DiscoverTraining for Life“Why Isn’t This Working Faster?” (And What We Wish More Women Knew)
“Why Isn’t This Working Faster?” (And What We Wish More Women Knew)

“Why Isn’t This Working Faster?” (And What We Wish More Women Knew)

Update: 2025-06-05
Share

Description

💭 In this episode, Sarah and Tanna dive deep into one of the biggest mindset blocks in health and fitness: expecting fast results in a long-game process. If you've ever felt discouraged because change isn't happening "fast enough"—this one's for you.


⚡️ In a culture addicted to quick fixes, overnight transformations, and before-and-after pics, it’s easy to think you’re behind, failing, or not doing enough. But real change? The kind that actually sticks? It’s steady. It’s layered. And it’s 100% worth it.


💡 In this episode, you’ll learn:




  • Why our brains crave instant gratification (and how to override that urge)




  • How to shift from “expectation” mode into “action” mode




  • The power of identity-based habits (doing the thing because it’s who you are)




  • Why a slow burn creates a deeper, more lasting transformation




  • How to enjoy the journey instead of rushing to the finish line




Progress takes time—but your daily actions are always planting seeds. Stay the course.


🎧 Tune in now and get reconnected to the pace and purpose of your journey.
Whether you’re in week 1 or year 10, this episode will help you own your timeline and stop comparing your behind-the-scenes to someone else’s highlight reel.


📲 Find us on Instagram at @healthyrolemodels and tell us: what’s ONE shift you’re making this week to support long-game change?


💬 Loved this episode? Leave us a 5-star review—it helps other women find our podcast and our community. 💕


 

Comments 
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

“Why Isn’t This Working Faster?” (And What We Wish More Women Knew)

“Why Isn’t This Working Faster?” (And What We Wish More Women Knew)

Sarah Gilks and Tanna Payne