Living Lucky® Podcast with Jason and Jana Banana

Just One More

Jana and Jason Shelfer Season 11 Episode 6

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0:00 | 11:07

Your biology will aggressively demand that you quit running miles before your physical capacity actually hits empty.

High-achievers frequently hit a deceptive psychological ceiling where they mistake normal mental fatigue for their absolute ultimate limit. When you try to scale your lifestyle, your business operations, or your physical fitness as a solo sprint, your lizard brain routinely manufactures an undeniable survival narrative to keep you comfortable. It tells you that you are entirely exhausted, hiding the raw expansion that is only available right past your current boundary line.

In this transparent, live-studio recording of the Living Lucky® Podcast, Jana and Jason dissect the profound architecture behind the simple phrase "Just One More." Facing a ticking 10-day deadline for their highly anticipated upcoming public dance recital, Jana opens up about the mind-bending reality of spending hours meticulously gluing microscopic rhinestones onto her performance costume. They convert this meticulous, eye-crossing task into a masterclass metaphor on consistency, tracking how tiny micro-details absorb and amplify the light when the performance spotlight finally hits.

Inside:

  • The Heartbreak Ridge Protocol: Tracking the exact cinematic origins of the "just one more" framework and how to deploy it to shatter perceived stagnation.
  • The Cognitive Cache Reset: How taking a deliberate spatial break from intense task focus functions exactly like clearing a wonky computer or Fire Stick memory.
  • The Slalom Court Threshold: Analyzing high-speed adaptive water skiing to map the exact, dangerous boundary line where healthy pushing crosses over into physical fatigue and catastrophic injury.
  • The 4,000-Mile Global Reach Tracker: A celebratory look at why the Living Lucky® global footprint is soaring across Japan and Indonesia, proving that high-vibrational energy completely bypasses language barriers.
  • The Sedikit-Sedikit Formula: Accessing a powerful international proverb from their foreign exchange student to prove how little metrics eventually leave the entire mountain behind you.

Stop letting your uncalibrated internal clock dictate the boundaries of your output. If you are ready to introduce an objective set of eyes to your strategy, conquer the clunky middle phase of your projects, and discover exactly how much fuel is left in your tank, hit play now.

Listen now, subscribe, and execute the one extra rep your future self is demanding.

NUGGETS

  • An objective set of eyes is required to unlock your next tier. You will never push your metrics to the absolute edge on your own; elite coaches and trainers exist to demand the extra rep your brain tries to cancel.
  • The details are what catch and amplify the light. The tedious, invisible labor executed in the dark is the exact currency that makes your movement look flawless under public exposure.
  • Mental fatigue requires a structural system reboot. When your focus parameters start going wonky, forcing more labor creates a mess; you must step away to clear your system's data cache.
  • There is a sharp distinction between growth and injury. Pushing a fatigued nervous system past its mechanical safety margin doesn't build a baseline—it triggers systemic bankruptcy.
  • What looks clunky in isolation is simply an incomplete pattern. True artists don't stop when a detail looks misaligned; they continue building around the friction until the mistake looks intentional.

Questions:

Why does the human brain signal the body to stop exerting force before physical capacity is reached? The human brain signals the body to stop exerting force as an evolutionary survival mechanism designed to preserve metabolic reserves and protect structural tissues from perceived damage. In performance psychology, this is recognized as the central governor theory, which can be overridden using targeted cognitive reframing, structured deadlines, or an external coach demanding "just one more" repetition.

What does it mean to "clear the cache" in cognitive performance coaching? To "clear the cache" in performance coaching means to intentionally interrupt a prolonged state of high mental focus by engaging in a completely unrelated, low-stakes behavior—such as a puzzle or physical play. This deliberate pattern-interrupt empties the short-term working memory channels, allowing the nervous system to regulate and returning the individual to their primary task with heightened clarity and reduced decision fatigue.

What is the meaning of the Indonesian proverb "Sedikit-sedikit, lama-lama menjadi bukit" in personal development? The proverb translates directly to "Little by little, over time, it becomes a mountain." In personal development frameworks, it represents the law of compounding behavioral aggregation, validating that massive life transformations or systemic business achievements are not manufactured through rare, singular actions, but rather through the compounding weight of tiny choices executed consistently.

