The Mindset Mentor - The Secret to Being Disciplined No One Talks About
Episode Date: February 6, 2026Why do you keep falling off even when you want to be disciplined? In this episode, I’m breaking down why discipline has nothing to do with willpower—and everything to do with identity. I’ll sho...w you why self-sabotage isn’t failure, why discipline is actually the highest form of self-love, and how your brain will always choose who you think you are over what you want to change. If discipline has always felt hard, heavy, or exhausting for you, this episode will completely change how you see it—and how you show up for yourself every day. Feeling stuck? It's time to take back control. If you're ready to master your mind and create real, lasting change, click the link below and start transforming your life today. 👉 http://coachwithrob.com The Mindset Mentor™ podcast is designed for anyone desiring motivation, direction, and focus in life. Past guests of The Mindset Mentor include Tony Robbins, Matthew McConaughey, Jay Shetty, Andrew Huberman, Lewis Howes, Gregg Braden, Rich Roll, and Dr. Steven Gundry. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Welcome to today's episode of The Mindset Mentor Podcast. I'm your host, Rob Dial. If you have not,
you done so, hit that subscribe button so you never miss another podcast episode. And if you're out there
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before, which allows us to grow and impact more life. So if you would do that, I would greatly
appreciate it. Today, I'm going to talk about the secret to be.
being disciplined that nobody really talks about. Because if discipline was just about willpower,
you would have already figured it out by now. Do you realize that? Like, you've already proven
at some point in time that you can force yourself, sometimes for weeks at a time. Like,
you can do workout streaks for a couple weeks, journaling streaks for a couple weeks.
You do meditation streaks. And yet you always fall off at some point in time. And so I want you
to realize that's not really failure. What it is is it is your brain, protect
a self-image of yourself that you've actually never questioned. And it's something that comes from
what was programmed into at childhood. And many people talk about discipline and how to do it and how to
just take action. But I guarantee you what I'm going to teach you today, you've never heard in the way
that I'm going to teach you. And it will completely change the way that you think about discipline and the
way that you go about creating the life that you want. And so let's dive into it. One of the things you
may have heard me say before on this podcast is that I believe discipline is that.
the highest form of self-love that is possible for you in your life. That is the reframe that I want you
to start to think of discipline through. Discipline is not about punishment. You're not forcing yourself
and punishing yourself to do something. Discipline is the highest form of self-love.
You only need discipline to do the things that are hard for you but are good for you. Like you don't
need discipline to just sit on your ass and scroll on your phone, do you? You don't need discipline
to avoid your life. You don't need discipline to avoid the hard conversations in your relationships.
You don't need discipline to sleep in. You don't need discipline to eat fast food instead of making
yourself a healthy meal. You only need discipline for the things that are good for you.
You need discipline to get up and move your body when you don't feel like it. You need
discipline to rest when your trauma tells you that you need to keep pushing and prove that you're
worth something. You only need discipline when you need to eat in ways that are best for
your body long term. You need discipline when you want to build a business so that you will have a
better life and your children will have a better life in the future. So discipline is self-love.
Discipline is saying, you know what? Like I care too much about myself to not do this. I care too
much about myself to not work out today. I care too much about myself to not eat healthy today.
I care too much about my future to not wake up when my alarm goes off. Discipline is saying I
care about myself. I care about my future. I'm not abandoning myself today because I've done it so much
in the past. Discipline is saying I care too much about myself. Do you get that? I care too much about
myself to waste my time on my phone. I care too much about myself to stay in this relationship.
Right. So self-love, we think of as like, oh, going in your hair done or taking a bath and throwing in a
bath bomb and lighting a candle. Sure, those can be self-love, but it's not just softness. It's follow
through. It's doing what you say you're going to do. Self-love is doing the thing that your old self-resists
because your higher self knows that it matters in your life. So discipline is how you keep promises
to yourself, even when the motivation disappears because guess what? It's going to disappear.
