Martin Meadows – How to Build Self-Discipline (Download)

You know what you should do. Exercise regularly. Eat healthier. Work on that important project. Yet somehow, Netflix wins, the snack drawer calls, and procrastination feels irresistible. The gap between knowing and doing isn’t a character flaw—it’s a self-discipline challenge that science has extensively studied. Understanding how willpower actually works can transform your ability to achieve meaningful, lasting change.
About the Course and Instructor
Martin Meadows has distilled complex scientific research on self-discipline into practical, actionable strategies. Rather than burying you in academic studies, this course delivers the essential “how-to” knowledge you need to strengthen your willpower and overcome the temptations sabotaging your goals.
Core Self-Discipline Foundations
Understanding Habit Formation
Learn the scientific framework for breaking destructive habits and establishing positive ones that stick. Discover why identifying your deeper “why” matters more than surface-level motivation, and how being selective with your commitments protects your limited willpower reserves. The course introduces keystone habits—powerful behaviors that trigger positive cascades across multiple life areas.
Mastering Dopamine’s Dual Nature
Dopamine drives both your worst impulses and your greatest achievements. Understanding this neurochemical’s role is crucial for breaking bad habits and forming beneficial ones. You’ll learn when dopamine works against you (fueling instant gratification) and how to harness it as a motivational ally for long-term success.
Training Your Willpower Through Discomfort
Self-discipline isn’t innate—it’s trainable. Discover practical techniques to systematically increase your self-control capacity through strategic discomfort, building mental resilience that translates across all life domains.
Navigating Self-Discipline Traps
The course exposes psychological pitfalls that sabotage even strong intentions:
Social Contagion: Self-discipline spreads through your social circle, for better or worse. Learn to protect and strengthen your resolve amid negative influences.
Future Self Disconnect: Why you consistently overestimate your future willpower and how to bridge this dangerous gap.
Decision Fatigue: Understand why President Obama wore only gray and blue suits, and how limited decision-making capacity affects the poor differently than the wealthy.
Cognitive Biases: Navigate the Dunning-Kruger effect, restraint bias, empathy gap, status quo bias, and loss aversion—all quietly undermining your self-control without your awareness.
You may also be interested in these courses:
- Jimmy Naraine – CONFIDENCE and SELF ESTEEM: Develop Confident Body Language (Download)
- Andrew Luttrell – Building Influence at Work (Download)
Strategic Planning: Learn how to anticipate and prepare for temptations rather than relying on willpower alone when cravings strike.
Unconventional Strategies That Work
Discover why extreme diets sometimes produce better long-term results than moderate approaches. Learn about strategic indulging—yes, you can occasionally indulge yourself and still progress toward your goals. Understand why popular visualization techniques might actually prevent success, and what to do instead.
The course includes quizzes after each major section to reinforce learning and practical tips for immediate application.
Who Should Take This Course
This program serves anyone committed to self-improvement and willing to apply what they learn. Whether you’re struggling with diet adherence, productivity, exercise consistency, or any goal requiring sustained effort, these science-backed strategies provide the framework for success.
However, if you’re seeking instant solutions without effort, this isn’t your course. Real self-discipline development requires understanding, practice, and persistence—but the rewards are life-changing.
Transform knowledge into action. Master self-discipline, resist what holds you back, and finally achieve the long-term goals that matter most.





