The Mel Robbins Podcast - A Powerful Mindset Makes You Unstoppable: How to Train Your Mind & Unlock Your Full Potential
Episode Date: June 2, 2025Today, you’ll learn how to control your mind and train it for extraordinary performance. By the end of this episode, you’ll know the exact mental training techniques used by world-class athletes,... Olympians, and elite performers to overcome fear, build resilience, and unlock the next level of your potential. Mel’s guest today is renowned performance and mindset coach Steve Magness, who has coached Olympians, Division 1 athletic teams, and organizations at the highest level of performance. Today, Steve is breaking down the science of mental toughness — and teaching you how to apply it in your own life starting now. You’ll learn how to: Rewire your mind to silence self-doubtPerform under pressureTrain your focus like an elite athleteStop overthinking and take confident actionBuild real mental resilience (without burnout)Hack your mindset and unlock your personal power This is your roadmap to extraordinary performance — grounded in science and designed to help you rise above whatever is holding you back. Because when you change your mindset, you change the game. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode, you’ll love listening to this one next: How to Stop Negative Thoughts & Reset Your Mind for Positive ThinkingConnect with Mel: Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Wouldn't you just love to have a powerful mindset that makes you unstoppable and finally
get that roadmap to success that you deserve?
Well, today you're getting it because Coach Steve Magnus, who is one of the top performance
and mindset coaches in the world, I'm talking a guy who has coached elite athletes, Olympians,
D1, professional athletes, he is here in our Boston studios for one reason, to coach you
and to teach you the exact same mental techniques that he has been using in the most elite settings
that are rooted in courage,
purpose, and excellence, and you're getting it all today for free.
You're going to learn how to train your mind just like the world's top performers do.
Because when you change your mindset, you change the game.
So what does that look like?
Well, after the conversation today, you're going to know how to rise above any challenge,
become mentally tougher and more resilient and able to easily handle any challenge that
life throws your way or with the people that you love.
And this is absolutely a conversation that you are going to want to share with everybody
that you care about, every athlete, every student, every person in your life that has
bigger goals and a bigger possibility.
They need to hear this because whether you're an entrepreneur, bigger goals and a bigger possibility, they need to hear this.
Because whether you're an entrepreneur, a parent,
a shift worker, a nurse, teacher,
work in a desk job, or you're a student,
what you're about to learn today
will transform every area of your life
and unlock your next level of potential.
See, when Steve first started coaching elite runners,
he noticed something fascinating.
It wasn't just their talent,
it wasn't just their fitness level,
it was the way they trained their minds
that set them apart.
His mental techniques have propelled
some of the best athletes in the world
to extraordinary success,
even when they were filled with doubt,
uncertainty, and a string of losses.
Today, he's teaching you how to hack your mind
and achieve anything you want.
So are you ready to be coached?
Because Coach Magnus is ready to coach you,
and he's here, so let's do this.
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so excited for the conversation today.
I am thrilled to be learning from Coach Steve Magnus.
I'm going to tell you about him in just a minute.
And look, it's always an honor to be able to spend time and be together with you.
And if you're a new listener, I wanna take a moment and personally welcome you
to the Mel Robbins Podcast family.
I am so glad that you're here.
And because you hit play on this particular episode,
here's what I already know about you.
You understand the power of your mindset
and how your mind could help you unlock
the next level of your potential.
And you're also here because you know
that when you win the mental game,
you win the game of life.
And one more thing, if somebody sent this episode to you,
here's what I want to tell you about that.
I think that's pretty cool,
because it means you have people in your life
that care about you,
and they know you could be unstoppable.
You could reach higher possibilities
if you take to heart
everything that our expert today is about to share with you.
See, in our studios today,
we have a really extraordinary thing that's about to happen.
You and I are about to be coached by one of the world's
top experts in mindset.
His name, Coach Steve Magnus.
Steve has coached Olympians, professional athletes,
D1 athletes, and some of the world's top performers. He's an elite runner himself,
a Division I college coach, and you're also going to hear the riveting story of how he turned
whistleblower at one of the most elite Nike training camps, an experience that forever changed his life and his perspective on
what mental toughness actually means. Coach Steve has spent years helping the most elite runners in
the world increase their athletic performance under pressure. He's also the co-founder of the
Growth Equation, where he and his team teach the science, art, and practice of sustainable peak
performance through groundbreaking research and interactive courses.
Their work has been used by Ironman world champions, heart and lung transplant surgeons,
world-class coaches across every single major sports league, award-winning creatives, and
leaders at some of the world's most respected brands.
He's written five bestselling books, including his latest, Win the Inside Game, How to Move from Surviving to Thriving.
And here's what I love most about Coach Steve.
Yes, he's coached Olympic athletes through the mental
and emotional pressure of competing in the biggest arenas
at the highest stakes.
But you want to know what makes him truly different?
It's how real, relatable, and accessible his tools,
techniques, and strategies will be to you, to your life, and your goals. He is here, and he's got the cutting edge different. It's how real, relatable and accessible his tools, techniques and
strategies will be to you, to your life and your goals. He is here and he's got
the cutting-edge science, compelling research and real-world experience on
the track, in the classroom and in the game of life. Because the fact is, when you
know how to win the mental game, you win the entire game of life. So without
further ado, please help me welcome
Coach Steve Magnus to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Coach, I am so glad you're here
and I also feel like I owe your wife a huge thanks
because I know you got two kids under the age of two
and she said it was cool for you to jump on a plane,
fly across country and be here with us.
A huge shout out to your wife, Hillary.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for being here.
Thanks so much for having me.
I'm excited to be here.
I'm thrilled that you're here.
So I want to read to you from your bestselling book,
Do Hard Things, When the Inside Game,
How to Move from Surviving to Thriving
and Free Yourself Up to Perform.
And I'm reading this passage that really caught my attention
on page 28.
We all get stuck. We don't reach our capabilities. We get in our own way. We
feel trapped, like we can't take the action that deep down we know we should.
This book is about freeing yourself up from whatever is preventing you from
going on the journey to realizing your potential. It's allowing yourself to be courageous.
For me, the journey started with realizing
that everything I'd been taught about success was wrong.
Steve, could you speak to the person
who has made the time to be with us right now,
who is so excited to learn how to win the inside game from you.
Can you tell them what they might experience in their life that could be different based
on everything that you're about to share with us today?
The lesson that really astonished me in working with elite performers, first athletes, and
then across the board is that all of us get in our own way.
And all of us are capable of more,
but we let fear, anxiety, self-doubt,
that voice in our head tell us,
hey, let's avoid this thing, let's stop doing this thing.
And what I promise you today is I might not be able to fix all of your problems, but I'm
going to give you the tools to lighten the load, to be able to navigate that inner voice,
to be able to switch stress from seeing it always as a threat, but as something that
can challenge you and propel you forward,
and how to work with your brain and body instead of fighting against it endlessly.
Coach, I believe you.
I'm ready.
I'm so glad that you're here.
The book is called Win the Inside Game.
What does winning the inside game mean exactly, and why is it so important to know how to
do this?
I think let's start with the opposite,
which is the external.
Okay.
And I think the external is this,
is when we tie our identity to our achievements.
In fact, there was a meta-analysis, a study of studies,
including 70,000 people,
that shows that when we prioritize and emphasize the external more than the internal,
it is, and I quote, universally detrimental to our well-being.