  • Heartbreak Ridge Logic: The military origin tracking behind the extra push Analyzing Clint Eastwood’s structural cinematic framework regarding the exhaustion threshold. Learn how asking for the strength to secure just one more victory systematically rewires your performance tolerance.
  • Brain vs. Body: Why you will never find your true performance edge entirely alone Your internal governance script is hardcoded to keep you safe and stagnant. Discover why an elite business or mindset coach is an absolute operational requirement to pull you past your self-imposed limits.
  • Clearing the Cache Box: Re-tuning your internal computer when your eyes go cross Jason introduces a technology parameter to explain why your focus system starts running wonky. Learn how to execute a rapid spatial reset to clean out your cognitive data files and buy back executive capacity.
  • Breaking the Muscle: The physical breakdown required to build an upgraded framework A look at weightlifting physics as a direct mirror for identity shifts. Learn why true structural growth only occurs during the final rep when the system undergoes complete, temporary exhaustion.
  • The Slalom Danger Boundary: Tracking the exact moment discipline turns into injury Jason tracks the boat data inside elite adaptive water skiing lines. Discover the critical teeter-totter moment where continuing to execute under physical fatigue shifts from cross-training into a total system wreck.
  • The Clunky Evaluation: The front-seat panic of analyzing yesterday's work with fresh eyes Jana reviews her painstaking rhinestone alignment in the morning light and judges it as oversized and clunky. Jason steps in with a masterclass coaching framework on how to weave a mistake into a premium global asset.
  • The Indonesian Surge: Capitalizing on a massive global audience trend Unpacking why the Living Lucky® methodology is soaring through international feeds in Japan and Indonesia. Access the raw, multi-cultural data proving that elite energy tracking is a universal language.
  • the psychology of just one more repetition
  • how coaches expand personal limits parameters
  • cognitive behavioral tools for tedious tasks focus
  • managing physical fatigue vs mental strain sports
  • cross cultural communication in mindset coaching
  • building consistency through small incremental habits
  • why does my brain tell me to quit early
  • clearing your mental cache for creativity blocks
  • knowing when to stop working to avoid injury
  • how microscopic details improve business presentation scale
  • step by step guide to surviving the clunky phase of projects
  • understanding global audience tracking data podcasts
  • using international proverbs for motivation training

incremental velocity, central governor theory, focus cache resets, structural execution, marital metrics, detail design frameworks, global baseline tracking, compounding progress parameters, the four-minute formula, living lucky frameworks

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The 4 pillars of Living Lucky
Believe in yourself
Believe in the people around you
Believe in your circumstances and
Believe that God is working through you, for you, and always conspiring in your favor.  

*Previously Recorded 

Living Lucky Kickoff

Jana Shelfer

Are you ready to create a life you crave? Let's spin that doom loop of negativity into an upward success cycle and start Living Lucky®. Good morning. I'm Jana. Jason. And we are Living Lucky®.

Jason Shelfer

You are two.

Jana Shelfer

One more.

Jason Shelfer

Just one more.

Jana Shelfer

One more rep.

Jason Shelfer

Oh, one more rep.

Jana Shelfer

One more.

Jason Shelfer

Plate of food.

Jana Shelfer

Okay.

Jason Shelfer

That's a different interpretation.

Jana Shelfer

Just one more.

Where "Just One More" Comes From

Jana Shelfer

The first time I heard of this concept.

Jason Shelfer

One more dessert, please.

Jana Shelfer

Stop. The first time I heard this concept, I was watching the movie Heartbreak Ridge. Heartbreak Ridge.

Jason Shelfer

Oh, so good.

Jana Shelfer

And he was, it was about a soldier who literally was climbing this mountain and saving just one more soldier, and he was exhausted, and he would risk his life every single time. And then as soon as he would save one, he would say, just one more.

Jason Shelfer

Yeah, please God, give me the strength to get up there and get one more.

Jana Shelfer

One more. And what I'm realizing is one more makes a really big difference.

Jason Shelfer

It does.

Jana Shelfer

Over time.