Caring for yourself now and in the long term will always beat motivation. Anyone can care for themselves
when it's easy though. But discipline is loving yourself when it's uncomfortable. It's saying I deserve
a better life, even if today's version of me doesn't feel like getting up and doing it. And so it's not
just control, it's care. I want you to really understand it's more about devotion to yourself.
So let's talk about, I just want to bring that in. That's not what I've, the key of today and the big
part I want to cover, but I want to bring that in just a reframe for the way I want you to think about
discipline. Let's talk about why most people fail when dealing with discipline. And the
reason why is because most people think it's about forcing yourself to do things you don't want to do.
And that's why discipline can feel miserable. It's literally saying, I don't want to do this,
but I'm going to do it. Right? Like that's hard to do. It's hard to force yourself every single day.
But the real reason why discipline fails in a long term is because the discipline, the thing that
you're trying to make yourself do, conflicts with the identity that you have of yourself.
If you see yourself as someone who struggles with consistency, then every habit feels heavy to you.
It will feel like a struggle because you are acting out of alignment with who you think you are in your head.
Oh, I'm just a lazy person.
Well, then getting up and taking action is actually out of alignment with who you think you are.
Oh, I'm just somebody who doesn't follow through.
Well, then following through over and over again for the next three weeks, four weeks, whatever it might be,
doesn't line up with who you think you are.
Oh, I'm just someone who doesn't think that I'm good enough, right?
So if you see yourself as not good enough, or I don't follow through, or if you see yourself as
lazy, discipline actually feels like self-betrayal. And so if you see yourself as someone who always
falls off, your brain will make sure that you eventually do. You're going to eventually crash the car.
Do you get it? So discipline, if it feels hard, if it feels out of alignment with how you view yourself,
it's not as much the habit or the action in the short term. That's the problem. The problem is the
self-image of yourself that you have. Your brain's main job is to protect who you think you are.
So if discipline threatens that identity of yourself, your brain will self-sabotage.
And that's why you can willpower yourself to do something like workout every single day or journal
every single day or meditate every single day. But eventually you fall off every single time.
Why? Because you are trying to stay unconsciously. You're trying to stay in alignment with who you think you are.
That's what self-sabotage really is.
And people are like, I always self-sabotage.
You've got to ask yourself, what is self-sabotage?
Like, what is self-sabotage actually?
Self-sabotage is your brain choosing identity over improvement.
So the moment that your habits start to feel challenging to who you think you are,
your brain creates resistance to pull you back into alignment with your identity.
You are who you think you are.
So you don't fall off.
because of necessarily lack of willpower, you fall off because consistency threatens your own self-image.
Do you get that? Like, I really, really want you to get this part. Self-sabotage is not self-destruction.
It's actually self-preservation, but it's self-preservation of the wrong identity, the identity
that's keeping you in the exact same position. And we will be right back. And now, back to the show.
So your brain would rather keep you the same than become somebody who's unfamiliar.
So self-sabotage is you falling off because taking the action consistently over time
threatens who you think you are.
And you've got to be able to change who you think you are and take different actions
in order to actually long-term continue to stay consistent.
And so your brain would rather, once again, keep you the same.
as long as it knows who you are, then become somebody who's unfamiliar.
And so the real trick here is to change your identity first, to think differently of yourself
because your identity is not true, it's not set in stone, it's not 100% factual, your identity
is just who you think you are.
But then you realize every person who's ever met you has a different identity of who they
think you are.
So then who the hell are you?
Whoever you decide, that's what it comes up to be.
So in order for you to truly lock in and get disciplined and take consistent action that is out of the ordinary for you, two things must happen.
Number one, you must consistently take different action.
You know that one.
And you can do it for a little while, but you always fall off.
And number two, you must change the identity of who you think you are.
You must change the identity of who you think you are.
Why?
