On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Feel Behind in Your Career, Relationship or Life? THIS Is the Episode You Need To Stop Comparing Yourself
Episode Date: October 10, 2025Do you ever feel behind in life? What are you comparing yourself to? Today, Jay shares a powerful reminder for anyone who feels like they’re behind in life. Maybe you’re comparing your car...eer path to a friend’s promotion, your relationship status to someone’s engagement photos, or your lifestyle to highlight reels on social media. Jay explains how natural it is to feel this way, especially after school, when the timelines that once kept us moving together begin to split apart. Drawing on social comparison theory, he shows how easily our self-worth can become tied to where others seem to be, instead of honoring the unique path we’re on. Jay reframes the idea of being “behind,” not as a failure but an essential part of growth. Through psychology and real-life examples, he emphasizes that endings matter more than beginnings, and that setbacks are not signs of weakness, but proof that we’re actively building resilience. He challenges our attachment to comfort, which can quietly keep us stuck, and reminds us that what feels like delay is really unseen preparation for the skills and foundations that lead to future success. Jay shifts how we measure progress, from chasing empty wins to recognizing that grit matters more than perfection. In this episode, you'll learn: How to Redefine Success on Your Timeline How to Recognize False Progress in Others How to See Struggle as Strength How to Turn Setbacks into Resilience How to Trust That You’re Not Late The struggles you face today are shaping your resilience, your wisdom, and your strength for tomorrow. You are not late, you are not lost, you are simply on your own timeline. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty Join over 750,000 people to receive my most transformative wisdom directly in your inbox every single week with my free newsletter. Subscribe here. Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 00:52 Do You Feel Behind in Life? 02:37 #1: You Aren't Late, You're on a Different Timeline 06:07 #2: Endings Define the Story 08:42 #3: Comfort is What Really Keeps You Stuck 12:27 #4: Progress Doesn’t Guarantee Happiness 14:01 #5: Struggling Is Proof You’re Growing 17:49 #6: You're not Behind, You're Developing SkillsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Hart podcast, guaranteed human.
What do you get when you mix 1950s Hollywood,
a Cuban musician with a dream,
and one of the most iconic that comes of all time?
You get Desi Arness.
On the podcast starring Desi Arnaz and Wilmer Valderrama,
I'll take you on a journey to Desi's life,
how he redefined American television
and what that meant for all of us watching from the sidelines,
waiting for a face like hours on screen.
Listen to starring Desi Arnaz and Wilmer.
Vodorama on the IHard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
No one is harmed, no death, no trauma, just a few cells grown in a dish.
This is David Eagleman from the Inner Cosmos podcast, and this week we're tackling a tough
question where brain science meets the future.
Lab-grown meat is going to force us to confront the boundaries of our ethics.
And what does this have to do with brain plasticity, social belonging, messed up boundaries?
between mental categories.
What does this uncover about brain science
and our calculations of morality?
Listen to Inner Cosmos on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey there, Dr. Jesse Mills here.
I'm the director of the men's clinic at UCLA,
and I want to tell you about my new podcast called The Mailroom.
And I'm Jordan, the show's producer.
And like most guys, I haven't been to the doctor in way too long.
I'll be asking the questions we probably should be asking,
but aren't. Every week we're breaking down the world of men's health from testosterone and fitness
to diets and fertility. We'll talk science without the jargon and get your real answers to the
stuff you actually wonder about. So check out the mailroom on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your favorite shows. Life isn't a race. It's a relay. Some people sprint early,
others save their strength for later, some are still building their skills. Stop comparing your
life to the lives of people you don't even want. Stop comparing your progress to someone else's
performance. Stop comparing your worth to numbers, likes or applause. Stop comparing because the more
you do that, the less you see what's in your favor. The number one health and wellness
podcast. Jay Shetty. Jay Shetty. He won. The only. Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, it's Jay Shetty, author of New York Times bestsellers,
Think Like a Monk and Eight Rules of Love.
I'm so glad you're back here.
Today we're talking about what to do if you're feeling behind in life.
If you felt like everyone else has got their career right,
this episode is for you.
If you're feeling like you should have been married right now
and maybe even our children, this episode is for you.
And if you're feeling like everyone else is crushing it,
but you've been left behind, this episode is for you.
I think it's really natural in life to go from feeling like you were on track to off track.
