Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Why Courage Is a Daily Choice, Not a Personality Trait | EP 702 w/ John R. Miles
Episode Date: December 12, 2025What if the only thing standing between you and the person you’re meant to become isn’t talent, time, or even confidence, but one small, uncomfortable decision you haven’t made yet?In t...his powerful solo episode, Episode 702 of Passion Struck, John R. Miles closes the Season of Becoming by distilling the single most consistent lesson from hundreds of world-class performers, Navy SEALs, near-death survivors, and everyday courage-builders:Courage is not a trait you’re born with. It’s a vote you cast every single day.Drawing directly from four transformative conversations this season (Susan Grau, Anne Libera, Brent Gleeson, and Henna Pryor), John reveals the Four Daily Decisions of Courage that anyone can make starting today:The courage to Listen when life breaks you openThe courage to Unscript and show up realThe courage to Commit and stop negotiating with your potentialThe courage to Practice awkwardness on purposeIf you’ve ever felt stuck waiting for confidence, clarity, or permission, this episode is your wake-up call. You’re not behind. You’re one courageous 10-second vote away.Listen. Reflect. Become.Check the full show notes here: https://passionstruck.com/courage-is-a-daily-choice/All links gathered here (books, Substack, YouTube, community):https://linktr.ee/John_R_MilesThe Season of Becoming Workbook: Your Next Courageous VoteReflection questions + the exact micro-action planner for the Four Daily Decisions→ Download the free Companion Workbook at https://www.theignitedlife.net/p/the-10-second-vote-build-courage-habitSupport the MovementEvery human deserves to feel seen, valued, and like they matter.Wear it. Live it. Show it.https://StartMattering.comDisclaimerThe Passion Struck podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. The views and opinions expressed are those of John R. Miles and do not necessarily reflect those of Passion Struck or its affiliates. This podcast is not a substitute for professional advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a licensed physician, therapist, or other qualified professional.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on Passionstruck,
what if I told you that the one thing standing between you and the person you want to become
is the lack of talent.
It's not a lack of time.
It's a lack of a single, small decision.
We're all waiting for permission, waiting for confidence,
waiting for a burst of courage to land on us like a gift.
But the truth is, the Navy SEALs I've interviewed,
the world-class innovators, the intuitive guides, they all agree, courage is not a personality
trait you possess. It's a daily choice you make. My friend Scott Simon, founder of Scare Your Soul
and guest on Episode 300, nailed it. Most people think courage is jumping out of airplanes
or quitting your job to move to Bali. But the truth, it's the microchallenges, the tiny, daily
aspects of courage that move the needle the most. In a world addicted to waiting, the ultimate
act of becoming is choosing bravery for the next 10 seconds. Welcome to Passionstruck. I'm your host
John Miles. This is the show where we explore the art of human flourishing and what it truly
means to live like it matters. Each week, I sit down with change makers, creators, scientists, and
everyday heroes to decode the human experience and uncover the tools that help
us lead with meaning, heal what hurts, and pursue the fullest expression of who we're
capable of becoming. Whether you're designing your future, developing as a leader, or seeking
deeper alignment in your life, this show is your invitation to grow with purpose and act with
intention. Because the secret to a life of deep purpose, connection, and impact is choosing
to live like you matter.
Welcome back, friends, to Passionstruck in episode 702.
Let me ask you something.
Have you ever stood at the edge of a decision that you knew would change everything and frozen?
That heartbeat before you hit send on the resignation email.
The five seconds of silence before you finally told your partner the truth, the moment you almost signed up for the class, the gym, therapy, and talked yourself out of it.
In that pause, a voice always shows up.
I'm not ready.
I don't have the confidence yet.
I'm not the courageous type.
We treat courage like it's a personality trait,
like some people are born with it, Navy SEALs,
TED Talk Rockstars, Hall of Fame quarterbacks,
that friend who quit their job and moved to Portugal.
And the rest of us are permanently on the waiting list for a bravery transplant.
But here's what this entire season of becoming has proven.
From Susan Grau's Near Death Awakening to Ann Libra's improv stage, from Brent Gleason's Seal Hell Week to Hannah Pryor's awkwardness gym.