So the inside game is opposite of that.
It's having clarity in who you are, why you're pursuing something.
It's understanding that you get to define what success means.
It means that instead of just fitting in, you find deep, genuine connection and belonging
to those who you're going on this journey with.
And when we find that, when we go towards that, what happens is instead of insecurity
driving the ship, we feel secure enough to take risks, to take on challenges, to see again what we're capable of
and, you know, do the things that we want to pursue.
You know, I think I just got something out of that.
So, I think we make the mistake of looking at people
that achieve things on the outside and believe that it's
those achievements that are what make them good risk-takers
and make them able to
go after these things that we in our hearts wish we would do for ourselves.
But what you're actually saying is based on all of your experience coaching elite athletes,
Olympians, studying this mindset, toughness, and being a coach for it in highly competitive settings.
You're saying based on that and all the research,
it's actually the opposite.
It's those people that have learned how to win
this inside game and who are secure in themselves
who are actually able to take more risks.
Is that right?
Absolutely, I'll give you a story.
Okay, give me a story.
So Sarah Hall is one of America's top marathoners.
Okay.
She's one of the best in the world.
And she reached that level later in her career than normally, in her late 30s, early 40s,
is when she had her breakthrough.
And I got to work with Sarah for a number of years.
And what I learned from her is the race she had, her ultimate breakthrough,
where she set the American record in the half marathon.
So fastest half marathon in American history for a woman.
And leading up into that race, she had this,
I'm gonna set this record.
I'm paying attention to the outcome.
I'm going with the external thing.
And about a month or two before the race, she said,
you know what, this is getting in the way.
I need to leave this behind. And to quote her, she said, it is stealing my peace.
And instead, what I'm going to focus on is I'm going to focus on the feeling.
And she defined the feeling is I want to get in that race, be surrounded by a bunch of other women,
not be threatened by them, but realize that we're all bringing out the best
in each of us.
And if I put myself in that spot and I enjoy that,
great things are gonna happen.
And to me, like that's what it is.
You're seeing one of the best in the world
telling you that the way that you set the record
isn't to obsess over the record, but to let go just
enough and focus on that internal feeling and sensation and that security knowing that
you can take that risk.
And if you fail, it's not going to be the end of the world because you got to feel that
experience.
You got to go through that journey.
You know what I hear in that story that is so helpful, and I think we can all relate
to that, whether we're like, okay,
I gotta get into that nursing school,
or I've gotta meet the person by the time I turn 30,
or I gotta be making this kind of money,
like that external thing.
When she made the switch,
what I heard was actually the switch from pressure
and performance to a sense of faith
that if you put yourself in the right environment
and you tap into the energy of what it's gonna feel like
to trust yourself there in that experience,
that the rest of it takes care of itself
and a lot of that pressure that I would imagine
can cause you to choke and get up into your head and kind of do things that you don't realize impact
how you perform. But your ability to relax in and have faith in just being in the experience
is what helps you win.
It is. I mean, that's the essence of what we call flow in sports psychology, which is that feeling
of like everything clicks.
You cannot pressure your way into flow.
If you feel exceedingly amounts of pressure, you can't get in that state.
So ironically, sometimes we try too hard in that trying that wanting the thing is what
is preventing us from actually getting that goal
because we're trying to force it.
I had a really good track coach who was a mentor
who was the track coach of Carl Lewis.
And he told me one day, he said,
"'Steve, most people have the wrong concept of effort.
They think effort means digging down,
trying harder and forcing yourself.' And he said, trying harder, and forcing yourself.
And he said, no, no, effort is like Carl.
And what he meant by that is,
if you watch Carl Lewis Sprint or Usain Bolt,
they are going all out,
but their cheeks are bouncing up and down.
Sometimes they're smiling a little bit.
They're relaxed doing it because real effort is quiet. It's how do we get the most out of ourselves, well being calm and relaxed doing it because real effort is quiet.
It's how do we get the most out of ourselves,
well-being, calm, and relaxed doing it.
And it's that kind of like paradox
where we think we want to try and dig,
but whenever we do that, it backfires.
It's probably the same if I sat down to write.
If I said, hey, I need to write this wonderful paragraph
that's gonna shock everyone and get them latched on
to what I'm talking about,
that paragraph isn't gonna be good, right?
I've gotta put myself in that position on the chair
and say, hey, I've done the research.
I'm a pretty good writer.
Trust myself to figure it out.
Completely.
You know, it also, all of that pressure
for a lot of people also results in procrastinating
and getting so obsessed with how it's gonna turn out
that you don't actually even do the damn thing.
And I think that's a very interesting thing
for us to talk about because, you know,
ultimately you create mental toughness
in the athletes that you are coaching and in
the companies that you go into and work with.
How do you define mental toughness and what do you think some of the common misconceptions
around mental toughness is?
So you mentioned that I have two under two.
So our-
What's two under?
Oh, two kids under two.
Two kids under two. So our- What's two under, oh, two kids under two. Two kids under two. Okay. So my almost two-year-old has hit the stage
where she's throwing tantrums.
And my wife is also an elementary school teacher,
so she's an expert on kids throwing tantrums.
And if we look at why do kids throw tantrums,
here's what occurs.
Two-year-old maybe sees something that she wants,
mom and dad say, no, no, no,
she doesn't quite grasp the concept of no.
She wants it, she sees it.
She gets frustrated or angry or mad.
And because those emotions and feelings are overwhelming
and kind of foreign for a two-year-old, right?
She goes into like freak out mode,
which eventually runs at course and then she shuts down.
Toughness is navigating that freak out.
We experience the same thing as adults,
except it has more layers.
So we feel discomfort or stress or anxiety or fatigue
or whatever it is, that emotion and that feeling.
And then we bring in the layer
of our voice tends to go with it.
So our voice starts to get negative and spiral
and think about, oh, I can't do this. of our voice tends to go with it. So our voice starts to get negative and spiral
and think about, oh, I can't do this.
If I don't win this race or finish this or get this job,
I'm gonna be embarrassed.
We just spiral out of control.
And what happens is your brain gets the message.
It says, hey, we've got overwhelming emotions.
We've got a negative voice that is spiraling.
How do we escape this situation? And our brain doesn spiraling, how do we escape this situation?
And our brain doesn't go, how do we get the best result out of this situation?
Right.
It says, how do we get out of this right now?
The quickest moment possible.
If I'm running a race, the quickest thing is just slow down or stop.
If I'm trying to finish my, you know, dissertation or nursing exam or whatever, and the quickest thing is procrastinate,
like leave this, don't come back to it
because that'll leave you in the moment.
And what real toughness to me is navigating,
how do we understand our inner world and those emotions
so that they don't overwhelm us?
How do we stop that spiral or that rock rolling
down the hill and gaining momentum? How do we stop that spiral or that rock rolling down the hill and gaining momentum?
How do we stop it early enough so that we can do something about it?
And I think the misconceptions around toughness is that our kind of old school model tells us only one path,
which is that grid it out, like fight the thing, and often don't pay attention to your emotions or feelings, like ignore them.
Well, sometimes that works, generally on easy stuff.
On hard things where it actually matters, it backfires.
Because if I try and avoid the thing,
if I try and resist the thing,
we have a saying, what we resist persists.
