The Rebuild
The Rebuild with Dillon Phaneuf
At some point, we all have to rebuild.
Sometimes it’s after everything falls apart, loss, failure, identity collapse.
Sometimes, life is good on paper, but something’s still missing. Either way, the work is the same: look inward, take ownership, and start again, brick by brick.
This show is about that process.
I’ve been coaching full-time for nearly 15 years. I’ve walked people through physical transformation, emotional healing, relapse, addiction, growth, success, and pain that doesn’t show up in check-ins. And right now, I’m walking through my rebuild.
This podcast is where I bring the rawness of that to the surface. You’ll hear conversations with people building something real, solo episodes where I process what I’m learning in real time, and moments that hopefully remind you you’re not alone.
Whether you’re at your best and want to go higher or on the bathroom floor trying to figure out what’s next, this space is for you.
Because even when it feels like checkmate, there’s always a better move.
The Rebuild
You’re Rewarding Yourself for Bare Minimum
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One of the sneakiest ways people stall their progress is by rewarding themselves too early.
This episode breaks down a pattern that shows up again and again in fat loss, behavior change, and personal growth: premature celebration.
A lot of people are not actually inconsistent because they “don’t care.” They’re inconsistent because they keep giving themselves emotional permission to let off the gas before real momentum has been built.
One decent week turns into a cheat weekend.
A few days of hitting protein becomes a reward meal.
One stretch of better choices gets treated like proof that “I’m back.”
And then the cycle resets.
The problem is not the celebration itself. The problem is celebrating effort before the effort has actually become stable enough to produce meaningful change.
In this episode, I break down how early dopamine kills long-term drive, why people often over-identify with tiny bits of progress, and how low standards quietly keep them trapped in the same loop.
Because if every small attempt gets treated like a major breakthrough, your nervous system never learns what real consistency actually feels like.
The answer is not to be miserable or to never acknowledge wins.
The answer is raising the standard.
When your bar for “doing well” becomes more honest, your progress becomes more stable.
What We Cover
• Why premature celebration stalls momentum
• How one good stretch often turns into self-sabotage
• Why early dopamine can quietly reduce follow-through
• The difference between trying and actually building consistency
• How to raise your standards without becoming obsessive
Key Takeaways
• Minimum effort gets minimum results
• Celebrate outcomes, not attempts
• Standards create stability
If you feel like you’re always “almost getting back on track,” this episode will probably hit close to home.