But what's also natural is to feel you were always behind.
Now, where does this come from?
It comes from the fact that for potentially 16, 18 or 21 years of your life,
if you were in formal education, you moved at the same pace as everyone.
So everyone went from seventh grade to eighth grade.
A lot of people went from high school to college
And you went from college into your first job
But it was at that point that the timelines changed
Maybe your friend got promoted first
And you got promoted last
Maybe your other friend got proposed to first
And you're still single
Maybe your other friend had an amazing wedding
And you're sitting here just trying to plan your weekend
Maybe another friend has already had a baby
and you're here just trying to figure out
what you're going to watch on Netflix tonight.
It can often feel that after high school and after college,
there was no system that kept you on the same page.
So you could watch what everyone else was doing
and feel completely behind.
This episode is to remind you
that you're not late, you're not behind.
Lesson number one, you're not late,
you're on a different timeline.
You're on a different clock.
We measure our worth by comparing timelines with others.
In 1954, psychologist Leon Festinger noticed something simple but profound.
We don't judge ourselves in isolation.
We judge ourselves by comparison.
In other words, we don't compare our life or ourselves to who we were yesterday.
We compare our life and ourselves to who everyone else is today.
or at least what they tell us.
Think about this.
You might feel fine about your career
until you see a classmate on LinkedIn
with a fancy new job title.
You might feel proud of your apartment
until a friend buys a house.
You might feel good about your relationship
until you scroll past someone else's engagement photos.
This is social comparison theory.
Our worth gets measured,
not against our own progress,
but against the timelines of people around us.
This study absolutely blew my mind.
This study at Harvard gave graduating students two options.
They could either earn $50,000 a year
while everyone else earns $25,000,
or they could earn $100,000 a year
while everyone else earns $200,000.
Which one do you think they chose?
Which one would you choose?
Most students chose the first option.
Less actual money, but more status relative to others.
It didn't matter how much they earned in reality.
What mattered was how much they earned compared to the people next to them.
A 2010 study by the University of Warwick found that life satisfaction is more influenced by relative income.
what you make compared to your peers than by absolute income.
Social media has magnified this effect.
According to a study in computers and human behavior,
time spent on social media correlated directly
with increased feelings of inadequacy due to comparison.
But here's the truth.
Colonel Sanders launched KFC at 65.
There are so many amazing entrepreneurs
who built their dream at 40,
50, 60, 70. But because we live in an influencer economy, we all feel that if we're not multi-millionaires
by the time we're 21 or 30, that we're too late. The reality is there is no universal timeline.
What feels like late is usually just different. Life isn't a race. It's a relay. Some people sprint early,
others save their strength for later, some are still building their skills. Stop,
comparing your life to the lives of people you don't even want. Stop comparing your progress to
someone else's performance. Stop comparing your worth to numbers, likes or applause. Stop comparing
because the more you do that, the less you see what's in your favor. Reminder number two,
endings define the story, not the start. Think about
movie. It can be slow at the start, uneven in the middle, but if the ending is powerful, that's what
you remember. You leave the theatre saying, wow, that was incredible, it blew my mind. Psychologist Daniel
Carneman proved this with his peak end rule. We judge experiences not by how long they lasted,
or even by how they began, but by their most intense moment. And above all, how they ended.
In one study, patients undergoing painful medical procedures remembered the experience as less awful if the ending was gentler, even if the procedure itself was longer.
The ending rewrote the story in memory.
And the same is true for our lives, our careers, our relationships.
A rocky start doesn't lock in a bad ending.
A slow decade doesn't cancel out the power.
of where you finish.
A failure today doesn't stop you
from closing with a win tomorrow.
So if you're feeling behind,
if you're feeling stuck in the middle,
if your start has been messy,
remember, people won't remember every stumble.
They'll remember how you've finished.
And most importantly, you haven't finished yet.
Don't quit in the middle of your story.
Keep going until the ending makes your story.
struggle worth it because the science is clear it's not the start that defines the story it's how
you choose to end it according to kahneman's peak rule you can spend half of your life behind and still
end happy because that's what matters one of my favorite quotes from john lennon is everything
will be okay in the end and if it's not okay
It's not the end.
We end before we've even got started.
We finish and quit before we've even got going.
If you're in the messy middle, you don't have to feel stuck.
No one cares how long it took you.
They care that you kept going.