Because as I just said, you will never act out of alignment.
with who you think you are long term. You can do it for a little while, but you will always,
always fall back to who you think you are. Always 100%. It might be in two weeks. It might be in two
months, but you'll fall back to who you think you are. The most disciplined people in the world
are not the most motivated people in the world. They're the most aligned people who they think
they are and the actions that they take are aligned. You know, so they don't ask like,
oh, do I want to do this? Do I feel like doing this? No, they think like, this is just something
that someone like me does. I take action. I follow through. I do what I need to do to change my life.
I am too important to let myself down. I am not that person who I used to be, right? That's how you
have to start to talk to yourself. You've got to start to change the way that you speak to yourself.
It's all about how you speak to yourself in your own head. You can try to take the right action, but if you're
constantly saying I'm not good enough, I don't follow through, I'm lazy, you'll eventually
self-destruct. And so stop trying to be disciplined and start proving a new identity of a
disciplined person to yourself. Do you see that? It's like everybody's trying to go,
discipline, take action, discipline, take action. When the real secret is like, you have to go around
the back door. And you do need to take the action, but you also kind of got to go around the back
door of it and be like, well, I've got to start to think about who I am differently. I think about
myself differently in the way that you speak and then also the way that you take action those are the
two parts that have to happen every time you say something like i need to be more disciplined
your brain hears i'm not a disciplined person because if you were a disciplined person you wouldn't
need to be a disciplined person so it's automatically saying i'm not that kind of person and so you just
have to understand that your brain hates acting out of character you've got to just say to yourself i am
disciplined from here on out i am committed to following things
through from now on. Therefore, your BS meter doesn't go off in your head. You know, if you sit there,
you say, I'm a disciplined person, but you've never been disciplined. There's a bullshit meter that goes
off your head. Oh, if you, I, I wake up early and you don't wake up early. You're like,
that's bullshit. Right. So, so therefore, you don't want your BS meter go off your head. So just say
something like, I am disciplined from here on out. I am committed to following through from now on.
Right. It's like, it's not talking about the past. It's talking about from this moment, forward,
who I'm going to be. And so this is how your brain actually learns your identity and who you are.
Your brain constantly updates its identity through repetition. Your brain is hearing what you say about
yourself, and that's updating your identity. And it's also seeing what you do in reality,
in your 3D plane that you live in, every single moment. So your brain updates through repetition.
it updates your identity through proof. It updates your identity through the actions you take.
It updates your identity through the things that it sees you do day and day out. Your brain does not
update through intention. It updates through what it sees and what it hears about itself.
This is why it really matters what you do and it matters what you say. Every small action
is a vote for that new self-image. So stop saying like, I'm trying to work out and start saying,
I'm somebody who doesn't give up on themselves.
That shift is believable.
That shift is actionable.
And that shift allows your brain to believe something
that's a little bit outside of what it's always believed.
Now, let's talk about how when you start to take action,
this little thing inside of your brain starts to be released
and it's a chemical called dopamine.
So your brain doesn't necessarily love discipline,
but it loves progress.
Brains love progress.
It's like Tony Robbins always says,
progress equals happiness. Everybody needs something that they're working towards in every step in the
right direction of that, your brain starts to get exciting and releases dopamine. And dopamine is
released during pursuit, not achievement. And so people think, oh, when I achieve this thing,
then I'll be happy. No, you'll actually be happy in the pursuit and you being able to see that
you're progressing in some sort of way. And this is why streaks like tracking works. This is why
checklist work. This is why taking an X and putting a the day where you, hey, today I ended up
taking the Asheny, you put an X today and you put an X tomorrow, you put it the next day.
These little streaks and tracking actually start to motivate you. They actually start to signal
to yourself that you're winning. They start to show that you're becoming the type of person
who takes action and follows through. They are, they're small bits of proof that show that your new
identity is becoming true. And it makes it much more believable for yourself. And so taking these
small actions and getting these tiny wins tells your brain, do this again. This is who we are now.
