the things you love.
Be productive.
Love your neighbor.
Love yourself and make yourself available to help other people. Do the things you love, be productive, love your neighbor, love yourself, and
make yourself available to help other people and you'd have an amazing life.
But there's a lot that we've learned in life that led us to this point, different
constructs, teachings, which are all designed for the right reasons that we
have to unlearn at a certain point to really appreciate and experience life to the fullest.
So that's what I'm, that's my whole core purpose and mission.
And then to share that with people so that people can understand it.
What is it really like to not do anything for six months?
What is it to not make any money and no money is going to come
surging back into your life?
Are these things possible?
What does it really look like?
When you think of things like manifestation
and different things,
I'm exploring them as deeply as I can
to be able to bring back to as many people
who are interested to find out like,
how did it really work?
It sounds good on when I read it,
but can I still pay my mortgage?
Can I still have a nice car?
Can I still have some of the guilty pleasures I have in life?
Or do I need to get rid of all of those things?
And I think the answer is what I'm learning.
There's a bell curve where we have a life energy that's programmed.
If we're all energy, there's a life energy that's pulling us
individually in a certain direction.
Your energy would be very different from mine.
And it's up to us to understand what our energy is, what our true
self is all about, what are our unique gifts?
Let those come to the surface and let us ride that life energy.
And at any point in time, you can go along this bell curve, which the first
one would be you have no interest, totally, you have no desire, you do
nothing, but you do it because you have a really down outlook on life.
Then you start to work hard and you think it's all your responsibility.
But life is harder.
You're trying to chase things you think you want.
And then you get, can get to a point where you start to get in tune and in touch
with your own natural talents, your own life energies, you start to see things
you really like, enjoy, you're passionate about, passion being coming
from the root word of suffering.
When you're passionate about something, this is something I'm willing to suffer for because it's
so great.
So that's like me on those stairs doing 1400 toe raises.
I was so passionate about getting to fly for a brief moment.
I would willingly jump on the stairs and do 1400 every single night because that's what I wanted to do.
I love, know if my dad or my mom said, you have to do 1400 of these every night
before you go to bed or you're not worthy, I would have hated it.
So that's where some of the difference comes in.
And as you get in touch with your Dharma, your purpose, the things that you're
truly passionate about that you can feel energetically, then yeah, you're, you
can jump off that bell curve and start to make things happen in your life aligned
with where your natural energies are.
You could also keep going all the way to where nothing really needs. Cause you are so convinced that you're that worthy.
Miracles are happening all around you don't have to go and do anything.
But that's for a very few yogis and Buddhists that can make it to that level.
But they're available to all of us.
And some of them aren't necessary for us to go all the way to the end.
So there's a safe jumping off point.
You can jump off wherever you want and start to apply what you know with some cleaned up
energy and start applying it to what you're passionate about and go make an amazing life
happen for you.
It's just the further down the road you get, you realize I don't have to make an amazing
life.
Life is amazing. And that's where some of the magic happens.
You brought up a lot of important ideas and I want to unpack one in particular, which is action versus inaction. Just to be clear, I know you're not talking about sitting back and doing nothing or being
lazy, but some people might misinterpret it that way.
And in extreme cases, like in China during and after COVID, there's been this trend where
some younger folks choose to opt out entirely.
No drive, no ambition, and that kind of passive inaction can lead to poor mental health,
and it's not helpful for society either. But I know that's not what you mean.
So could you give an example from your own life?
What does your version of intentional inaction look like?
Yes, so that I don't lose anyone that's listening,
the best way to understand that is that action is better than an inch sitting
around and doing nothing, like you mentioned that that's not productive.
But it's with what intention are you taking action or choosing in action?
And when it becomes inspired action, that's when it's amazing.
When it becomes inspired action, that's when it's amazing.
So, and oftentimes what you're waiting for or what we're all guilty of is we're so busy and we want to do more, we want to do more, we're adding things to our
life, not subtracting, we're busy for the sake of being busy, we're busy because
our ego tells us, it sounds cooler if I tell you how
busy I am, somehow it makes me seem worth more if I tell you how busy I am.
If I tell you I get up at 4 AM, some people are impressed.
Why?
I have no idea.
But we get programmed that way.
And then we start to numb ourselves to what's actually happening all around us.
We're missing millions of opportunities that are available right around us.
Our awareness goes down and now we're like in the grind, making life harder,
creating that furnace of stress and anxiety.
And now we're immersed in it.
And now we're just blindly going back to the well, being overly stimulated
and having this pressure on ourselves to just do more.
Now, conversely, when we allow ourselves to relax, especially our mind,
and calm, pay attention to our thoughts, pay attention to our feelings,
start to manage our energy so that we let things flow through us and we don't hold on to past traumas, previous
experiences, we don't start worrying about a future that doesn't exist.
We're not creating a future that we don't want in our mind.
You're just being.