Becoming your future self is not a lightning bolt moment.
It's a practice.
And that practice has exactly one currency, doing the uncomfortable thing today before you feel ready.
That's why this solo episode is called.
Why, courage is a daily choice, not a personality trait.
Over the next 20 minutes, I'm not going to try to motivate you with rah-rah stories.
I'm going to hand you the exact language, the simple structure, and the bite-sized microactions
that every high-performer I've ever interviewed uses to choose courage when it matters most.
Because the truth is this.
The leaders, the seals, the innovators, the astronauts, they don't have more courage than you.
They just decided it first.
And by the time this episode ends, you'll have everything you need to make the same decision today.
One quick thing before we dive in.
If this show has ever lit a fire under you or helped you take one meaningful step, pay it forward right now.
Hit share and send this episode to someone who needs to hear it.
And drop a quick five-star rating on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
It takes just 30 seconds, and it's how we keep reaching new people.
All right, deep breath. Let's cross the bridge from waiting to be coming. Thank you for choosing
Passion Struck and choosing me to be your hosting guide on your journey to creating an intentional
life. Now, let that journey begin.
I've interviewed hundreds of people who operate at the absolute edge of human performance.
Navy SEALs who kicked indoors while bullets fly.
CEOs who bet everything on one decision, artists who risk total public humiliation night after night,
and do you know what every single one of them has told me without exception?
They don't have courage like it's a fixed trait.
They vote for it every single day.
This is the core psychological bridge we must cross.
Courage isn't waiting for confidence to show up.
Courage isn't waiting for clarity.
Courage is acting first and confidence catches up later.
The second you wait for certainty, you've already lost the rep.
Real courage isn't the absence of fear.
It's choosing to be brave for the next 10 seconds.
That 10 second choice is a vote you cast for your future self
against the heavy, lazy gravity of who you are right now.
In our series this month on The Season of Becoming, four extraordinary guests showed us exactly what those votes look like in real life.
Not skydiving, medal of honor, quit your job and sell the world heroism, just four daily decisions that anyone can make.
Susan Grau voted to listen to the quiet voice of intuition when life broke her open.
And Libera voted to drop the script and show up unperformed, raw, and real.
Brent Gleason voted to stop negotiating with his own potential and hold the line in private.
And Hannah Pryor voted to step into awkwardness on purpose long before she felt confident.
That's it. The only difference between you and them, they kept voting for the uncomfortable option.
And it all starts with the very first vote, the courage to listen.
So we start today's exploration with Susan Grau, who taught us that sometimes life has to shatter you
before it will remake you.
As a little girl, Susan was accidentally locked inside an unplugged freezer.
She died in there, clinically, spiritually, completely.
Then she came back.
What she brought with her wasn't just survival.
It was a new operating system for courage.
The line that she told me from her experience that stopped me cold is this.
What I run from chases me.
What I try to control ends up controlling me.
That's the vote she keeps making.
every day. Stop running, stop gripping, and finally face the thing you're most afraid to feel.
When grief, loss, or betrayal rips the old version of you apart, you're left with two paths.
Numb it, distract it, control it, or get quiet and listen to whatever voice is trying to be
born in the wreckage. Susan says, real connection to yourself, to your purpose, only happens
and radical presence.
You can't hear your soul when your head is full of grocery lists, resentments, or tomorrow's
to-do list.
So here's the first daily vote of courage, the one that Susan casts again and again.
Pause, breathe, and ask one simple question.
I ask self, what would you have me do right now?
Then, shut up and listen.
That's it.
10 seconds of stillness instead of scrolling, 10 seconds of surrender instead of force.
That tiny act, choosing to listen when every instinct screams, fix it, fight it, or flee,
is the first brick in the foundation of your future self.
You see, courage isn't forcing a new outcome.
It's allowing the thing you can't control to become your teacher.
That's Susan's vote.
What's yours going to be today?
If Susan gave us the courage to listen, Anne Libera gave us the courage to show up without the mask,
and runs Comedy Studios at the Second City, the same stage that launched Tina Faye, Steve Carroll,
and half the people who've ever made you laugh until you cried.
