Keith and Laura explore why they resist starting things—even when they’re likely to bring joy, growth, or connection—and how to move from reluctance to intentional, sustainable action.
Resistance is often about the stories we tell ourselves and what might become if we try. It isn’t always the thing we are avoiding, rather the commitment, emotional impact, fear of “not getting it,” or wasting time. Twin Peaks becomes the doorway into a bigger conversation about why we hesitate to start new things—and how to move toward the life we actually want, one small choice at a time. Laura and Keith unpack deeper patterns around time, habits, and fear of future commitment.
Expectations and Permission to Quit
Laura starts with her reluctance to watch certain shows, then realizes her resistance often points to fear about the future shape of her life, not the “show” itself. She worries that liking “one more thing” will consume precious time and energy. To counter this, she leans on small, doable commitments—an episode at a time, a workout in manageable bites—and personal rules like closing a book after page 100 if it’s not working. She shares how these boundaries help her avoid burnout, trust her own taste, and stay aligned with the life she wants to design.
Consumption and Creating
Keith names a familiar tension: it’s far easier to hit “next episode” than to go for a walk, drink water, or sit down to write. He reflects on how shows, books, and podcasts can be both valuable research and a convenient hiding place from the hard work of creating. Rather than demonizing entertainment, he looks at balance—asking what he is not doing with his time, and how over-bingeing undercuts the goals he says he cares about. Underneath it all is a desire to be more spontaneous, intentional, and realistic about what he can sustain.
Sustainable Instead of “all or nothing”
If you’re resisting something right now—a habit, a project, a conversation, even a new show—this episode is an invitation to get curious instead of critical. Keith and Laura don’t offer rigid plans or quick fixes; they model what it looks like to notice your patterns, question the stories you’re telling yourself, and experiment with smaller, more honest commitments. We’re allowed to stop what isn’t working, to choose what actually fits our lives, and to move toward change at a pace we can sustain.
Thanks for Joining Us.

In Residence with Keith and Laura
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This post was created with assistance from Perplexity AI, which helped generate and organize key points based on the podcast transcript.