How do we learn to listen to our body better?
How do we change our self-talk? How do we change our focus to our body better? How do we change our self-talk?
How do we change our focus to get us out of these spirals and navigate these situations?
I think I get it, but just so I make sure that the person who's here with us understands
how mental toughness is an important thing in their day-to-day life.
How does having mental toughness help you navigate a job search or a breakup or, you know,
we use the example of, you know, your wife's a teacher
and you've had a really, really tough week
with the kids at school.
How does mental toughness help you
in just your day-to-day life?
Yeah, we'll start with the teacher one
because I see this all the time.
Okay.
Teachers have one of the hardest jobs and it's sometimes a thinkless job,
but they do an amazing job.
So I love supporting my teachers out there.
Here's what happens.
Teaching is hard.
You get home, you're overwhelmed.
And the tendency is to be like, okay, I'm so overwhelmed
and I'm just shutting down and I can't do anything else.
Mental toughness is realizing that like,
you're still gonna have to show up the next day
and because you care about your job and the kids,
like show up and teach them to the best of your ability.
How do you get over that or get through that overwhelm
and get yourself back in that position?
So for a teacher, it could be something as simple as
what is my get home, shut down and reset routine
that allows me to kind of deal with that stress,
take it off and say, okay, just for a couple hours,
I'm gonna get myself in a place where I rejuvenate
and then can get a good night's sleep
and then tackle the job again tomorrow with, I think you said job search.
I think there is, it's handling rejections.
It's because that feels personal.
Yeah.
Right?
You apply for the job, you do everything that you can to put yourself in the best position.
And someone essentially says, you're not good enough or we don't want you. And in that moment,
that can hit deep. And toughness is realizing and figuring out how do I
create the space between that almost failure
in my identity and who I am. To be able to say,
I get it, that person didn't select me, but that doesn't mean that
I'm not worthy as a human being and that I'm not capable of doing this job. They just didn't
see it. How do I get back on the horse?
How do you do that with, like, let's say since you coach such elite athletes, you've got
an athlete, and this is kind of part of your story too, which we're going to get into that just misses
the Olympic team or just misses the world record intellectually coach.
I get it.
Like I got to have a little bit of space for the rejection and the pain of coming just
so close.
But then there's that mental toughness skill
that is your expertise.
What are some of the things that you would say
to an athlete that you're coaching in those moments
that feel similar to a job rejection, right?
Same psychological thing.
Same thing.
Yeah.
So here I take them through a process.
As first, you can't deny that it hurts.
You have to accept and sit with it and live with it
and realize that this thing you cared about,
you fell short in.
And that sucks.
There's no getting around it.
There's no faking it.
It just sucks.
So that's number one.
Number two is you've gotta get your brain and body
out of what I call stress and protect mode.
Okay.
Where you're feeling all of these stress hormones,
which pushes your brain to be like, protect myself,
you know, avoid the thing, shut down,
which is our acute response to failure.
And you've got to get it into,
how do I almost get into like a learning and growing mode?
And the best way to do this
is simply socializing with friends.
Really?
When we're around other people,
there's research that shows
that when you're socializing with other people,
you produce a hormone called oxytocin.
Okay.
It's like a bonding hormone.
It's what's actually produced when, you know,
women have babies to help them bond with the child.
Same thing occurs for us in adults.
And what research tells us is it counteracts
the kind of negative stress hormones
that make us feel like worthless or alone
or whatever have you after stress.
So the best thing you can do is,
with athletes I always tell them,
after the game, if you lose,
guess what, go have pizza with your friends.
Like go eat.
And what that does is it shifts you out of that mindset.
And then the last part of this process
is you gotta build yourself up.
You gotta give yourself evidence that you are worthy.
And here I like to do it in two different ways.
One, I like to have people have what I call an evidence journal.
Which is write down things where you went through something tough and came out on the other side.
Coach, I'm picking up on the fact that your evidence journal is also part of the training.
It's sort of like the reps in a gym.
So can you just tick off a couple examples of some of the little things
that people start to write down as evidence, right, that they've survived other setbacks that the
person listening might be able to relate to? So some of the things I like to do is like look at
how consistent were you when you, you know, were preparing for this? Did you get your five days
a week of training and people can look back and say, I did it.
I did the training plan.
I showed up.
Did you prioritize yourself?
Did you, the day before the job interview,
did you get the sleep in that you wanted to
to prepare for the thing?
You were looking for how do I give myself the evidence
that I gave myself the best shot that I could.
And the other thing that I like to do is look through past kind of experiences and moments
where it's like, hey, I came through this thing.
And the reason is pretty simple is our brain often has a negativity bias where we just
latch onto and remember the times that it didn't go well.
Why?
Because they sting. Like we remember the things that sting more.
We forget all the times where it's like,
hey, we showed up for practice when it was raining.
You know, we showed up for the job
even when we were tired the night before
and we still got it done.
Those things just go out the window.
So we've got to give our brain that information
that reminds us like, hey, I've been here before.
I've gone through some tough things,
like you are capable of this and more.
I think that's really important
because I can say one of the things
that I have to chronically work on
is making sure that my relentless drive, right?
To do better, to be more efficient,
to have more fun in the way that we're working,
to make a bigger impact doesn't negate all of the amazing things
that are actually going well.
Can you give me an example of working
with one of your athletes where their attitude
or negativity was really starting
to impact their performance?
This is very common, even at the elite level.
Because often you think like, oh, these people have bulletproof minds.
Yes.
Right? It's not true.
What do you mean it's not true?
How do you get to the Olympics, Steve, and not have a bulletproof mind?
Here's what I learned. I used to think that.
I used to think, oh, there's something different about them.
But what you realize is the same problems that I'll literally talk about with a high school
kid navigating the SAT and basketball team tryouts are the same thing that I'll talk about with
someone who's made the Olympic team and trying to show up to the Olympics. You're kidding me.
No, it's because it's a human problem. What do you mean by it's a human problem? So the kid who's trying to make the basketball team and do well on the SATs and the person
who's just made the Olympic team achieved a dream and now is getting ready to compete
in the Olympics, they're both facing the same psychological problem?
Our human stress response, which makes us see the negative, to think that we're not
good enough, to think that we're going good enough, to think that we're gonna be overwhelmed
and freak out on the starting line
and not be able to show up how we wanna show up.
What you're basically talking about
is self-doubt and choking.
Yeah, this is why choking happens to the best of the best.
This is why Simone Biles got the twisties,
because it's not anything
to do with her being weak or anything. She's the total opposite of that. Amazing. But our
biology is wired the same. And although the arena might be different, our brain doesn't
know the difference between what feels like a lot of pressure when we're at the high school gymnasium
versus the Olympic stadium where we see hundreds of thousands of people. It's still pressure and we
still feel it the same way. It's not like it's proportional to the amount of people who are
viewing us. This makes so much sense. Coach, it's so cool what you do for a living because it does make sense to me
that if you're going in for an interview
for a job that you're really interested in,
of course you're gonna feel pressure
because you wanna do well, that's human nature.
If you're going in for an interview and for high school
to talk to the coach, hoping that the coach
is gonna wanna recruit you for
their team. It's an interview that you care about. It's the exact same psychological setup.
It's just that the place and the space is different, but you're feeling the same thing.
