Convenience Is Costing You More Than You Think Podcast Por  arte de portada

Convenience Is Costing You More Than You Think

Convenience Is Costing You More Than You Think

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The most expensive thing in your life isn't what you're paying for — it's what convenience is costing you.

I don't walk the golf course often. But when I do, something shifts.

You start seeing things you completely miss from the cart. The landscape. The slope. What your next shot actually requires. And your score gets better — not because you worked harder, but because you slowed down enough to see clearly.

In episode #1486, I break down why convenience is silently killing your growth — and what happens when you get off the cart, walk your own course, and actually take it all in.

The people sprinting past you right now? They're missing everything.

Hit play. Then slow down.

Who This Episode Is For If you've been rushing through life just trying to get to the next thing — this one's for you.

Key Takeaways

  • Convenience feels like a shortcut but always charges a hidden fee — in growth, in awareness, in opportunity
  • Rushing to the next thing means you're experiencing your own life as a blur
  • Walking the course forces you to visualize, prepare, and engage — the cart just delivers you unprepared
  • Skipping the foundational steps always comes back to bite you — every skill builds on the last
  • Slowing down doesn't make you fall behind. Done right, you arrive just as fast — with far fewer mistakes

Questions for Reflection

  • Where in your life are you riding the cart — just trying to get through it instead of growing through it?
  • What have you been rushing past that deserves your full attention and presence?
  • What foundational skill or step have you glossed over that is quietly limiting your next level?

Action Steps

  1. Identify one area of your life where you've chosen convenience over development — a skill, a relationship, a process — and commit to walking it instead of riding through it.
  2. This week, slow down one daily task you normally rush. Pay attention to what you've been missing.
  3. Audit your current pace. Are you moving fast because it's strategic — or because stillness and process make you uncomfortable?

Featured Quote "It's better to slow down and do it right than to sprint to the next thing without learning anything — just to say you got there faster."

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