And here's what she hammered home.
Improv isn't about being funny.
It's about being free.
The second you try to be funny, you're dead on the stage.
dead in life because you're no longer in the moment. You're performing an old script you wrote in your
head to impress people who probably aren't even watching. Anne's daily vote of courage is simple
and terrifying. Drop the script. Stop over-engineering your personality. Stop rehearsing the perfect
line. Stop polishing the version of you that you think will finally be enough. Instead,
Walk into the scene, any scene, and meet it exactly as it is.
Say the true thing.
Admit the awkward thing.
Risk looking a little lost, a little human.
That's the microaction Ann wants you to take today.
The next time you're in a meeting, a date, a family dinner, or even standing in line at coffee,
catch yourself performing, and do one unscripted micro edit.
Say the real feeling out loud.
ask the real question.
Let the silence sit instead of filling it with noise.
One honest beat instead of the rehearsed routine.
That tiny surrender, choosing discovery over control, presence over performance is the second
daily vote for your future self because the you who's trying to be impressive is the old
you.
The you who risk being real, that's the one who's just starting to become.
Now, before we keep going, let me hit pause here for a second.
Everything we're talking about today, listening like Susan, dropping the script like
Ann, it sounds great in a podcast, but it only becomes real when you actually do it.
That's why, for every single episode on Passion Struck, we build a free companion workbook,
packed with reflection questions, identity exercises, and the exact micro-currish challenges
we're walking through right now.
These aren't fluffy PDFs.
They're the real difference between
that was inspiring
and that podcast episode actually changed me.
Grab yours at the ignitedlife.net.
My substack, completely free
when you join the Ignited Life community.
Takes about a minute
and you'll get the workbook for this episode
and every episode delivered straight to you.
Now, a quick word from our sponsors
who make all of this possible.
Thank you for supporting them
because it lets us keep giving you everything for free.
You're listening to Passionstruck on the Passion Struck Network.
Okay, we've already cast two votes today. Susan's vote to listen when everything inside
you wants to run, hands vote to drop the script and risk being real. Now we go harder.
Navy SEAL, Brent Gleason, is about to challenge every single excuse you've ever made with your
potential. So if courage is a daily vote, Brent just walked in and raised the price of admission.
He's a former Navy SEAL who survived Buds, the cruelest proven ground on Earth, and then had to
survive coming home. His greatest act of leadership wasn't kicking in a door under fire. It was
the night he looked in the mirror, admitted he was drinking himself to death, and he was a
shows sobriety when no one was watching. That's Brent's daily vote. Stop negotiating with your own
potential. He says most of us already know exactly what we need to do. The gym membership is paid.
The conversation is overdue. The alarm is set for 5 a.m. But then every morning, we just sit
at the table and start bargaining with ourselves. Just one more snooze. You know, I deserve the
drink. It's been such a hard day. I'll start on Monday.
You see, the enemy is not a lack of knowledge, but a lack of commitment.
We know what to do, but we negotiate the terms.
I'll skip the gym today.
I'll start tomorrow.
That conversation can wait.
These tiny negotiations create a gap between who we are and who we know we're capable of becoming.
And that's why Brent's lens as a seal is so brutal and beautiful.
Comfort is a disease. Discipline is freedom. And the only thing standing between you and the life you want
is the standard that you're willing to hold when no one's clapping. So here's the third daily vote of
courage, the one Brent demands. Ask yourself right now, what standard am I honoring in private today?
Not when the world is watching, not when the camera's on, when it's just you and the choice.
Private standard is the blueprint for your entire public life.
No more deals, no more tomorrow.
Just one non-negotiable vote for the version of you that refuses to settle.
That's how a seal builds a life.
And that's how you build yours, one unrelenting private decision at a time.
Now, the fourth and final vote, the one most of us avoid like the plague.
Hannah Pryor walked on the show and exposed the quiet cowardice killing modern life.
We would literally rather scrub a stranger's toilet than ask a co-worker for five minutes of help.
30% of people admitted it in a survey.
30%.
Why?
Because we've convinced ourselves that needing help equals weakness.