Reminder number three.
Comfort is the real cause of delay.
People love to say they're behind in life.
because the world is unfair.
And yes, life can be unfair.
But often that's not the real reason we're stuck.
Here's the harsh truth.
We're behind because comfort has us sedated.
You're not behind because the world is unfair.
You're behind because comfort is controlling you.
Take the parable of the frog in warm water.
Don't actually do this.
But if you drop a frog into boiling water,
it jumps out immediately.
but put it in lukewarm water and heat it slowly,
it won't notice the danger until it's too late.
That's how comfort works.
It doesn't scream, you're wasting your life.
It whispers, you're fine here.
Don't push.
Maybe tomorrow.
Before you know it, years pass.
This is called the status quo bias.
Our brain prefers the safety of what's for me.
familiar even if it's not serving us. Research shows that when faced with change, most people
would rather stick with a mediocre situation than risk the uncertainty of a better one. That bias is
why people stay in unfulfilling jobs, toxic relationships or unhealthy habits, not because they can't change,
but because comfort tricks them into not wanting to. One of my favorite quotes is,
is from Ticknard Hahn.
He said we will choose familiar pain
over unfamiliar change.
We will choose something that hurts us
because it feels familiar
instead of choosing something that we don't recognize
that might be better for us.
A 2017 study published in Frontiers in psychology
found that over 80% of people
choose the default option in experiments.
even when better alternatives are available simply to avoid change.
Gallup surveys show that 85% of employees worldwide are disengaged at work.
Yet most don't leave.
Not because they lack ability, but because comfort feels safer than growth.
So if you feel behind, don't just blame someone else.
Ask yourself, am I truly trapped or just comfortably stuck?
because comfort is more dangerous than failure.
Failure wakes you up.
Comfort puts you to sleep.
You don't get ahead by waiting for perfect conditions.
You get ahead by breaking free from the sedation of comfort.
By choosing growth even when it feels awkward, risky or hard.
Life is unfair.
You don't need fair. You need focus.
Life can be unfair.
you don't need guarantees you need grit
life can be unfair
you don't need perfect conditions
you need persistence
life can be unfair
you don't need equal chances
you can make good choices
life can be unfair
you don't need luck
you need leverage
life can be unfair
you don't need comfort
you need consistency
I agree with you that life can be unfair.
I agree with you that things need to change.
I agree with you that we need to try and change them.
But we also need to take control about it.
On the podcast Health Stuff,
we are tackling all the health questions
that keep you up at night.
Yes, I'm Dr. Priyanka Wally,
a double board certified physician.
And I'm Hurricane Dabolu,
a comedian and someone who once Googled,
Do I have scurvy at 3 a.m?
On Health Stuff, we're talking about health in a different way.
It's not only about what we can do to improve our health.
but also what our health says about us and the way we're living.
Like our episode where we look at diabetes.
In the United States, I mean, 50% of Americans are pre-diabetic.
How preventable is type 2?
Extremely.
Or our in-depth analysis of how incredible mangoes are.
Oh, it's hard to explain to the rest of the world that you, like,
your mangoes are fine because mangoes are incredible, but like, you don't even know.
You don't know.
You don't know.
It's going to be a fun ride, so tune in.
Listen to Health Stuff on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey there, Dr. Jesse Mills here.
I'm the director of the men's clinic at UCLA Health, and I want to tell you about my new podcast called The Mailroom.
And I'm Jordan, the show's producer.
And like a lot of guys, I haven't been to the doctor in many years.
I'll be asking the questions we probably should be asking, but aren't.
Because guys usually don't go to the doctor unless a doctor.
piece of their faces hanging off or they've broken a bone. Depends which bone. Well, that's true. Every
week, we're breaking down the unique world of men's health, from testosterone and fitness to diets and
fertility and things that happen in the bedroom. You mean sleep? Yeah, something like that, Jordan.
We'll talk science without the jargon and get you real answers to the stuff you actually wonder about.
It's going to be fun, whether you're 27, 97, or somewhere in between. Men's health is about more than six-packs
and supplements, it's about energy, confidence, and connection.
We don't just want you to live longer.
We want you to live better.
So check out the mailroom on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Kelly, and some of you may know me as Laura Winslow.
And I'm Telma, also known as Aunt Rachel.
