Tag: behavior change

  • Health Is Not a Moral Failing: Why Willpower Isn’t Enough

    Health is not a moral failing because the cards are almost always stacked against you. Willpower isn’t enough.

    Trying to “get healthy” in today’s world often feels like swimming directly against the current while food and supplement companies, diet camps, fitness organizations, medical research headlines, and that one guy you work with who moonlights as a personal trainer cheer you on from the shore. Everyone has advice. Everyone has certainty. And somehow, when it doesn’t work, the blame still lands squarely on you.

    There is a deeply ingrained tendency to moralize health — to assign virtue or failure to outcomes that are profoundly biased, contextual, and unequal. We pretend that health exists on a level playing field when it very clearly does not.

    The Quiet Judgments We Make (and Internalize)

    Weight and body size are an easy example. We make snap judgments about people’s habits, discipline, and character based on how they look. At the same time, we can swing so far in the opposite direction — defending body positivity without nuance — that we fail to support improvements in holistic health altogether.

    If someone relies on quick, processed meals, we assume laziness or indifference. What we rarely ask is:

    • How many hours are they working each week?
    • Are they exhausted and trying to buy back time with their kids?
    • Is life simply heavy right now?

    Mental health is treated similarly. We often tell people that exercise and proper nutrition will dramatically improve mental health outcomes — and while that may be true, it’s rarely helpful when someone is in the depths of it. When it hurts to breathe, when the world feels dark and overwhelming, information alone does not move the needle.

    Instead, people are left with the same conclusion over and over again: I must be the problem.

    Discipline, Shame, and the Illusion of Control

    The word discipline gets thrown around so often that anything less than perfect adherence is considered failure. There’s no scale. No spectrum. No acknowledgment of progress.

    And while it’s easy to villainize the health and wellness industry for this, I don’t think this is always a conscious moral failing on the part of individuals within it. Much like survival throughout history, relevance today often depends on belonging to a tribe. A school of thought. A camp with rules, identities, and certainty.

    Tribalism gives us a sense of superiority. It allows us to confuse different with wrong. And once we do that, it becomes very easy to assign moral value to health outcomes. After all, isn’t it just survival of the fittest?

    This mindset fuels narratives that make me wince:

    • “Good” versus “bad” foods
    • Hustle and grind culture that ignores the silent epidemic of chronic stress and sleep deprivation
    • “No excuses” messaging so rigid it creates guilt around missing a workout for your child’s birthday party or anxiety over a box of Christmas cookies

    None of this exists in a vacuum— and it’s why willpower alone isn’t enough.

    When the Industry Fails, People Blame Themselves

    The truth is, I fell for many of these traps myself.

    I was obese — objectively, not dramatically — and I responded the way so many people do: by trying to fix everything as fast as possible. I bought programs, supplements, and chased information with urgency and fear. The speed at which I tried to change my body and learn everything I “needed” to know felt like free-falling through quicksand.

    By the time I realized I was unnervingly skinny, it became painfully clear that proper education was either missing entirely or hidden behind premium-priced paywalls I couldn’t access at the time.

    As I’ve grown older and immersed myself in physiology, behavior change, and chronic disease research, one thing has become obvious: critical foundational information is often sidelined in favor of sexier solutions like nutrition plans and exercise programs.

    Domains of health are treated as if they must compete with one another. And that fragmentation is exactly how we end up with staggering rates of chronic illness, obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and burnout.

    Why Moralizing Health Backfires

    When someone tells me they’ve “failed” at their health goals, it’s almost always because they’ve internalized this moral framework and placed too much weight on willpower. They believe they lacked discipline. They believe they didn’t want it badly enough.

    Accountability matters — but responsibility cannot rest entirely on individuals when the system itself is failing them.

    How could we expect everyone to succeed when health is treated like an unfair, unwinnable competition? When only those who “win” are deemed worthy of being healthy?

    You cannot willpower your way through chronic stress, sleep deprivation, environmental barriers, or nervous system dysregulation. Telling people to “try harder” often produces the opposite of the intended effect.

    Moralizing health breeds fear, guilt, doubt, anxiety, and avoidance. It does not create sustainable change.

    A Different Way Forward

    Health must be treated holistically and objectively.

    Objectivity allows us to become curious again — to experiment without shame, to learn without fear, to approach our bodies with something closer to childlike wonder rather than constant judgment.

    This perspective has fundamentally reshaped how I coach.

    I can no longer ignore:

    • Social determinants of health
    • Elitist ideology in wellness spaces
    • Rigid frameworks that don’t bend for real life
    • Misinformation and constantly shifting “truths”
    • The failure to truly follow the science
    • The way “willpower” and “motivation” get weaponized in health spaces

    Health education is a right, not a privilege.

    When we stop shaming people for where they are, when we focus on behavioral psychology and foundational health, when we remove people from the uphill battle that modern wellness has become — that’s when change becomes possible.

    If You’ve Ever Felt Like You Failed…

    This post is for the people who may not have even recognized how deeply health has been moralized. For those who didn’t realize that shame alone may have been holding them — or their clients — back.

