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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Mark Manson returns for his third appearance on The Rich Roll Podcast with a fishbowl format, diving straight into practical advice for New Year's resolutions and life change. The conversation explores why most January goals fail, the difference between vanity goals and values-aligned objectives, and how procrastination is really emotional avoidance in disguise. (03:21) Manson and Roll tackle complex topics like positive thinking, manifestation, and the trap of people-pleasing through an unstructured Q&A format.
Mark Manson is the bestselling author of "The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck" and host of the "Solved" podcast, where he conducts deep-dive explorations into specific psychological topics for 4-5 hours each episode. Known as the "anti-guru" in the self-improvement space, Manson has built his reputation on providing no-bullshit advice that challenges conventional wisdom about positivity and personal development.
Rich Roll is the host of The Rich Roll Podcast for over 13 years and author of several books including "Finding Ultra." A former alcoholic who transformed his life in middle age, Roll brings personal experience with addiction recovery and multiple life transformations to discussions about change and self-improvement.
Instead of orienting purely around positive outcomes, identify what struggles you actually enjoy having. (17:24) Manson emphasizes finding "something that you are willing or even happy to suffer for." This reframes goal-setting from chasing rewards to understanding what costs you're genuinely willing to pay. He uses his own example of leaving music school because he couldn't enjoy practicing 10-12 hours daily like the students who would succeed, while discovering he naturally enjoyed the "struggle" of writing and rewriting paragraphs multiple times.
Research shows procrastination is fundamentally about avoiding uncomfortable emotions like anxiety, shame, or perfectionism, not organizational issues. (56:57) The most effective solution is the "minimum viable action" - shrinking intimidating tasks to their smallest possible size to reduce emotional resistance. Rather than trying to write a perfect chapter, commit to writing one paragraph. This gets you in the chair and creates momentum without triggering the emotional avoidance response.
Chronic people-pleasers have difficulty answering "What are you willing to be disliked for?" (70:25) This reveals the core issue: they've outsourced their sense of self-worth to external validation. The solution isn't to stop pleasing everyone cold turkey, but to find something meaningful enough to fill that identity void. Roll adds that many people-pleasers never developed authentic self-connection because they learned early to adapt their behavior to meet others' expectations.
When people consistently abandon goals near completion, it's often because solving the problem would eliminate a piece of their identity. (74:51) The "having" of a problem can become central to how someone sees themselves. Additionally, there's sometimes a hidden psychological payoff - feeling righteous about being wronged by others, maintaining control in relationships, or avoiding the fear of not deserving good things. Understanding what need the current behavior meets is essential before attempting change.
While pain isn't required for change, it often creates the willingness needed to overcome fear of the unknown. (102:01) Willingness is described as something that "visits you" rather than something you can manufacture through decision-making. You can't make yourself willing to change, just as you can't make others willing. This explains why people can intellectually understand what they need to do but remain unable to act until circumstances create enough discomfort to spark genuine willingness.