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You Can’t Think Your Way to Change with Justin Whitmel Earley
01/06/2026
You Can’t Think Your Way to Change with Justin Whitmel Earley
In this episode of Wealth Beyond Riches, Tim Meisenheimer sits down with Justin Whitmel Earley—business lawyer, author, former missionary, and habit-builder—to explore why lasting change doesn’t start with willpower or ideas, but with practices. Justin shares how an intense season of anxiety and burnout early in his legal career forced him to confront a painful disconnect between what he believed and how he was actually living. Though his theology and values were strong, his habits—sleep, work pace, phone use, rest, and embodiment—were quietly shaping him into someone he didn’t want to become. Together, Tim and Justin unpack why modern life trains us toward busyness, isolation, and disintegration, and why recovery doesn’t come from “thinking harder” but from rebuilding small, faithful rhythms. From keystone habits and embodied spirituality to friendship, movement, and reflection, this conversation offers a hopeful path for anyone who feels stretched between success and sanity. What We Learned You don’t notice habits—but they notice you Habits operate beneath awareness, quietly shaping who we become over time. You can’t think your way out of a life you practiced your way into Change happens at the level of daily rhythms, not intentions alone. Habits form the bridge between belief and experience When habits and values are misaligned, anxiety and fragmentation often follow. Keystone habits create outsized impact Small practices—like exercise, reflection, or honest friendship—can reshape sleep, health, finances, and emotional life. The body teaches the soul Physical habits (sleep, movement, rest) are not separate from spiritual formation—they are central to it. Culture trains us more than we realize Busyness, phone-checking, and constant productivity are learned norms, not neutral behaviors. Community accelerates change Even one trusted relationship marked by honesty can radically improve emotional and spiritual health. Reflection is a leadership discipline Reading, journaling, prayer, and engaging “old wisdom” create clarity in a distracted world. Resources Mentioned The Body Teaches the Soul Justin’s newest book exploring the connection between physical habits and spiritual formation. https://a.co/d/g0Gwszb The Common Rule A practical framework for building daily and weekly habits that foster stability and depth. https://a.co/d/cUo0gKH Habits of the Household Applying habit formation to family life, parenting, and the home. https://a.co/d/7WEib8c Made for People A guide to rebuilding friendship and community in adulthood. https://a.co/d/iZvLQ0N Keystone Habits (Behavioral Science Concept) Small practices that trigger widespread positive change (e.g., exercise, reflection, relational honesty). Embodied Spiritual Practices Sleep, movement, rest, prayer, journaling, reading “old books,” poetry, and art as formative disciplines. Vizio Divina / Lectio Divina Ancient Christian practices of reflecting prayerfully on visual art or Scripture as a way of shaping attention and desire.
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