It's about the scale of it based on your experience. And that, I think, is why mental toughness
is everything. What do you do in those moments when it matters
or when your emotions rise up?
Because what you're also saying is
it's not just a mental game, it's also a physical one.
And in fact, there's something that you write about
in your book that I wanted to just read to you
because we're on the topic of mental toughness.
So you write about this very interesting thing in your book, Win the Inside Game, and this is on page 123. In the 1960s,
scientists noted an interesting phenomenon when animals were pitted against one another in a lab.
From rats to chicks to fish, when they were competing for resources, the contest results
shifted the animals' subsequent behavior. The winner became more aggressive, attacking whatever opponent stepped into the cage next.
The losers hesitated.
They retreated and defended, hoping to avoid conflict.
The behaviors translated into consistent outcomes.
The winners kept winning at an alarming rate, and the losers kept a streak of their own.
See, what was interesting about reading this
is that you basically are starting to make the case, Steve,
that it's not just your thoughts,
but with the emotions and then the way that your thoughts
start to spiral, there is a biology.
There's something physical and probably neurochemical
happening in your body that winners learn
that they have to fight to gain resources
and losers come up with a different strategy.
You might think that winners keep winning simply because they're better fighters, but
research found that relative skill didn't explain the winning and losing streaks.
It's about what changes in the animal's biology when they either win or lose.
Can you talk more about this?
This is some of the most fascinating research I've come across, and it's called the winner
and loser effect. And what happens is we change our stress response based on the outcome of the event or even more so our expectation of the event. What I mean
by that is after you win you tend to get a bump in testosterone and this has been
found in both men and women. You get a bump in testosterone and that
increase in testosterone makes you think hey I'm gonna be more confident coming
into this next thing. I can take on this challenge.
And what tends to happen is next time you step
into the arena, your brain goes,
hey, remember last time we got that bump in testosterone,
let's do that again.
So we're more likely to approach whatever it is
we're taking with more challenge, more testosterone.
And we have what psychologists call a challenge response.
If on the flip side, is if you lose,
and then especially if you do win that loss,
you think it is like overwhelming,
this is the end of the world, my life is over,
I'm never gonna be able to do this thing again,
you have more cortisol.
And what your brain learns is it says,
hey, this place really sucks.
So next time we face something similar,
before you even step into the arena,
your brain defaults to producing more cortisol
to try and convince you to avoid
the situation you're getting in.
Okay, so hold on, let me just unpack this.
Because I think this is so important.
In real life, not that athletics is not real life,
if you've just been broken up with,
and then you're about to put yourself back out there.
This is an example where cortisol might spike
and you might feel the uh-oh if you've been laid off.
And you're now starting to go for interviews.
It might be an uh-oh, right?
If you didn't get into your dream school
and now you're reapplying again,
your body is wired because of the sting of that didn't get into your dream school. And now you're reapplying again.
Your body is wired because of the sting of that
to actually feel that hesitation and protection.
Am I getting this right?
Absolutely, spot on.
And what do you wanna say to those of us,
to the person listening who is either feeling this way now
or who has somebody in their life who now has this
hesitation or feels defeated or is starting to really lose their edge. What do you want us to
know coach about these moments in our life and what to do about it? Two things. One is we can influence this to a large degree based on our expectations.
What?
So what research tells us is if we set the expectations, which are based on, essentially
our brain goes, what are the demands that we're facing and what are we capable of?
What are the demands that we're facing and what are we capable of? Okay, what are the demands that we're facing and what are we capable of?
So if you're sitting there and you're saying, I got broken up with, I'm putting myself back
in the arena, I'm going on the date, the demands are, I'm going to have to talk to someone
who I don't know very well and open up and put myself out there.
Now your capabilities, because last time it didn't go very well, your brain
goes like, I don't know if you're capable of this. I don't know. So what do you have
to do in that situation? You have two options. You can say, okay, I'm going to set the expectations
and sometimes lower them a little bit. Say, hey, this is my first date. I'm not trying
to set the world on fire. I'm just going to put myself out there and go talk to them.
Lower those expectations.
Okay, so that's step nine.
So one thing you can do is lower,
I don't have to get this job.
I don't have to.
Okay, gotcha.
I can just go and the fact that I'm getting out there,
that's a win.
Yes.
Okay, so lower expectations, step one.
And the second part is improving
that your capabilities side.
Okay.
Which is in athletics, what do we do? We train.
You practice.
You practice.
In life, you can do the same thing, right?
If you are struggling and afraid of going on that first date,
go call up a friend and say,
hey, we're going to practice some conversations together.
I'm going to talk about myself.
We're going to role play this.
And it sounds a little silly,
but what it does is your brain goes,
okay, I've been here before.
If you're keep being afraid of that job interview,
then you wanna go do some mock job interviews.
And the good thing is this,
is when you control the environment, right?
And you're doing with friends or family
or someone who doesn't entice that fear around you, then your brain doesn't automatically
default and you can train that.
I love that. So I think I would, I would even say, I bet there's something else coach that
you do with the people that you coach is it's actually very helpful to know that it is a hardwired response
and a sign that your brain is working as it should.
That if I'm about to try something that I'm nervous about
or the stakes are high or that I really sucked at
or got screwed over or hurt by,
that it's normal to have your cortisol spike and it's normal to
feel that hesitation but I got options. So the hesitation now doesn't scare me
because I should expect to be nervous and then you just taught me just lower
your expectations I don't have to kill this thing I just have to like I'm just
gonna put myself out there and then the second thing is kind of obvious but we
avoid it if we're stressed out, which is just practice.
This feels like the perfect moment to take a quick pause, let everything that you have
poured into us just really set in.
I want to also give you a chance to share this with people that you care about.
If you've got a high school athlete, you've got somebody that wants to do better at work,
you've got somebody that needs to strengthen the mental game, because what do we learn
in when you change your mindset, you change the game.
Share this episode with them.
We all need a little Coach Steve in our life,
and don't go anywhere because after this short break,
we've got a lot more to cover, more tools, more tips.
We're going to continue to win the inside games.
So stay with me.
Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
I'm so thrilled you're here.
Thank you for sharing this with people that you care about.
You and I are learning how to win the inside game and get mentally tough with Coach Steve
Magnus.
You have such a fascinating career and and we're gonna get into it,
but you've transitioned from a, my opinion,
world-class athlete to an Olympic coach,
to a best-selling author of not one, not two,
but literally five books,
to now being a sought-after and world-renowned
elite performance and mindset coach,
both with elite
athletes, with some of the world's leading brands.
How has your personal journey and the twists and turns of your career and the people that
you have been coaching shaped your understanding of mental toughness and how to build it?
I think I've had a diversity of experiences that you outlined,
which has made me realize that my early on view of toughness,
which was only through sport, was kind of wrong.
Meaning, I grew up in the like, you know, no pain, no gain, like just push and
that's what I thought. And the other thing that really I think was an aha moment, which
was during my, I think my first book is I got to interview a guy named Matt Billingsley,
who is a world-class drummer, who is now the drummer for Taylor Swift.
And it was one of my first big interviews where I'm like,
this is awesome, let's go.
And I'm like, just tell me about what it's like
to be on stage with, you know, 100,000 screaming people
and you doing your thing.
And he starts walking me through how he's preparing.
And as I'm listening to this,
all I'm thinking in my mind is like,
this is how I would mentally prepare for a race.