Now you can allow yourself to start to feel, create awareness for what's
really going on around you.
And you will then become incredibly inspired to take action when it's the right time.
That's when you spring into this.
I've studied Gandhi's life quite a bit.
And in Gandhi's life, there was this magical moment where he was mediating
two different sides of a divorce.
And he realized, I have this amazing power to bring peace to situations and to
mediate, and he went from being a very unsuccessful person that's wandering all
over the place to this very inspired person that had an amazing
amount of energy that he could pour into his life's work.
And then we all know the story then of Gandhi.
Same thing with Albert Einstein.
For a long time, he couldn't get three people to show up to one of his talks.
He had to shut them down.
No one was interested in listening to him.
He wasn't all that interested in being anything other than pursuing what he could
see in his mind that he was being fed through lucid dreams.
Somehow he knew what it was like to stand on the front end of a light wave
and travel throughout our space.
He was receiving those kinds of messages.
As he was paying attention, he just knew light bends.
When it goes around a planet, it bends.
I can't tell you why or how I just know because I've been on
one.
He's never physically been on one.
So he hired mathematicians who were actually smarter than he
was to prove the things he already knew.
And then it create the theory.
He, they just basically delivered the mathematics to prove the theory of relativity,
but he only knew it because he was being fed that information, which became his
light's purpose was how do I prove that this happens?
I know deep in my soul.
And he was willing then to go through whatever it took to prove that those
theories and they sat through two different eclipses until they captured it.
And he had it nailed to the decimal point, which you just couldn't know.
Except he was being fed that information. So it all comes down to waiting and allowing yourself to be quiet
internally and externally, sit in silence, not forever, just until you really tap
into who you are, your own self-worth and a touch of inspiration. That's the first track.
Go check this out.
So go check it out.
Do it the best you can.
Then look for another clue of what you should do next.
And then do exactly what's in front of you being a hundred percent present.
And then your life will lead you in tune with your life energy to an amazing experience.
And I think that's what we need to get all of human consciousness
more dialed into is just the ability to listen, to feel, and to look for the signs.
And then when you have the sign, jump in and do it the best of your ability
with what's right in front of you.
Not worrying about your past, not worrying about your future, not worrying or fearful of anything.
Just do what's right in front of you.
An amazing life will unfold.
And that's what I'm experiencing myself.
As you were speaking, I realized you were describing my exact
experience as a podcast host.
This show is about one year old.
I came up with the plan just two weeks before Christmas 2023.
Hosting a podcast was never part of any plan. But after COVID and some time in reflection,
I felt this pool, maybe I should start one.
I've done a lot of public speaking before,
on stage, in group, one-on-one,
in finance, raising money.
I figured if I could move people to invest
millions and billions of dollars,
maybe I could move them in a different way too.
I didn't start with a business plan
or goals around monetization.
I just followed the idea.
And along the way, things unfolded.
Guests referred more guests.
The show built momentum.
A podcast network even reached out.
At first, I thought it was spam.
But it was real.
Now that's at revenue too.
So yes, everything you just described, I've been
living it. And it's been a really meaningful ride.
And I would venture to say the more now you keep listening, like
to whether it's different guests or and you start asking
different questions, you'll be a better and better tracker of your life energy.
Where you recognize clues, cues, and things that speak to you that are inspirational because you
feel it. And you go, I gotta pursue that. Something's telling me, I gotta look into that deeper.
The more you keep listening and responding to that, which I would call inspiration, as opposed to doing something
someone else is telling you, right?
If you have a coach that says, Vince, you need to do 30 episodes with
these people and do it this way.
It becomes work.
And that's when change becomes really hard, but change becomes really
easy when you're listening and you're in tune with yourself and your incoherent vibration with the universe.
And you're like, that sounds exciting.
Do it.
And that's what I've learned through Segway Consulting.
That's how I came to know that simple change is easy.
And simple, easy growth, simple, easy change, it's there.
You have to allow yourself to be inspired.
Because when you're inspired, you can do amazing things.
When you're uninspired, you just don't want to do anything.
And so many of us are trying to chase what we think we want
and do what other people have told us is the right
way and we're trying to fit ourselves into that mold, life is very difficult.
It's hard.
I'd spent almost three decades acting that way.
And I feel like with, when you look at the mental health stats and everything else that's
going on around people, it's a clear signal that we're doing something wrong.
And that if we can just get in tune with more of these inspiring
thoughts that will spur action, then we'll actually
be more productive, aligned with our true self,
and treating each other better.
But it has to happen one person at a time.
That's it for part one. We heard how Sandy chased success,
get lost, and realized the summit wasn't even his.
We realized the summit wasn't even his. But next, we get into what happens after the climb.
How to grow, how to heal, and how to build something that actually fits.
We'll also dive into the live Pills method, and what it means to strip down without falling
apart.
Don't miss it.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget to subscribe to our show,
leave us top-rated reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.