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Breaking the Impossible: Dominate by Consistency

Shark Theory

Release Date: 04/28/2026

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Shark Theory

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Shark Theory

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Shark Theory

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Shark Theory

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Shark Theory

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Breaking the Impossible: Dominate by Consistency show art Breaking the Impossible: Dominate by Consistency

Shark Theory

When Sebastian Sawe crossed the London Marathon finish line in 1 hour, 59 minutes, and 30 seconds, he didn't just break a record — he shattered every excuse the world had for saying something is impossible. In this episode, I break down what this historic moment means for you and whatever goal you've been told — or told yourself — can't be done. The biggest lesson isn't about running; it's about consistency, belief, and being bold enough to light the path for others. Key Takeaways Everything in life is deemed impossible until someone actually does it — your limits are not permanent...

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Shark Theory

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More Episodes

When Sebastian Sawe crossed the London Marathon finish line in 1 hour, 59 minutes, and 30 seconds, he didn't just break a record — he shattered every excuse the world had for saying something is impossible. In this episode, I break down what this historic moment means for you and whatever goal you've been told — or told yourself — can't be done. The biggest lesson isn't about running; it's about consistency, belief, and being bold enough to light the path for others.

Key Takeaways

  • Everything in life is deemed impossible until someone actually does it — your limits are not permanent ceilings.
  • Roger Bannister ran the first four-minute mile in 1954, and within three years, 16 other people did it. Once someone proves it's possible, the floodgates open.
  • The second-place finisher in London also broke the two-hour barrier — and it was his first marathon ever. Sometimes not knowing what's impossible is your greatest advantage.
  • Sebastian got faster in the second half of the race, proving that true endurance comes from pacing yourself with intentional, relentless consistency.
  • You don't have to be the strongest, smartest, or fastest person in the room — you just have to be the most consistent over the longest period of time.

Action Steps

  1. Identify one area of your life where you've accepted "impossible" as the final answer and write down one small, consistent action you can take daily to challenge that belief.
  2. Stop overcomplicating your preparation. Sebastian ate two pieces of bread, tea, and honey. Audit where you're adding noise instead of focusing on simple, repeatable habits.
  3. Make a decision to be the one who lights the torch in your family, your team, or your community. Own the responsibility of being the first to show others what is possible.

Notable Quote

The most consistent person over the longest period of time ends up being the one that breaks barriers, breaks records, and lights a path for others.