What was he saying?
Well, the thing that struck me is he said,
I don't really drum much before the concert.
Said I already know how to drum.
What I'm doing is, first I'm getting my body loose.
I'm going through all these like, you know, stretching and things to get my body feeling good. And then I'm getting
my mind right, which is like just rehearsing the beginning of a couple of different songs
so that I can get in that groove in the state of performance that I need to get in. And
he walked me through all that. And I said, I said, this is the same kind of stuff
that I do for a race.
And what it made me realize is that performance is performance.
So, performance is performance means the thing that you have to do
is the thing that you have to do,
whether it's an interview or a date or a presentation or work
or stepping onto a track and running in the state championship.
That's the thing you have to do.
But the thing that comes before it, what is that, Coach?
It's setting up your environment well.
Okay.
So what that means is like you prime yourself to perform.
This is why athletes put on their special race day shoes,
they put on their jersey.
Matt had the drumsticks that he used for concert times.
He's got everything lined up
where this is what it's gonna be.
I put myself in the environment
that's going to invite the action that I wanna take.
It's setting your mindset, right?
What am I trying to do? Am I seeing this as an want to take. It's setting your mindset right. What am I trying to do?
Am I seeing this as an opportunity to take on or is this thing that is causing this overwhelming
anxiety or feeling like a threat? And I think what I realized, it's not just from Matt's story,
but also others, is it's the same stuff. As I said, my wife's a teacher. Early in her career, she was a world-class runner.
She represented the US at a half-marathon
world championships.
No big deal, you know.
No.
You two are gonna have really fast kids, you know that?
Don't put the pressure on our two-year-old now.
I'm sorry.
But what I realized is that, again,
when she got into teaching, she takes the same mindset.
She's like, I want to be great at this.
And what you realize is like, okay, what does that take?
Consistently showing up, putting in the training, being prepared for the next day and priming yourself.
Okay, how am I going to get into the mindset where I am, like enthusiastic and energetic,
because kindergartners, guess what?
You gotta keep their attention.
And you can't do that by just walking in the door
and being like, okay, I'm here,
like let's talk about our colors in ABCs or what have you.
You've gotta think about the tactics
that you're going to use.
You know what I love about what you're saying, Coach, is that I think we get so obsessed
about the performance or the thing that we have to do at work or the thing that we have
to do at school or the way that it's going to turn out or the result that we don't take
the time to think about the environment or the steps leading up to the thing that actually
allow you to step on the field of life
and do the thing.
Who do you wanna be?
Who do you wanna show off as?
Like that's it.
Is that what you ask the people you coach?
Who do you wanna be?
Absolutely.
Who do you, because here's the thing is,
and this is something else that people often don't get,
is if you look at some of the elite performers
is that who they are on game day when they step out on the field is a little bit different
than who they are at home.
How so?
So I'll give the example of Aaron Judge, the baseball player for the Yankees is he puts
it like this is on the field.
I want to be 99, which is his number.
99, and I'm paraphrasing, is aggressive,
he plays hard, he wants to win.
When I take that jersey off, I'm no longer 99, I'm Aaron.
You know, Aaron gets along with his family.
He doesn't need to be hyper competitive at everything.
He can let things go.
But you see that all the time with athletes
because what happens is like,
we all have kind of different states we can get into.
Even just that invitation coach, who do you want to be?
It's a way that you can snap yourself
into a moment of intentionality to basically,
who do I want to be in the interview?
Who do I want to be today at work? Who do I want to be today at work?
Who do I want to be when I show up at that parent-teacher conference?
And by asking yourself that, I would imagine that's part of the mental toughness because
you're cueing your mind, right, to start to think about these things.
You're spot on.
Who do you want to be in this situation?
And I think too often we don't put the thought and care to align ourselves with that action.
When you were in high school,
you as a elite runner came extremely close
to breaking the four minute mile,
which is a goal that you had had forever.
And the fact that you missed it by a second
haunted you on one hand, but that failure also has fueled your life's work. What did not reaching
that goal teach you about life and how you coach other people when it comes to mindset and performance.
At that time, I think in the history of the US, only five high schoolers had broken the four minute
barrier. So it's something that basically never happened. And I came to shy. And I still can picture
it to this day. There's four laps around the track. Every lap needs to be under a minute.
So you're literally watching the clock
and you're seeing it and you're like, I'm still under,
I'm still under, I'm still under.
And going into that last hundred meters,
I can see that clock and realizing, oh no,
I'm gonna be right at it or just shy.
And then I remember crossing that line.
There's like 30 seconds before the results come
out. I'm staring at the results board and then I see myself four minutes and one second. And it's
just devastating because you see this thing that is your goal. It was literally written on the wall
of my high school bedroom where this is the thing that I'm going to do that is going to define
myself. I didn't care about anything else in high school. Nothing. is the thing that I'm going to do that is going to define
myself.
I didn't care about anything else in high school.
Nothing.
Parents couldn't get me to care about anything except running.
And I fell short.
And for a while, I think that got to me.
I couldn't do it.
I put everything into it and found out that I wasn't good enough.
Everything I learned about performance came as a result of being like,
okay, let's analyze this.
Let's figure out how do we get on the other side of feeling this ultimate failure
and making it into something worthwhile and good.
And that's where my search for understanding the mental side of sport came from.
If I didn't let go and pull the other way just enough, I wasn't going to be able to
fulfill my potential because every race was going to feel like life or death and it did.
We all have our four minute miles.
We all have those things where we create that story in our head where it's like, oh, this is what I care about
deeply. This is what I'm obsessed with. And we can't because we care about it. We think
that if we just let go a little bit that that means, oh, that means I'm weak. That means
I'm not all in. That means that I'm not actually striving for that. But what it actually means is it allows that inner game
to flourish because our brain goes like,
okay, yeah, yeah, like the four minute mile matters.
Like getting that job, selling this many books,
whatever, it matters, like let's be real,
but it can't be the only thing.
We've got to have something else
pulling in the other direction.
I absolutely love this. Cause you also say that the inner game is not about like checking boxes.
That it's the process of chasing goals.
And why does tying the achievement or landing that job or getting into that medical school or being married by this date
or having that car that you drive.
Why does those things on the outside
actually end up screwing you over?
What happens is when we tie our identity
to that external pursuit,
it makes us fragile instead of resilient.
Because our brain goes,
if I don't get this goal, then it literally is life or death.
I am not worth anything.
We don't perform best in that situation.
We need to take a little bit of the pressure off.
We need to have that robustness where you realize that I am secure in who I am.
In win or lose, it might sting, but I'm still who I am.
I'm still surrounded by those who love and support me.
They're still gonna be here.
And that's where we perform best at
because we get to take those risks instead of feeling like,
oh gosh, here it is.
I'm gonna fall short again.
Brain freaks out.
I just love listening to you.
And I want to take a quick pause so that we can hear a word from our amazing sponsors.
And I also want to give you a chance to share Coach Magnus's incredible wisdom with the
people that you care about.
Every one of us needs to know how to win the inside game.
And that's exactly what we're doing today.
And don't go anywhere because after this short break, Coach and I, we're going to be the inside game. And that's exactly what we're doing today. And don't go anywhere because after this short break,
coach and I, we're gonna be waiting for you.
