They’ve swum oceans, scaled mountains, launched empires, and shattered expectations. But before they did any of it, someone, maybe even themselves, thought: “You can’t do that.”
Hosted by Sam Penny, Why’d You Think You Could Do That? dives into the minds of people who said “screw it” and went for it anyway. From adventurers and elite athletes to wildcard entrepreneurs and creative renegades, each episode unpacks the one question they all have in common:
“Why'd you think you could do that?”
If you’re wired for more, haunted by big ideas, or just sick of playing it safe, this is your show.
Sam Penny (00:00)
Welcome back to the bravery digest on why do you think you could do that podcast? I'm Sam Penny coach for the brave. Today, let's talk about something that most people get dead wrong. Why your environment, not your motivation is what really determines how brave you'll be. Let's get real for a second.
You don't rise to the level of your motivation. You fall to the level of your environment and willpower is overrated. Hype only lasts until you hit your first obstacle. If you want to act braver consistently, you need to design an environment where bravery is the default, not the exception. Because here's the truth, comfort is always available. If you don't deliberately build systems that push you forward,
you'll unconsciously slide back every single time. So how do you create an environment that demands your best, even on days when you don't feel like showing up? Let's get tactical. Here's five elements to build a brave environment that will stretch you, challenge you and force you to grow. First one is to build physical cues that trigger bravery. Surround yourself with reminders of who you're becoming, not just
who you've been put your 90 day goal up on the wall. Pin a note that says move before fear and keep your bravery audit visible right beside your screen if you need to let your physical space shape your mental state. Now the second thing accountability you can't wiggle out of. Don't just talk about your goals, raise the stakes, announce deadlines publicly.
Put some money on the line. someone to to it and actually Bravery thrives when there are real consequences for playing small. Number three, remove the easy outs. Make it harder to shrink back to comfort. Delete your fallback plan. Block your usual distractions. Lock time into your calendar for
discomfort driven work. Make the brave thing the only thing.
Number four, raise the room. Who you surround yourself with sets the standard. Join a group where bold moves are normal. Work with a coach who doesn't let you coast. Be around people who make your current level feel uncomfortable. And remember, small circles mean small thinking. Number five, build habits that run without motivation.
Set bravery to run on autopilot. That could be one 90 second brave action every day, a Friday journal, what scared me this week, or a weekly review of where you hid and where you showed up. Systems outperform motivation every single time. Here's the big takeaway. Bravery isn't about hype or waiting to feel ready.
It's about building conditions that demand better, where excuses get crowded out and your best self gets called up day after day. So here's my challenge for you. What's one change you'll make to your environment this week to demand more from yourself?
Maybe it's as simple as writing your brave goal on the wall. Maybe it's joining a group or putting a little money on the line. Pick one and put it in play today. Let's stop hoping to feel brave. Let's build the space that requires it. Now, before I wrap, I want to see up a guest who personifies everything we've just talked about. Someone who built his environment and his entire life to
demand the extraordinary. This Thursday, I'll be sitting down with Jared Gossens, blind since birth, elite athlete, business owner and a man who has made the impossible look routine. If you want to know what it looks like to build a life that requires bravery, don't miss this episode. I'm Sam Penny, coach for the brave. Thanks for listening to the bravery digest. Go build your brave environment and see what you're really capable of.
I'll see you this Thursday.