If those names ring a bell, then you probably are familiar with the show that we were
both on back in the 90s called Family Matters.
Kelly and I have done a lot of things and played a lot of roles over the years.
but both of us are just so proud to have been part of Family Matters.
Did you know that we were one of the longest running sitcoms with the black cast?
When we were making the show, there were so many moments filled the joy and laughter and cut up that I will never forget.
Oh, girl, you got that right.
The look that you all give me is so black.
All black people know about the look.
On each episode of Welcome to the Family, we'll share personal reflections about making the show.
Yeah, we'll even bring in part of the cast.
some other special guests to join in the fun and spill some tea.
Listen to Welcome to the Family with Telma and Kelly on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Number four, most people ahead of you might not actually be ahead of you.
They might actually be unhappy.
We look at people who seem ahead, the ones with the money, the titles,
the perfect photos online, and assume they're happier.
But here's the counterintuitive truth.
Most people ahead of you could be unhappy.
This is called the hedonic treadmill.
Humans adapt quickly to changes good or bad.
Promotions, new cars, dream houses.
They spike happiness for a moment, then become the new normal.
That's why someone can be ahead on paper, but feel empty.
They're running faster, earning more, collecting trophies,
but the treadmill keeps moving.
So they never feel satisfied.
the hedonic treadmill shows that external success doesn't equal sustained happiness.
Here's the truth. That person you're comparing yourself to may look ahead but may feel empty.
Fast success often collapses because the inner foundation wasn't there.
Now this isn't true for everyone, but it's important to understand that person might be ahead,
but at what cost, at what sacrifice.
Maybe that was a sacrifice they were willing to make.
But are you?
Stop envying a highlight reel and start studying the life they're living.
You don't know the price that they paid.
You don't know the sacrifice that they made.
Reminder number five.
Struggling means you're in the arena.
When you're struggling, it's easy to think you're failing.
But the truth is, struggling means
you're in the arena.
In 1910,
Theodore Roosevelt gave a famous speech in Paris.
He said the credit doesn't belong to the critic,
but to the one actually in the arena,
whose faces marred with dust and sweat and blood.
A century later, psychologists are proving him right.
Take start-ups.
Data shows 90% of new businesses fail.
That's brutal.
But here's the twist.
The people who try, even when they fail, are far more likely to succeed in the next round.
A Harvard Business School study found entrepreneurs who failed the first time
were more likely to succeed later than those who never tried at all.
See, that's the interesting thing.
If you're sitting there on the sidelines, you may never, ever win.
If you fail the first time, you could probably win the second or third.
Failure wasn't a dead end.
It was evidence they were in the arena, building resilience, building the skill and building knowledge.
Psychologists call this stress inoculation and post-traumatic growth.
Facing challenges conditions the brain and body to handle more.
Struggle strengthens coping mechanisms, emotional endurance and problem-solving skills.
Neuroscience shows that when we're tested, our brain rewires.
The prefrontal cortex responsible for decision-making and regulation actually becomes more resilient through struggle, hence struggling the first time failing and losing sets you up to win.
A study in psychological science found people with moderate adversity reported better mental health and higher life satisfaction than those with no adversity.
too smooth a life actually weakens us.
I love this quote from Michael Hoppth.
Hard times create strong men.
Strong men create good times.
Good times create weak men and weak men create hard times.
It's fascinating to me how some of our best times can actually weaken us
and how some of our worst times can make us strong and powerful.
Resilience research shows that exposure to struggle predicts adaptability in future crises.
That's the skill you develop.
So if you're struggling, it doesn't mean you're losing.
It means you're brave enough to step into the arena.
The ones who never struggle, they're in the stands, safe, comfortable and potentially stuck.
Struggle isn't a sign of weakness.
It's a sign you're doing something real.
Every bruise is proof you're in the fight.
Every setback is a scar that makes you stronger.
The dust, the sweat, the blood, that's the price of the arena.
And it's preparing you.
Don't confuse trying with failing.
Don't confuse practice with losing.
Don't confuse learning with weakness.
Don't confuse falling behind with being out of the race.
Don't confuse starting over with starting from zero.
And don't confuse scars with shame.
Their proof you showed up.
Reminder number six, you're not behind your developing skills.
When you feel behind in life, it's usually because you're comparing outcomes.
Someone else has the job, the relationship, the house, and you don't.