I mean, we got a lot of ground to cover
and we're gonna do that when we return.
Stay with us.
Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
I am so glad you're here today because you
and I are getting coaching from one of the most respected and renowned mindset coaches
on the planet. I'm talking about Coach Steve Magnus. We're learning about how we win the
inside game. You know, there's super fascinating research in your book that I think is really important to read right now
because I was really surprised by this and it goes to this point because again
I think it's super counterintuitive to think okay the world's top top top top
top performers whether it's in business who you're coaching or it is the world's
like most elite athletes.
They're maniacally focused, they're 1000% disciplined.
It's hustle, hustle, hustle.
They're focused on the Super Bowl.
They're focused on this thing.
The research actually shows the opposite.
And I'm reading from Win the Inside Game, page 90.
This is research that you write about
for Michigan State University.
I was blown away with this,
that they looked at over 100 years
of Nobel Prize winning scientists.
And it turned out that what these
Nobel Prize winning scientists did in their downtime
away from the lab may have proved vital.
The distinguished scientists, check this out,
were 22 times more likely to perform, sing or act, 12 times more likely to perform, sing, or act, 12 times more likely
to pursue creative writing, and about seven times more likely to participate in crafts
like sculpting, painting, or glassblowing, whereas their less accomplished peers were
more likely to be entirely focused on their scientific research.
And so this research basically, you know,
as you write in your book, is like that going all in
and attaching who you are to one achievement
or to the fact that you're the chief resident
or you're married to so-and-so or you drive this car,
this singular focus actually hinders us.
It does.
And it runs counter to just about everything we're told.
Completely.
Just go all in, be obsessed, only care about this thing.
And the research, as you said, on Nobel winning scientists shows it's different.
There's research on entrepreneurs that the ones who are more likely to actually succeed don't quit their day job early on. There's research on athletes that show that
they generally, those who make it to the top of the top, are more diversified in both their sports
early on and then their later interests. Because what it does is it makes us resilient.
Because if we fail at the one thing
and that's all that matters,
comes back to that our brain and the alarm.
We produce a ton of cortisol.
Your brain says, I'm losing.
My identity is at stake.
Like shut down.
If we have other things in our life that we care about,
that give us something else to think about,
give us other pursuit to kind of do interesting things on,
then even though the law stings,
you still have that resilience in your life.
And that's-
It's sort of like being like a stool.
So instead of being on a unicycle,
you have three wheels, a tricycle, various things that
give you grounding and foundation in your life.
You know, in your experience, coach, especially with Olympic athletes, elite performers, what
habits do mentally tough people tend to have?
What you see is they prioritize consistency over intensity, meaning they don't just shoot
for like the magic day
where everything aligns.
They're like, hey, I've got to figure out how to show up
day after day, even on the bad days, right?
Even on the days when things aren't going well,
where maybe we don't get the full workout in,
but we get something in because they know
that if they stack enough solid days after days,
then that is what leads to greatness. In fact, way back when I was a college coach, I tracked this.
I tracked how many times did people show up to practice in workouts and how many times did they
miss them. And then I ran a correlation between improvement and who showed up.
And guess what?
Strong correlation.
The people who showed up in didn't miss days performed better.
In fact, the person who showed up the most during that period was this young lady who
came in and I kid you not, her freshman year in a race of a hundred plus people,
I think she was 99th out of like 101.
By her senior year, she was qualified for the first round
of the national championships.
Wow, huge jump.
And if you looked at the data,
out of everybody on the team throughout that period,
she missed the least amount of practice.
She missed the least amount of workouts.
I mean, it's incredible.
Yeah.
And that is what mental toughness creates,
is the ability to meet those moments
and process what happened and learn from it, right?
And step back on the track and grow.
And so much of it is the story
that we tell ourselves in our head,
because we get locked in these negative stories that again define us as I'm not good at this thing.
And if you talk to, again, elite performers, could be athletes, whoever it is, what you
realize is they start to tell themselves stories that are about growth and agency, meaning
taking control of the situation, what can I do about it, versus stories that are
kind of push us down and where we can't do things about it,
where there is no path forward.
So it's all about figuring out how to tell yourself
that story.
It's such great advice.
And as a coach, you're already using their name
and talking to them that way.
But we can do that to ourselves by using, hey Mel, you can handle using their name and talking to them that way. But we can do that to ourselves
by using, hey Mel, you can handle this. Hey Mel, shake it off. What are some of the things that
you would say just reflexively to one of your athletes if you're trying to boost a shift in
their mindset? So number one is I tend to give them an action. Okay. Actions work better. Okay.
So instead of telling someone,
hey Mel, you need to relax.
Like in the history of the world,
I don't think telling someone to relax has ever worked.
Yep.
So instead I say, hey Mel, shake out your arms.
Get a little loose.
And what happens is your body goes like,
okay, I'm going to let go some of this tension.
Therefore, I'm going to relax.
Action is number one.
Number two is what do they need to be focused on?
Because generally what happens is stress,
either we narrowly focus on the negative,
see all the bad things, or our brain goes scattershot
and it's all over the freaking place.
So what we have to do is say, okay, what matters?
I'm gonna focus on that.
There's research on this.
If you're a field goal kicker and you're feeling pressure and your mind's all over the place,
what you literally do is say, focus on that spot right there, stare at it and kick it
there.
And that will help you perform.
And we can do that.
And our other aspects of life, which is like, give it a narrow goal or narrow thing to latch onto and tell
yourself to focus on that.
In the third person.
In the third person.
Mel, just focus on the next right move.
Mel, just focus on the phone call you need to make.
We'll worry about that other thing later.
Bingo.
Wow.
So coach, how do you train yourself to handle like hard tasks?
Like, you know, you find yourself not that motivated.
You got something that you need to do.
Can you train yourself?
I mean, you're an elite runner, so I'm sure you can push through just about anything.
But for the rest of us mere mortals who are having trouble getting up the stairs without feeling winded.
Like, how do you hack this?
Like, let's say you're somebody who's,
all right, a goal is I really want to get my finances under control. I need to create a
budget. I need to cut some expenses. I need to get serious about what I want to save. Like,
it's time for me to stop jerking around about this. Okay? So that's your goal. But then you go,
I don't want to face my horrible spending habits.
I don't want to look at the fact that I literally have no savings.
So how does it work in this scenario?
Start with the smallest step forward where you can make progress.
Okay.
So in this example, it might be take the thing that is staring you in the face
that you spend money on that
you know you shouldn't and just focus first on that. Maybe it's every morning
you go get your special foam latte at Starbucks and you say this is what I
need to this spending habit is I know I shouldn't do it every day so I need to
fix this. That's it. Narrow win on that one. And you, minimum viable
progress. So maybe it's instead of every day I say, I'm going to, you know what, next week
I'm going to go two days a week. And that's what I'm going to allow myself to do. And
what happens is you make progress and you get these small wins. And small wins give
us a bump in this like feel good hormones that say,
hey, look, Steve, you're making progress.
And if we can stack enough small wins, then that allows us to take the next step in the next big thing.
And that's all it is.
It sounds almost ridiculously simple, but what prevents us from taking on the hard things is we only see the hard things.
Right? Again, I love running, so too many running examples, but if someone who had never
run came up to me and said, hey, I want to go to a marathon, I wouldn't say, great, we're
going to tackle a marathon. I'd be like, no, no, we're going to go on walks. And then when
you get to your street, I want you to jog the street home.