    If reading this makes you breathe a little easier, feel a little more grounded, or look forward with a bit more hope, then it’s doing its job.

    You are allowed to start.
    Allowed to try, to fail, adjust, and try again.
    You are allowed to persevere.

    Health is not a moral test you pass or fail. Willpower is a tool—not the foundation.

    And you are not broken for struggling in a system that makes it harder than it needs to be.

  • Foundations First! Why Do I Coach Holistic Health?

    The more I read about human physiology—and the more I study the chronic conditions affecting the majority of the population—the clearer something has become:

    The health and wellness industry is pouring most of its energy into too narrow of a field.

    We’ve decided that health can be solved with:

    • The right training style
    • The right diet camp
    • The right supplement stack
    • Or the right level of intensity

    And if it doesn’t work for you?
    The implication is usually that you failed.

    I’m pushing back on that.

    Not because exercise, nutrition strategies, or performance goals don’t matter—but because they are often layered on top of foundations that were never built in the first place.

    What I Mean by “Foundation-First”

    When I talk about foundation-first coaching, I’m talking about four things:

    • Sleep
    • Stress
    • Environment
    • Education

    These are not exciting.
    They don’t sell well.
    They don’t make for dramatic before-and-after photos.

    But they influence every single bodily system.

    When these foundations are addressed early, one of two things usually happens:

    1. A large portion of the problem resolves itself
    2. Or we can confidently rule them out as the bottleneck

    Either way, progress becomes clearer and more sustainable.

    This is what holistic health actually looks like—not treating systems in isolation, but recognizing that improving foundational inputs benefits the whole human at once.

    What I’m Pushing Back Against

    I’m explicitly pushing back against the idea that we can fix widespread health issues with:

    • CrossFit (or any single training modality—nothing against CrossFit on it’s own.)
    • The Carnivore Diet (or any all-or-nothing eating pattern)
    • Supplementing our way out of poor sleep, chronic stress, or environmental mismatch
    • Skipping “boring” fundamentals because they don’t sell well

    Yes—you can build big biceps while sleeping poorly.
    But big biceps won’t protect your cardiovascular system from the effects of chronic undersleeping.

    Health and performance are not the same thing.

    And holistic health is far more than the guy telling you that you can eat an entire pizza if you just follow his program.

    Why This Shift Happened for Me

    This shift didn’t happen because I accidentally stumbled into better habits.

    It happened because of research.

    I became increasingly interested in physiological adaptation—how the body responds to stress, recovers, and changes over time. The deeper I dug into topics like sleep, circadian rhythm, environment, and behavior change psychology, the more I realized how niche this foundational knowledge is treated in the industry.

    Somehow, we’ve decided that:

    • Fancy lighting
    • Extreme transformations
    • And profit-driven certainty

    Are more valuable than teaching people how to work with their biology instead of against it.

    I will forever be changed by learning the basics well.

    Not because everything else is wrong—but because I now understand what everything else is built on.

    The Problem with All-or-Nothing Health

    Many popular “health solutions” feel all-or-nothing:

    • Intense training plans
    • Restrictive diets
    • High accountability pressure
    • Expensive programs that promise certainty

    When they fail—and many do—people are left wondering why health seems to work for everyone else but them.

    Often, the issue isn’t motivation or discipline.

    It’s foundational health.

    We already struggle with shrinking attention spans and constant distraction. Expecting people to maintain extreme interventions without stable foundations sets them up to fail—and then blame themselves for it.

    What Foundations Actually Do

    Foundations:

    • Remove guesswork
    • Reduce friction
    • Treat the whole human
    • Create capacity for experimentation

    Think about how many times you’ve jumped head-first into a new program or diet, only to realize two or three weeks later:

    • You don’t feel motivated anymore
    • You don’t feel better
    • And it cost more money than you’d like to admit

    Foundational habits don’t require:

    • Motivation
    • Subscriptions
    • Fancy e-books
    • Or constant decision-making

    They are building blocks.

    They’re boring—but they work.

    They create a system so that future you doesn’t have to keep asking, “Why isn’t this working?”

    Why This Approach Gets Skepticism

    We are hardwired for extremes.

    Big changes feel meaningful.
    Quiet consistency feels underwhelming.

    But here’s the truth:
    If you’re ready to make extreme changes to your diet or training, you’re also ready to make smaller, equally substantial changes that support your long-term holistic health.

    Foundations don’t limit you—they free you.

    They give you the stability to explore other approaches without constantly starting over.

    This Is the Season I’m In as a Coach

    This post is for people who have been chewed up and spit out by the health and wellness industry.

    It’s also me clearly delineating where I stand.

    I’m not saying everything out there is wrong or nothing else works.

    I’m saying holistic health is bigger than trends—and deeper than marketing.

    As long as I see gaps where foundations need to be built or repaired, I will address them with clients first. This is the season I’m in as a coach.

    You don’t have to sprint toward me or buy into anything overnight.

    You can walk nearby.
    Ask questions.
    Follow along at your own pace.

    And trust that building the foundation will support whatever comes next.

    If you are ready to make a change but feel like you need support, check out my coaching services by clicking the button below!