What if the spirit of self-sabotage isn't weakness at all, but a quiet strategy to make sure a loss never truly feels yours?
Alice is joined by Steve Magness — performance scientist, coach to Olympians and military teams, and the high-school phenom who ran a 4:01 mile, chased Roger Bannister's ghost, and never broke four. In his book, Win the Inside Game, he speaks about choking under pressure in sports and why talented people freeze the moment an audience shows up. But what makes Steve fascinating isn't the elite résumé — it's the self-sabotaging psychology underneath: we don't fear failure so much as being seen as failing, and so we self-sabotage to soften the blow before it lands.
Steve's reframe: choking is rarely a skills problem, it's an ego defence — which is self-sabotaging explained in a single move. The student who "didn't really study," the runner who "wasn't really training" — both are pre-building excuses, so a loss never feels fully theirs. That's why self-sabotaging behaviours show up exactly when stakes rise. His antidote is to treat the brain like a muscle: step into the arena on purpose, start small, and rig a friendly audience so your alarm system turns down a notch instead of screaming 'run'. The deeper argument is about who's standing around you, and how that quiets the spirit of self-sabotage.
Drawing on toddler-persistence research, the boot-and-nail case, and studies of coaches on the sideline, Steve shows how a calm, believing audience rewires what your brain reads as danger — part of why choking happens at all. He ties this to "the problem of modernity" — we've swapped deep local communities for shallow global connection, candy instead of fruits and vegetables, and lost the support that used to help us get back on the horse. Whether you've been hiding behind a half-effort or you're trying to build something in public, this is a sharp, science-backed reframe of what rejection is for.
In this episode they explore: • Choking as self-protection — why "I didn't even study" is an excuse built before the test
• The gym model for courage: start small, never max out the bar on day one
• The boot-and-nail case and a predictive brain that manufactures pain that isn't there
• Interoception and anxiety — why some people read every twinge as a five-alarm threat
• The "problem of modernity": intimate strangers and the community we traded away
• The "healer in chief" — why the alpha chimp consoles rather than dominates
• The Pygmalion study: fake potential scores that became real test gains
• Leading people back from a loss without breaking them
• Adam Smith warning his own invention about hyper-individualism
• Treating life as a quest — why Steve won't write "Do Hard Things 2"Connect with Steve:
Instagram: @stevemagness
Substack: SteveMagness
Newsletter: https://thegrowthequationnewsletter.substack.com/
Books: https://www.stevemagness.com/books/
Chapters:
02:05 Choking as self-rejection
05:31 Treat your brain like a muscle
07:30 Rig a small, friendly audience
09:32 The quest mindset
11:43 The predictive brain and the boot-and-nail illusion
16:55 Interoception, anxiety, and sitting with the signal
23:19 The problem of modernity
28:0 The healer-in-chief
33:31 "I believe in you" and the Pygmalion study
37:13 Leading after a loss
41:42 Adam Smith's warning
46:03 The 4:01 mile that taught Steve outcomes never satisfy
51:45 Crippled by success, and why he won't write the sequel
56:45 Where to find Steve