In one way that makes it more fun, turn discipline into a game. Like most people make discipline so
heavy. And they, if they screw up, they're so shitty to themselves. And they guilt themselves and they
shame themselves and they beat themselves up. And then they end up falling off course because they're just so
mean to themselves, they don't want to be mean to themselves anymore. And so you don't need to make
discipline so heavy or make it so serious or make it so all or nothing. Like your brain hates
pressure, but it loves play. And so games and making it fun and turning this discipline into a
fun thing for you removes this weight that you put on yourself in order to get it done. And so how can
you make taking the action that you need to to change your life more fun? How can you turn it into a game?
How can you treat, you know, consistency like points?
Not perfection, but being more consistent into points.
Like every time you show up, you earn a point.
You know, every time you walk into the gym, you earn a point for yourself.
You turn, you gamify this entire thing.
Regardless of how much you lift or how long you're there, you showed up at the gym, boom, you got a point.
You know, make rules of the game.
Hey, you know, I can screw up once, but I don't miss twice.
One miss day doesn't break the game.
two missed days might reset the entire streak.
Oh, you got to go back to zero.
And then make it more fun.
Like set a minimum to earn points that feels almost too easy
so that you can start to see the results.
Five minutes of movement, that counts as a workout.
Just to get yourself started.
Obviously, you know, if you really want to change your life,
five minutes isn't going to do much for it,
but you're just trying to stay consistent for a little while.
So five minutes of movement.
All right, I give myself a point.
one sentence counts as journaling, I give myself a point. One minutes of breathing with your eyes
close counts as meditation. I give myself a point. And so you start to track all this stuff and you track
the streaks instead of the outcomes. Now that's a little bit different for most people because
most people focus on the outcome. They need to have the outcome. The outcome's got to be what they want
to be. I want to track the streaks because action is what really matters, not the end result.
I know that action long enough will change your life.
And so that's the result that we want, the long-term result, not like the short-term results today.
If I just show up, no matter how big today was or how small today was, but if I just do it every single day or most days, if I fast forward a year or five years from today, I'm in a completely different place than I am right now.
So don't track like weight or the depth or the intensity or how long you did something for.
just track the days that you showed up.
Track the moments when you showed up for yourself.
And you can make it fun, like create a visible scorecard,
like a scoreboard for yourself.
You know, you can do the check marks,
so the X marks on a calendar so that therefore you can start to track your progress.
And you start to turn, you know,
you can turn your habits and the actions you need to take into challenges.
Like, I'm going to just do seven days of showing up every single day.
That's it.
I don't need you to, you know, maybe don't worry about the next six days.
I'm going to wake up at 5 a.m. every day for the next seven days.
That's not a huge lift. You could probably do that. I'm going to do 30 days of not missing twice at the gym.
Once again, reward consistency, not the results, right? Keep the game light. Have fun with it. Don't be such an ass to yourself.
Like the moment it feels heavy and you're like, oh God, this is starting to get too much. Lower the bar. Make it more fun. If it feels too rigid, add some flexibility to it. Make it fun. Stop being so hard on yourself all the time. Consistency beats intensity every time.
Consistency rewires your identity in the long term.
When you stop beating yourself up so much, the resistance towards it will disappear.
And when resistance disappears, that's when habits really start to stick.
And so I really want you to get into your head and really start to reframe.
Discipline is not about forcing behavior.
It's about becoming somebody new.
You don't rise to the level of motivation that you have.
You fall to the level of your identity.
So the real question is not how do I get more disciplined?
The real question is, who am I proving myself to be today?
And every small action is enough.
One small action after another stacked on top of each other for years will change your life.
And every small action is proof of who you are becoming.
And that's how discipline stops feeling so hard and like so much effort.
And how discipline starts to feel like acting in alignment with who you truly are.
So that's what I got for you for today's episode.
If you love this episode, please share it on Instagram stories.
Tag me at Rob Dial Jr.
R-O-B-D-I-L-J-R.
And if you want to learn more about coaching with me, outside of this podcast, go to coach with rob.com.
Once again, coach with rob.com.
And with that, I'm going to leave you the same way.
Leave you every single episode.
Make it your mission to make somebody else's day better.
I appreciate you.
And I hope that you have an amazing day.