But here's the truth. You're not behind. You're developing skills and you're developing your story.
J.K. Rowling was a single mother living on welfare before she wrote Harry Potter.
From the outside, she looked behind. No money, no stability, no career.
But those years weren't wasted. They gave her the persistence to keep submitting her manuscript
after 12 rejections. They gave her empathy, which poured into her characters.
They gave her grit, which became the foundation of her success.
She wasn't behind.
She was building muscles she couldn't see yet.
Think about the most beautiful building you've ever been inside of.
A home, a castle, a hotel.
No one ever went in that building and said,
I love the foundations of this building.
The foundations of this building must be amazing.
They must be so deep.
You never see it.
the foundations.
But the taller of the skyscraper,
the deeper the foundations.
The taller of the building,
the deeper the foundations.
Right now,
you could be working on the foundations
that no one sees
and maybe even you're missing.
And one day when everyone sees that building,
you'll remember the foundations
and everyone will forget again.
Psychologists call this latent learning,
knowledge and skills that don't show
immediate results, but surface later when conditions change. It's also tied to the concept of
deliberate practice. And as Erickson research shows that expertise isn't just about time spent,
but struggle invested. The slow unseen grind is what creates mastery. Erickson's research found
that world-class performers typically accumulate 10,000
hours of deliberate practice before breakthroughs.
Most of those hours look invisible from the outside.
You know, sometimes we talk about whether athletes have a gift or whether they developed
it.
I promise you, every athlete that I've spoken to, every athlete that I've worked with,
the best of the best, they don't doubt that they have some God-given talent,
but they would be offended if you didn't count the hours.
they put in. If you didn't notice the work and struggle they put in, the amount of intensity,
because when we say God given, we want to imagine like they didn't do anything. But if you sat down
and spoke to them, they would remind you of showing up. When I had the opportunity to interview
Kobe Bryant, he talked about how he was training before anyone had even walked into the gym,
how he was training even after everyone had left. When you hear the stories of Cristiano Ronaldo,
there were players who were coming early to training. Cristiano Ronaldo was there.
earlier than them. That's what it takes. A study from Stanford found that people often underestimate
how much their skills compound over time. Progress feels slow in the moment, but accelerates later
like compound interest. So when you feel behind, it's not that you're failing, it's that your
skills are incubating. The world only sees outcomes, but psychology shows that invisible skills,
resilience, persistence, patience are the very traits that predict long-term success.
Stop measuring your life only by outcomes.
Start noticing the skills you're building in the struggle because you're not late, you're preparing.
And preparation always looks like you're behind until the moment it doesn't.
Thank you so much for listening to today.
I hope you'll pass this on to a friend who may be feeling.
behind. As always, I'm sharing with you research, science, spiritual wisdom and insights
from a 360 degree perspective. And remember, make sure you subscribe so you never miss an episode.
I'm forever in your corner and I'm always rooting for you. If you love this podcast, you'll love
my episode with Lewis Hamilton. Lewis and I talk about why you should stop chasing society's
definition of success and how to be more intentional with your goals.
goals. You don't want to miss it. It's not about being perfect. It's about just every day, one step
of the time, trying to be better, trying to do more. I'm learning a lot about myself. I have to break
myself down in order to be able to be better. I'm Jonathan Goldstein and on the new season of heavy
weight. And so I pointed the gun at him and said this isn't a joke. A man who robbed a bank when he was
14 years old. And a centenarian rediscovers a love lost 80 years ago. How can a hundred
and one-year-old woman, fall in love again.
Listen to Heavyweight on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Nora Jones, and I love playing music with people so much that my podcast called Playing Along is back.
I sit down with musicians from all musical styles to play songs together in an intimate setting.
Over the past two seasons, I've had special guests like Dave Grohl, Leve, Rufus Wainwright,
Mavis Staples, really too many to name.
And there's still so much more to come in this new season.
Listen to Nora Jones is playing along on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Radhi Dvlucia and I am the host of a really good cry podcast.
This week, I am joined by Anna Runkle, also known as the crappy childhood fairy,
a creator, teacher, and guide helping people heal from the lasting emotional wounds of unsafe or chaotic childhoods.
that talking about trauma isn't always great for people.
It's not always the best thing.
About a third of people who are traumatized as kids
feel worse when they talk about it.
Get very disregulated.
Listen to a really good cry on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
