15:13
15:13

The Identity That Keeps You Stuck

by Anthony V. Lombardo

Type
Activity
Meditation
Suitable for
Everyone

You can be journaling, meditating, setting goals, and doing everything you know to do — and still feel like your life is not truly changing. In this talk, we explore a deeper reason growth can stall: the part of you that wants change may still be operating from an identity that does not feel safe inside that change. This is a reflection on self-protection, nervous system safety, and why real transformation often begins by asking a different question.

Transcript

For a second,

I want you to think about this.

Have you ever had a season in your life where you were doing everything right?

You were journaling,

Meditating,

Listening to the podcast,

Reading the books,

Setting the goals,

And yet your life still looked almost exactly the same.

Maybe every Monday you start off by telling yourself that this is going to be the week,

But come Thursday,

You're questioning everything.

You go to bed every night recommitting to change.

But by the next morning,

You've already talked yourself out of it.

You swear that this year is going to be different.

But by March,

You're living the same life you promised that you'd leave behind.

And maybe things have gotten slightly better.

Maybe you're a little more aware,

But still not fundamentally different.

If that's you,

This video is going to matter to you.

Because I want to offer you something that completely changed how I understand personal growth.

And it's this.

If your life isn't changing,

It's not because you're not trying hard enough.

It might be because the part of you that's trying is the same identity that's afraid to change.

Let me explain what I mean.

There was a time in my life where I genuinely believed that effort was the answer.

More discipline,

More consistency,

More courage,

More positive thinking,

More doing the work.

And on paper,

I looked like someone evolving.

But underneath it,

I was exhausted.

Not physically exhausted,

Identity exhausted.

Because every attempt I made to change felt like I was pushing something uphill that quietly rolled back down when I wasn't looking.

Have you ever experienced that?

You set the goal.

You feel inspired.

You start off really strong.

And then a few weeks later,

Something inside you tightens.

You procrastinate.

You overthink.

You suddenly feel tired.

You lose momentum.

And then you make it mean something about yourself.

I lack discipline.

I need to want it more.

I need to push harder.

That was my cycle.

Until I noticed something subtle.

That tightness didn't show up because I was lazy.

It showed up when things started to get real.

When change stopped being something I simply talked about and started requiring me to actually become somewhat different.

And that's when I actually began to see the pattern.

Growth doesn't fail because we don't want it bad enough.

Growth stalls because some part of us doesn't feel safe inside it.

And when your nervous system doesn't feel safe,

It doesn't argue.

It just protects you.

So let's make this really practical.

Imagine you want to earn more money.

I mean,

Who doesn't want to earn more money?

So you set the goal.

You read about abundance.

You work on your mindset.

You invest in yourself.

But every time you're about to raise your prices,

Or pitch the idea,

Or take that next big step,

Your body hesitates.

You tell yourself you need more preparation.

So you watch another video on mindset.

You refine your plan.

You go learn another business strategy.

And that may not look like self-sabotage.

But underneath it,

There might be an identity saying,

If I expand,

I'll be exposed.

If I succeed,

I'll be depended on.

If I earn more,

I'll have to become someone I'm not sure I can sustain.

And that identity doesn't disappear just because you set that new goal.

It quietly resists.

And that resistance disguises itself as effort,

As being responsible,

As optimization.

For me,

I saw this clearly when I left my corporate job.

For years,

I had what looked like success.

Stable income,

Fancy title,

Recognition for what I was good at.

And I told myself,

If I ever went fully into my own work,

As a meditation guide,

As a coach,

That the hardest part would be visibility.

Putting myself out there and fully being seen.

But when I finally stepped into it,

I quickly realized visibility wasn't the hardest part.

Responsibility was being depended on by others while being visible.

You see,

In my corporate job,

I can present my work.

I could lead meetings.

I could perform competence.

But I was muscling through it.

Enduring it as something that I had to do.

The goal was to get through those moments of being fully visible and then exhale.

But when I started guiding sessions on my own,

When I started coaching people one-on-one,

Something different happened.

It wasn't being seen that activated fear.

It was knowing that someone was actually relying on me.

That they would show up.

That I had to stay present.

That I couldn't just disappear into the background.

That I was actually responsible for their experience.

And that's when I understood something that I think applies to everyone who feels stuck despite all their efforts.

Most of us aren't afraid of being seen.

We are afraid of being relied on.

We're afraid that if this works,

If we grow,

If we succeed,

We'll have to become consistent in a way that feels exposing.

So we stay in preparation mode.

We stay in self-improvement mode.

We stay in learning mode.

Because learning doesn't require embodiment.

Trying an effort doesn't require identity change.

But becoming,

Actually embodying that change,

Does.

So let me break down how this works.

Because this is important.

You have a current identity.

That identity has patterns,

Beliefs,

Comfort zones,

Familiar levels of responsibility.

When you set a new goal,

You're not just changing behavior,

You're threatening that identity.

And your nervous system's job is not to make you more successful.

It's designed to keep you familiar.