Because all you're trying to do is say,
simple, small progress.
And if you can stack that day after day,
that is what creates that mental muscle
and gives your brain evidence of like,
okay, I've made progress.
And it stokes that motivational fire.
So coach makes perfect sense.
And you and I both know,
that the second you even do the small thing,
that you're going to face discomfort.
And even if we just keep it in the lane of personal changes,
whether somebody just heard you say walk,
and they're like, you know,
I do need to start to take better care of myself.
I do need to move my body more consistently.
And that's a goal of mine
to really make that a priority. And so you can break it down and say, okay, I'm going
to go for a walk after a week of that I'm going to jog back down my block to my house.
But you're going to face tremendous discomfort, because you've never done it before. And you
say that discomfort is an opportunity to train your mental muscle.
If we want to train discomfort or train toughness,
we've got to do the very small things that make us realize that,
hey, this discomfort is just a signal.
And sometimes that signal is like accurate, meaning we've got,
you know, you sprain your ankle and you need to listen to that discomfort, right?
It's a pain signal that's like, fix this,
get off of your foot, like take care of it.
So here's a non-athletic example.
We all are kind of addicted to our phones.
Yes.
Okay.
And what happens is, I bet you the listener
have experienced this, is that you feel in your pocket your phone vibrate,
and you're like, oh, there's that buzz,
and you reach for your phone, you pick it up,
and there's no notification.
It's called phantom vibration.
It occurs in about 90% of us.
Huh, wait, literally the phone didn't vibrate?
Yeah.
You're kidding me. Yeah. 90% of people phone didn't vibrate? Yeah. You're kidding me.
Yeah.
90% of people experience a phantom vibration?
Depending on the research, but yes, about 90% of people feel it.
And the reason is because your brain is saying like,
hey, here's this thing you give a lot of attention to.
And like you feel good when it buzzes and beeps and you get a notification.
So we're essentially like almost mistakenly going to predict that because that's what
we're locked onto.
Okay.
Now, if I take that phone away, what happens is you probably feel a little bit of discomfort.
Oh, yeah.
You get fidgety.
You're like, where is the thing?
You're worried.
You start thinking that something might be wrong with somebody and what if they can't
reach me and what am I missing and I'm going to get trouble at work and where did the thing, you're worried, you start thinking that something might be wrong with somebody and what if they can't reach me and what am I missing and I'm going to get trouble at
work and where did the thing go and oh my god.
Your brain catastrophizes.
Yeah.
Your brain, your inner voice goes crazy.
I experienced it, we all experienced it.
Okay.
Okay.
If we wanted to turn down that alarm, what would we do?
We'd take our phone for a small bit and we'd say, okay, I'm gonna for an hour,
I'm gonna leave it in the other room. And at first, what would happen? Your brain would
go crazy. I'm spiraling out of control. What if someone's getting at me? But if you left
it for that hour, at some point, your brain would let go and say, you know what? I'm going
to see it at an hour. the world isn't gonna end.
And if, and that right there is training,
toughness for discomfort.
You know what I love about this example is,
I think that at this point in time,
every single one of us has a very
conflicted relationship with our phone.
Every single one of us wishes we spent less time on it.
We all know intellectually we should and we've also been told a million times that we
should create boundaries. But none of that actually changes behavior. And what
I really like about your invitation here, Coach, is that you're framing this as an opportunity
to train mental toughness in yourself
and being tough enough mentally
to not allow distraction, emotion, craving, anxiety,
whatever it is that's gonna rise up no matter what,
to derail you from staying focused and present
or just performing and doing what you need to do.
What kind of person do you want to be?
And I don't want to be a person that's beholden to my phone.
I don't want the phone to have more power over me
than I have over myself.
And it's a powerful thing to build inside yourself
this ability to not be rattled by something outside of you.
And that's what you're actually talking about.
You're actually training your presence
and your mental toughness in a way that helps you
not only for dealing with your phone,
but everything else in life.
You also talk about how listening to your body
is a form of mental strength,
rather than a sign of weakness.
What is one like mental drill or a tool that the
person listening can implement this week to start building this mental toughness and real resilience?
I think the most powerful thing you can do to develop mental resilience is time spent alone in your head.
When we make our inner world seem foreign, when we make our inner world seem like a threat,
like it's distant from who we are, then our brain reacts accordingly.
And it says, oh my gosh, I'm alone in my head.
Because being alone with your thoughts is kind of foreign and threatening.
If you're listening to this podcast, I'm going to tell you, pick something.
Doesn't matter what it is.
Pick something where phone's at the side.
It's just you alone with your thoughts for a short period of time.
Because that's how you navigate things.
And in fact, the late, great Kobe Bryant put this brilliantly
when he was talking about youth basketball practices.
He had his daughter's youth basketball practice.
Someone was yelling at their kid to what to think about
and what to do from the sideline.
And Bryant said, I told that what to do from the sideline.
And Bryant said, I told that parent, this is the key moment.
Your kid is learning how to be alone with their head and negotiate in their head.
That's where we learn how to be tough.
You don't want them to focus on external things.
You the parent screaming at them because chances are they're not going to listen to you in
the game.
They need to learn this skill.
So doesn't matter if it's sport or life,
figure out something where it's you alone in your head
and give yourself just a little bit of time and space
and that'll create toughness.
You know, we've talked a lot about not only how
maniacally focusing on outer success and achievement
and all the things that we chase can backfire on you.
And you've given us tool after tool after tool
and all the research on how we can not only win
the inside game, but we can build the skill
of mental toughness.
And there was a time in your life
where all of the things that you were chasing on the outside
just blew up in your face. And I would love for you to take us back to what was
probably one of the hardest moments of your entire life. You were 26 years old,
you had your dream job, and absolutely everything just flipped on its head.
Can you just describe what the job was and what happened?
I got the job for what was then called the Nike Oregon Project,
which was essentially Nike sponsored an elite track and field team,
where literally the goal was to win Olympic championships.
And you land this at 26, you're one of the coaches?
I was the assistant coach, 26, the youngest professional coach in the sport, fresh out
of graduate school.
I thought I had hit the freaking lottery.
And I was told, I was like, you know what? This goes well.
You're going to be, this program is going to be yours.
You're going to lead these professional athletes.
And let me tell you, in running, this is really rare because there's only a handful of professional
teams that do this at this level.
And it was with the premier sporting goods company
in the world.
And I thought I had my dream job.
I told everyone I had my dream job.
My parents were like, oh, thank God.
We are set.
Steve is killing it.
And then months into it, I started to see things
that raised some red flags.
I started to see things that raise some red flags. Or I started to see some documents that suggested from the sports scientists at Nike that suggested
like there was some cheating going on, some nefarious things going on that didn't fit
the rules of the sport. And at first, I remember calling my parents
in the stairwell at Nike and saying,
hey, I just saw this document
that mentioned testosterone medication,
which is a banned substance in sport.
And they're like, oh no.
And at first you rationalize it because you're like,
this is where I want to be, this is it.
But eventually what happened is it just gnawed at me.
And going back to asking that question,
who do you wanna be?
I have a clear view of how I see myself
in terms of ethics and morals and what I want out of sport,
especially sport like running,
where no one gets in it to become a millionaire.
