Life with Justin Stephens is about chasing goals and commitment, which means it is boring mundane work

Life with Justin Stephens: A Show About the Boring Truth of Chasing Goals

June 14, 20264 min read

There's a version of content on the internet that makes everything look easy. The wins are loud, the struggles are edited out, and the person on screen always seems to be three steps ahead of you. That's not what Life with Justin Stephens is.

This show is a biography. It's a documentation of my life — the real one. The one that looks like alarm clocks and long shifts and decisions I'm still figuring out. It's not a highlight reel, and I'm not going to pretend otherwise.

What the Show Actually Is

Life with Justin Stephens is built around one simple idea: show up, document it, and let people see what goal-chasing actually looks like from the inside.

I'm not here as the expert. I'm here as the student. When I sit down with someone to hear their story, I'm genuinely trying to learn from them — about their life, their dreams, what they're building, what they've survived. I believe every person carries a story that can teach you something if you're willing to slow down and listen.

And in between those conversations, I'm sharing my own life. The mundane parts. The repetitive parts. The parts that don't make for great TV but make for an honest record of what it looks like to be a regular person chasing irregular goals.

Why I Believe Goals Are Deeply Personal

People will not always understand your goals. They'll question them, underestimate them, or just look at you sideways when you try to explain them. And here's the thing — that's okay. They're not you. They don't know your past, your history, your network, or the quiet conviction you carry that tells you to keep going anyway.

Goals are personal because they're rooted in things only you fully understand. That's not a weakness. That's what makes them yours.

What I've come to believe is this: the specific goal matters less than having one. A goal is a guiding light. It's not a contract with the universe — it's a compass for your decisions. The path you take toward it will change. The timeline will shift. The strategy will evolve. But the goal itself stays constant, and that constancy is what keeps you oriented when life gets complicated.

Whether I accomplish everything I've set out to do is genuinely beside the point. The point is that having goals gives me a framework for how I spend my time — and time is the one thing none of us get back.

What Commitment Actually Looks Like

I'll be honest with you: commitment is boring. That's not a criticism. That's just the truth.

Commitment looks like showing up on days when showing up is the last thing you feel like doing. It looks like doing the same unglamorous tasks over and over because they're part of the process. It looks like hard work — not the Instagram version of hard work with dramatic music and sweat-soaked inspiration, but the real kind. The quiet, stubborn kind that most people don't see.

Goals don't happen because you want them to. Goals happen because you make them happen, repeatedly, through actions that are simple to understand and genuinely difficult to sustain. That gap — between simple and easy — is where most dreams die. Not because people don't care enough, but because no one told them that the boring part is actually the whole thing.

An Invitation

If you want to see what it looks like behind the scenes — not the polished version, but the real one — I'd invite you to follow along on my social channels. That's where I share my life as I live it. As unfiltered and unimpressive as it often is, it's the truth of what goal-setting looks like in real time.

And maybe more importantly, I hope this is a reminder to you: set your goals. Own them. Don't wait until you feel ready or until the timing is perfect or until someone else validates what you already know you want to pursue. Start now, do the boring work, and trust that time invested in the right direction compounds in ways you can't always see in the moment.

It's simple. It's not easy. But it's worth it.

— Justin

Justin Stephens

Justin Stephens

Justin Stephens is a father of three, Variety Manager in Training at WinCo Foods, and the founder of America's Holding Company. He writes about ownership, rebuilding, and showing up.

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