So when expansion feels unfamiliar,

When more visibility feels risky,

When more money feels destabilizing,

Your system subtly pulls you back to what it recognizes.

Not because you're incapable,

But because your system is wired for coherence.

To keep you oriented to what's familiar.

And to protect you from what's unfamiliar.

Not to help you grow.

And when a new version of yourself doesn't feel coherent yet,

It will feel dangerous.

So what do we typically do?

We double down on our efforts.

We push harder.

Which only reinforces the old identity.

Because the old identity is the one doing all that trying.

The identity that is pushing is the same identity that is stuck.

Essentially you're trying to outgrow yourself,

Using the same self that needs to be outgrown.

That's the trap.

This is why so many intelligent and self-aware people feel stuck.

They know the concepts.

They understand manifestation.

They understand habits.

They understand mindset.

But they're attempting transformation from the same self concept that created the limitation.

They are meditating from the old identity.

Repeating affirmations from the old identity.

Setting goals from that old identity.

So the body keeps pulling them back to baseline.

And then we naturally assume that the problem is motivation.

But most of what we call motivation is often just our body in a state of tension.

You can feel it.

Your jaw tightens.

Your shoulders are lifted.

Your breath becomes shallow.

That's not ambition or desire.

Those are bodily manifestations for what we often mistake as motivation or desire.

It's pressure.

And pressure doesn't create the expansion that you want in your life.

It creates contraction.

It keeps you in that same loop of feeling stuck.

So what actually changes all this?

Well,

Not more effort and not more motivation.

But instead,

Asking ourselves a different kind of question.

Instead of asking,

How do I change my life?

Or how do I become more motivated or more disciplined?

Start asking what identity is protecting itself right now?

What identity is protecting itself right now?

When you procrastinate.

When you hesitate.

When you over prepare.

When you feel that subtle pull backwards.

Pause and ask.

What part of me is trying to stay safe?

Because underneath almost every stuck goal is an identity that believes expansion will cost something.

Perhaps belonging,

Stability,

Approval,

Control.

And when you see that clearly,

Something can start to shift.

You can stop fighting yourself.

And you can start relating with what's present.

You can tell your system,

I see you.

I know you're protecting me.

But we're safe enough to take one step.

That's different than pushing through resistance.

That's different from overpowering your fear.

But that is what builds the internal trust required for real change.

So let's ground this for a second.

By considering something that might seem a bit counterintuitive at first.

Consider an important goal you have in your life right now.

The next level you desire to get to.

Maybe your life isn't changing because what you actually want isn't the goal itself or that next level.

Maybe you just want the feeling you think it will give you.

Security.

Freedom.

Recognition.

Think about that.

You just want the feeling that you think this next level will give you.

But the identity to hold that level feels unfamiliar.

So you stay locked in preparation mode.

You keep upgrading your knowledge,

Your skills.

You keep researching.

You keep waiting for certainty and to feel ready.

But readiness and certainty doesn't come from thinking about it more or from more preparation.

They come from doing it.

From embodiment.

Not thought.

I remember the first time I held a live session.

It felt so awkward.

But I stayed through it and didn't abandon myself.

And that did more for my confidence than any mindset video or that any course could ever do for me.

Not because it went perfectly.

But because I proved to my nervous system that I can remain present when things get uncomfortable.

And that kind of presence is what builds safety.

And safety is what allows for expansion.

And these tiny moments of expansion create evidence.

Proof points that you're capable of embodying this version of yourself.

And that evidence is what reshapes your identity.

That's the sequence of transformation.

And you cannot skip steps.

So if your life isn't changing right now.

First off,

Please give yourself some grace and avoid defaulting to self-blame.

Instead,

I invite you to get curious.

Where are you still operating from an identity that feels safer than the one you say you want?

Where are you choosing comfort over courage?

Certainty over aliveness?

Preparation over participation?

Learning over leading?

That one question,

If asked honestly,

Can change your entire trajectory.

And most of all,

Here's what I want you to hear.

You're not falling behind.

You're not fundamentally flawed.

You're definitely not the only one who struggles with this.

Trust me.

You're simply protecting a version of yourself that once served you.

But what kept you safe five years ago might now be the thing keeping you small.

Growth is not about becoming someone else.

It's about allowing yourself to be truly who you are without hiding,

Without performing,

Without the need to protect yourself from being fully seen.

And that takes repetition.

Small embodied repetition.

Not big leaps or a massive life overhaul.

Just staying with yourself when you would normally exit.

Speaking when you would normally edit.

Following through when you would normally back out.

That's identity work in real time.

So the next time you feel stuck,

Don't ask,

Why am I like this?

Ask,

What identity is protecting itself right now?

And instead of forcing it to change,

See if you can expand with it.

One step at a time.

One conversation you'd normally avoid at a time.

One visible move you'd normally delay.

That's how life actually changes.

Not because you're pushing harder,

But because you prove to yourself that you can stay present throughout the discomfort of growth.

Thanks for watching today.

I'll see you in the next video.

Much love.

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© 2026 Anthony V. Lombardo. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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