That one vulnerable question will broadcast to the entire office.
I'm slow. I'm dumb. I don't belong here. Hena's answer is blunt and liberating. We're not weak. We're
just out of practice. Hybrid work, endless slack threads, and AirPods have atrophied our awkward
muscle. We've forgotten how to have a normal human moment, so we magnify it into a five-alarm
identity crisis. And here's the cruel psychological trip your brain plays, the spotlight effect. You
think everyone can see your racing heart, your flushed face, that neon sign flashing,
I'm nervous. They can't. They're too busy worrying about their own neon sign. Hennas'
fourth daily vote of courage is the simplest and the scariest. Feel the awkward and move
anyway. She gave us two game-changing moves. First, change one word. Stop saying, I'm awkward.
Say, I'm feeling awkward right now.
Feelings pass.
Identity sticks.
Language matters.
Second, she told us to treat awkwardness like the gym.
Confidence isn't the prerequisite.
It's the result.
You don't get strong by watching other people lift.
You get strong by picking up the damn weight.
So here's your rep for today.
Your one awkward set.
Send the message you've been drafting and deleting.
Ask the question you're afraid makes you look stupid.
Say hi to the person you always nod past and give the compliment you've been swallowing for weeks.
One rep, 10 seconds of discomfort, zero actual risk.
That single awkward action is the fourth vote that you can cast for your future self.
Because the version of you who's waiting to feel confidence first, they're going to be waiting a very long time.
The version of you who feels the flutter and hits send anyway, that's the one who becomes unstoppable.
Okay, my friends, let's bring this home.
We began by shattering a lie we've all been sold.
That courage is something a few rare people are born with.
We end by claiming the truth we can all live by.
Courage is something we choose.
One small, deliberate vote at a time.
Four gaps.
Four seasons of life.
Four daily decisions that have nothing to do with skydiving or quitting your job to sail the world
and everything to do with becoming the person you already know you're meant to be.
First, Susan taught us to listen when the old you is breaking open.
Second, Anne taught us to unscript and finally show up as the real you.
Third, Brent taught us to commit and stop cutting deals with your own potential.
And fourth, Hena taught us to practice awkwardness on purpose.
because that's where real confidence is forged.
That's the entire playbook for the season to be coming.
None of these votes require heroic willpower.
They're 10-second choices.
A breath, a text, a question, a stand you quietly honor.
If you're listening right now and there's a goal that keeps slipping,
a conversation you keep postponing, a version of you that feels just out of reach,
hear this.
You're not behind.
your one courageous vote away. Your past doesn't get the final say. Your fear doesn't get the
final say. Only today's choice does. So make it right now. Cast one small vote for the future self
who's been waiting patiently on the other side of this moment. That's how becoming actually
happens. One uncomfortable, beautiful, ordinary decision at a time. Thank you so much for joining us today
on Passionstruck.
As a reminder, you can head over
to the ignitedlife.net
and grab the free companion
workbook for this episode.
It'll walk you step by step
through choosing your next vote today.
Next week, I'm sitting down
with Boris McGuire and Ollie Raisin
of Saffirini leadership.
And this was such a fun conversation
because they both lead
a transformational leadership program
that's based in Kenya,
where they take executives
out of the boardroom and into the bush
walking side by side with Sambora Ellers to relearn belonging purpose and what leadership
looks like when connection is a survival skill. I think in the West we are obsessed with time,
right? And we're obsessed with who's first and who's the youngest. We can all name
entrepreneurs like Mark Zuckerberg who became billionaires at 19 or 20. There are many
successful entrepreneurs who build multi-million dollar businesses, but they don't achieve it
until they're 50 or 55, and that's just not interesting to us.
It's not sexy.
It's almost like we're over.
We fetishize this idea that speed is the most important thing.
And I think it speaks to the fact that in the West, we are destination driven, whereas the
Samburu, it's much more about the journey.
It's the life's path and how you get there is more important than where you end up.
Until next time, remember, this isn't about perfection.
it's not even about personality.
It's about recommitting again and again
to the person you know you're capable of being,
especially when no one else is watching.
I'm John Miles.
You've been passion struck.