You get in it for the love of the competition itself,
to try and make that Olympic dream that you have as a kid.
And I came face to face where I had a decision,
where do I keep going and keep my quote unquote dream job,
or do I stick to my ethics and morals and values and quit and essentially blow the whistle?
You know, it's interesting as you write about this moment, because as you started to tell people
and you write about this moment in the stairwell, that you risked your career and your livelihood and you ignored advice from friends
and lawyers and even a prominent judge who told you at this time.
It may be the right thing to blow the whistle on this, but whistleblowers seldom come out
on top.
You're risking your career before it even gets started.
And you go on to write, after all, I was at my dream job.
I was the heir apparent to the
best-funded professional track team in the country, one with a future Olympic champion and medalist.
It was everything I ever wanted professionally. The advice family members kept repeating was,
can you just stick it out through the Olympics? I was there for a year and a half before I'd had enough.
We like our story simple.
The hero who overcomes adversity,
the woman who values are hard earned and firmly held
who prevails against all odds.
We think of ourselves in similar ways,
crafting a personal narrative
where we are the hero of the story.
We even have a psychological immune system,
a protective mechanism to thwart negative self-evaluations.
We want to think of ourselves as good, moral, decent people.
We shove away the messiness.
As you read this story, you probably believe you would have done the right thing immediately if thrust into that same position.
What happened?
Like, how long were you wrestling with what to do?
Months.
I mean, it took me months at first to decide to quit.
And then once I left, it took me months to actually blow the whistle and tell somebody.
There was this deep inner feeling, this gnawing away,
that just kept occurring where I was like,
gosh, I can't live with this feeling.
This isn't who I am.
And then more so, I'd see other people
who were like me, young,
and probably were sitting there thinking,
I got the dream job and we're headed out there.
And I couldn't help myself but thinking, oh my gosh,
they have no idea what they're getting into.
They have no idea what decisions they're going to face or what the environment is like.
And those feelings were what eventually pushed me to say,
okay, what can I live with? Like who do I can, who do I want to be?
Do I want my values to be slogans or do I want them to be things that I can look
at and say, deep down, this is this, they mean something. And eventually what
happened again, I didn't even tell anybody this. I just said, you know what?
I'm going to do it.
I'm going to blow the whistle.
I wrote a long email to US Anti-Doping, who was a regulatory body, and said, here's everything
I know.
Let's talk.
Let's start that process.
And it was the most scared I'd ever been in my life.
What was it like to hit send on that?
It was just this experience where you're like, I kind of know what I'm getting
into, but I have no idea.
And my life is about to turn upside down and I'm going to lose a little bit of
control over my life because this other thing is going to potentially dominate.
And again, I'm some shy introvert who just wants to,
you know, coach some people, help people perform well,
and then go home and like, you know,
sit at home and read a good book.
And I was like, I'm about, that's not going to be possible.
And it wasn't. I have reporters who came to my house and stalked it to follow me at work.
I had the FBI show up as I was backing out of the garage of my house and knock on the car window
and show me some badges like I'm in the movie. And it was just stuff that I was like, I couldn't even imagine, but you just, there was no other
possibility except I had to figure out how to navigate it.
What happened?
The head coach and the head doctor of the program were banned, had a ban from the sport. And positive change came out of it
where people A, understood,
and then I think some increased safety and guards
to make sure that that didn't happen in the future occurred.
But it took 10 years to go from hitting send
on that email essentially,
to when the final appeal happened
because like there were lawyers
and all sorts of things and evidence and
I had to turn over my computer and phone and have everyone go through everything I'd ever written.
It was the most trying, more than any experience I had in sport or life.
Like it pushed me to the max of how do I keep my sanity and not lose who I am and not let that kind of
negativity spiral take over because there are absolutely points where I'm like, I don't,
I've lost control of my life.
What did it teach you?
If you would have outlined everything that I would have had to go through before
I hit send on that email, I would have said no way in hell because it was tough. But it
taught me that like we're always capable of more. And the other thing that I think it
really brought home is that two things is that we get to write our own story.
So even though it felt like I've lost control of my life,
I was in charge.
I got to say, you know what, whatever,
who cares what the external world sees?
What matters to me?
How am I judging myself on this?
How am I defining my life based on this?
How do I want to integrate this experience
into the story I'm telling about myself?
And the last thing, and I think most important thing is,
is that I realized that toughness is not
the stoic individual pursuit that we often portray it as.
It is not the individual hero in the movie.
It takes a village and it takes support.
And if you don't have loved ones and the support
and the friends who are gonna say,
you know what Steve, I see you're struggling.
I'm here for you.
Whatever that means.
I get those texts, I get those calls.
And sometimes I take them up on it.
And sometimes just seeing that text reminds you like,
okay, I'm not alone.
I've got people in my corner.
And I think that's what it is,
is that when we talk about doing tough things,
is maybe the answer is we talked about a lot of tools
and tips, but it's making sure that you have genuine people
who love and support you surrounding
you. Because if you do, like they're going to be the people who allow you to handle the
challenges and who are there when you can't use any of the tips and tricks. You just need
a shoulder literally to cry on or a hug to support you to make you realize that like, it's going to be okay.
Life will work out. What are your parting words?
My parting words for you, the listener is that you can do this. You've got this. You're capable
of more. And that capability doesn't mean doing something heroic.
It just means taking the next small step
towards the challenge that you want to embrace.
That's what it is, is consistency over intensity.
And if you can take that small step,
then you're gonna build the momentum to change,
you know, who you are and what your pursuit is.
Coach Steve Magnus, you absolutely showed up
and just dusted this thing.
I mean, in the rankings of podcast interviews,
I would say you broke the four minute mile.
Thank you.
I try to do the best that I can and show up who I am
and help people in how I can.
Well, I appreciate how you got into that chair.
And it was very clear that you asked yourself the question,
who do I wanna be?
And you put on the coach and I'm gonna speak power
into the person that's listening and you delivered.
Thank you, thank you, thank you. And I also want to thank you. Thank you for taking the time to
listen to something that will absolutely improve your life. Like this is a life-changing conversation.
I'm so thrilled you are listening and watching all the way to the end. Thank you for sharing
this with everybody in your life that you care about, because we all need to know how to win the inside game.
And I am so blown away by what we learned today.
I can't wait to see how it changes your life,
because I know that it's going to.
And in case no one else tells you,
I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you.
I love you for listening and watching this.
I believe in you.
I believe in your ability to create a better life
and you got a roadmap and tools today, so go use them.
Alrighty, I'll see you in the next episode.
I'll be waiting for you the moment you hit play.
Let me find this.
You're doing great.
You're so good.
Thank you.
You're welcome, killing it.
She represented the US at a half marathon world championships.
No big deal.
You know.
You two are going to have really fast kids.
You know that?
Don't put the pressure on our two year old now.
I'm sorry.
So will you just explain first, second and third because I always mix those up.
Yeah, I do too.
And I'm a writer.
So we're both writers.
This is bad.
You were incredible.
Thank you.
Thank you. You better get ready for a lot more podcast interviews because...
That was fun.
Wow.
You guys make it so easy though.
Awesome.
Good job, everybody.
All right.
Now I can watch videos.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician,
professional coach, psychotherapist
or other qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
Sticher.