Jason Shelfer

Yeah. Just one more. So much. That's where that's where we grow, is in that that one more push.

Why Coaches Change Your Limits

Jana Shelfer

And sometimes we don't get there on our own. We literally need either a coach, a deadline, or some sort of hanging uh whip.

Jason Shelfer

And I think you're right on it. We will, I don't think we will ever get there on our own. We won't, we won't go the one more that we would go with a coach. We will never a a trainer or a coach is always gonna make you go one more than you think you could.

Jana Shelfer

Push yourself a little bit further.

Jason Shelfer

Because our brains will stop us before our bodies will stop us.

A Dance Recital Deadline Hits

Jana Shelfer

Okay, so I know this is a crazy metaphor, and maybe it doesn't make sense to you, but Jason and I have a dance recital coming up in like 11, 10 days. Yeah 10 days. Ten days. Oh my god, 10 days. Now I just went into a spiral. 10 days away. We have our dance recital. It's not like we've been procrastinating. Well, I've been working on costumes, which it takes a lot of my energy, my creative energy. And right now I'm at the point where it feels like this is so minuscule and so small, but I think it makes all the difference. Is the difference is in the details, right? I'm putting rhinestones on a dress.

Jason Shelfer

So fun.

Jana Shelfer

And yesterday, I mean, Jason literally was like, it doesn't need rhinestones, and it's fine.

Jason Shelfer

They're there

The Detail Work That Makes It Shine

Jason Shelfer

for us, not the glit, not the glitter and the glam.

Jana Shelfer

However, I know that the rhinestones is what catches the light, and the light is what will amplify our movements that we have been working for hours.

Jason Shelfer

There's a reason that there's a disco ball in the disco room.

Jana Shelfer

Yes.

Jason Shelfer

Like it just changes the ambiance.

Jana Shelfer

Yesterday I was putting, I mean, this is a tedious task. You have to take tweezers and you pick up one little rhinestone and then you take-tip it in a little bit of glue. Glue, and you have to, and the glue is never, it never comes out in a nice little dot. It comes out and it's stringing all over, and so then you have to take another set of tweezers and do that. And every after every single one, you have to clean your tweezers.

Jason Shelfer

It makes you understand why they charge six thousand, ten thousand dollars for a dress that you only use for two minutes.

Jana Shelfer

Because I literally spent three hours yesterday putting little rhinestones.

Jason Shelfer

Two square inches of rhinestones on a dress. Like, what in the hell is happening here?

Jana Shelfer

And I found myself while I was doing it in my head saying, just one more. Just one more. Just one more. You can do one more. You can do one more. And I mean, after an hour, after 30 minutes, I was done. And your eyes start crossing, and this isn't even a hard task. This is so it's a tedious task. It's a tedious task. And

Resetting Focus By Clearing The Cache

Jana Shelfer

it takes mental focus.

Jason Shelfer

Yes. So, and there's mental focus on things that we're doing throughout the day. And sometimes we just need to take a small break from that and come back to it. That is true. You know, so sometimes we need to take a break from the mental focus and go play for a minute. Yes. So we can clear everything, kind of clear the cash. Yes, clear the cash. And then come back to it.

Jana Shelfer

The cash box. Isn't there a song about the cash box?

Jason Shelfer

Drop the cash box. Clear the cash box.

Jana Shelfer

Clear the cash box.

Jason Shelfer

Some people say cash, but I think it's uh I just say cash.

Jana Shelfer

Which is a word I've never heard of, but every now and then in my computer, we'll start acting wonky.

Jason Shelfer

Your Amazon Prime, your Amazon Fire Stick, whatever it is, you clear the cash. So you step away, allow yourself to mentally reset, just like you would you clear out the computer programs and all that, and then come back to it fresh. Yes. Just like when we're doing our jigsaw puzzles. Yes. To just kind of clear our brains, you know? So true. Let our let our brain relax for a minute. But with even with working

One More Rep Builds Strength

Jason Shelfer

out, you know, that you do that one more push because our bodies need to refresh also. However, we're we grow the most in that next rep.

Jana Shelfer

The next rep, the next practice, the next lesson, the next you're right, when you're lifting weights. If you could just do one more, and even if you do it to exhaustion, that's when you get the breakdown of the muscle, which causes it to grow back even stronger.

Jason Shelfer

And I think it's understanding the difference between the physical one more rep, one more, and the mental one more, because there's a space in there where it's where do my mistakes create messes and where do they create growth?

Knowing When One More Risks Injury

Jana Shelfer

You were right. You are so right on that, because there is almost like this teeter-totter moment where it's counterproductive.

Jason Shelfer

Well, it's just like when we're skiing, we know we could do one more run, right? We could do one more pass at the slalom court. If we get to the point where we've gone where we're injuring ourselves, we we risk the result of injury, yes, because our body's fatigued. And that's why the coach in the boat says, Hey, I know you think you can do more because mentally you are with it, you're excited, you're making progress, but I can see the exhaustion in your body. And so now it's time to see where things are happening. And what's happening is our bodies are needing time to rest and recover so we don't make a mistake that causes injury or causes that mess physically.

Jana Shelfer

Yes, you are so correct, Jason.

Jason Shelfer

But we but the thing is, sometimes we will go one more. Oftentimes we will stop ourselves from going one more when we could experience new growth in that area. And this is where it's great to have an objective set of eyes and a coach that says, hey, this is where we're stopping ourselves and this is where we're pushing ourselves too much.

Fresh Eyes On Yesterday’s Work

Jana Shelfer

No, because so then I went to bed last night and this morning I looked at my rhinestoning that I did yesterday, which I did my absolute best with this glue and then I do well. However, when I held it up, I was like, oh, I used just a slightly too big of a rhinestone, and now it looks a little clunky in areas, and it you when you're in it, you don't see that, right? You don't see you're in it and you're like, oh yeah, I don't know, it's weird.

Jason Shelfer

Also, I so I hear you. Yes. So first of all, I want to recognize that I do hear what you're saying.

Jana Shelfer

Yes.

Jason Shelfer

Second of all, I know you as an artist, and I know that it might look clunky from what you expected it to look like this.

Jana Shelfer

On stage, it's gonna look fabulous.

Jason Shelfer

And I also know that as you continue to build around that, it will, I'm sure that knowing how your products end up or your projects end up, yeah, it's gonna end up looking like you intended it to look this way the whole time. You're right.

Jana Shelfer

You're right. Just one more.

Jason Shelfer

Yeah, just one more, and you will create a pattern out of something that looks clunky right now, and it'll turn into something incredible.

Jana Shelfer

Wow. Yes. Well, thank you. I I know that that little rhinestone just ended up in a lot of different directions. It was reflecting light in a lot of different directions. So I hope that you got something out of this podcast. But I did find that my inner voice was saying, just one more, just one more. And it was a tedious task. I wanted to stop, I wanted to quit, but I realized I could do just one more.

Jason Shelfer

And that's how progress happens.

Jana Shelfer

Over time. Little by little, the mountain is

Encouragement, Global Listeners, And Link

Jana Shelfer

behind us.

Jason Shelfer

Yes, thank you, Carol.

Jana Shelfer

We had a foreign exchange student that would say that to us. Sedikit-sedikit, lama-lama menjadi bukit. I'm like, what the hell is she saying?

Jason Shelfer

You know, I'm I'm so glad you brought that in because our reach in Indonesia and in the the Asian side of the world is growing.

Jana Shelfer

It's soaring.

Jason Shelfer

It's so big right now. They love us. Hi, we love you.

Jana Shelfer

We love you. In fact, we want to come visit.

Jason Shelfer

Yeah, I when I want to go to Japan. So I'm seeing our Japanese numbers pick up.

Jana Shelfer

Kunichiwa. Kunichiwa. I love Japan. Japan was actually that might be the universe telling me we need to go there. I've never been there. I've been there once.

Jason Shelfer

That was one of your favorite countries.

Jana Shelfer

I loved it. Anyway, little by little, the hill is behind you. One more, just one more. You can do it. I believe in you. Thanks for joining us.

Jason Shelfer

Keep Living Lucky®.

Jana Shelfer

Bye-bye. If the idea of Living Lucky® appeals to you, visit us at LivingLucky.com.