The Long Game Podcast
Why do we make the choices we do? Most progress is stalled not by a lack of effort, but by the invisible scripts and unconscious patterns that drive our decision-making. The Long Game is a space for clear thinking in a noisy world, designed for those who prioritize sustainable growth over manufactured urgency.
I’m Luke Hockborn, and I deconstruct the mechanics of momentum, behavior, and first-principles thinking—specifically for the business of life and work.
We bypass the "hacks" and performative motivation of the hustle economy to focus on cognitive architecture. This isn’t about moving faster; it’s about seeing the board more clearly. If you are building something that matters and you value discipline over hype, this is your sounding board for the long-term perspective.
No shortcuts. No manufactured urgency. Just the mental models required to play the Long Game.
Episodes
18 episodes
How to Rewrite Your Mindset: Stop Letting Your Past Control Your Present
Most people treat their identity like concrete that dried when they turned eighteen. They look at their flaws, their tempers, or their anxieties and point backwards—blaming childhood trauma, their parents, or their environment. But using your h...
The Outsourced Mind — AI, Human Irrelevance & The Choice That Defines This Era
We thought more options would make us freer. Instead, they made us harder to satisfy. The danger of AI is not that machines start thinking; it’s that humans slowly stop. As convenience becomes the default, deep thinking becomes a lost art. If i...
The Attention Debt – Why More Choice Made Us Less Certain
We thought more options would make us freer. Instead, they made us harder to satisfy. In a world of infinite scrolls and visible alternatives, we don't have a lack of options—we have a lack of attention for the options we’ve already chosen. We ...
In a World Where You’re Accepted by Everyone—You’re Prioritised by No One
Most people think being liked is the ultimate social currency. You’re easy to get along with, you avoid friction, and you fit comfortably into every room. But there is a hidden, long-term cost to being the person nobody has a problem with: when...
The Predictive Prison Called Your Mind – Why Your Truth is Killing Your Potential.
Most people think they’re seeing the world as it is. They aren’t. They’re seeing a "best-guess" simulation projected by their own brain. Your mind isn’t a camera recording reality; it’s a prediction engine. In this episode of The...
Micro-Agency: The Only Freedom You Actually Have
You aren’t as in control as you think you are.We talk about "five-year plans" and "major life chapters," but those are just stories we tell after the fact. The reality of your life is much smaller. It is a relentless series of 10-...
The Safety Net Suicide Pact Keeping You Stuck
In this episode of The Long Game, we stop treating personal development like a lifestyle choice and start treating it like a biological ultimatum. We’ve been conditioned to think growth is something we browse in a catalog—a hobby we pi...
The High Price of a Wasted Winter
Most people think hard seasons are something to survive. Something to get through, forget, and move on from as quickly as possible. But the real loss isn’t the adversity itself. It’s going through it… and staying the same.Pain is expensi...
The Advice Trap: Who Are We to Figure This Out? - The Long Game's FIRST Q+A
"Who are you to be giving advice to people?"A few years ago, someone asked me that question, and it changed the way I look at everything I do. The truth? I’m not a guru, and I don't have a five-step plan for your life. I’m ju...
Ambition is Subtractive: The Hidden Price Tag of Your Potential
We’ve been told a lie about success.We’re taught to view ambition as an additive process - stacking more money, more status, and more wins on top of our current life. But the brutal reality of the Long Game is that ambition is actually s...
Why You’re Sabotaging Your Future to Protect Your Past
Why does growth often feel like an identity crisis?Most of us believe that if we just work harder or learn more, we’ll naturally "level up." But the truth is far more uncomfortable: Growth doesn’t stall because you lack ability; it stall...
The Arrival Fallacy: Why Your Brain is Lying to You About the Finish Line
We are addicted to the "fully formed" version of our goals. Whether it’s the scaled business, the peak physique, or the validated career, we treat outcomes as if they exist independently of the process. But why do we find the "start" so confron...
Why We’re Obsessed With Optimisation (Without Knowing What We’re Optimising For)
Optimisation feels productive. Tweaking, refining, upgrading, adjusting. It gives the impression of progress, even when nothing meaningful is changing.But improvement without direction is just movement without destination.In this epi...
The Illusion of Early Success
Early success is easy to misunderstand.When someone rises quickly in a company, an industry, or a business - it’s tempting to assume you’re seeing the full picture. Talent. Readiness. Mastery.But speed of advancement is not the sa...
What Pressure Does to Good Judgment
Pressure doesn’t make people reckless., It makes them narrow.Under pressure, time feels shorter. Options feel fewer. Decisions start to revolve around relief rather than quality.In this episode of The Long Game, we explor...
When Opportunity Appears Random (But Isn’t)
In this episode of The Long Game, we explore why opportunity is so often misunderstood — and why it’s rarely random at all.We look at the pattern behind opportunity: how it tends to appear at the intersection of proximity, relia...
“The Difference Between Wanting More and Being Ready For More”
In this episode of The Long Game, we explore the gap between desire and readiness and why so many capable people find themselves overwhelmed, frustrated, or stuck repeating the same stress patterns at higher levels.We look at wh...
“Why Urgency Feels Like Progress .. But Rarely Is”
Urgency feels like progress — but it usually isn’t.In this episode, expect to learn why speed is often mistaken for movement, how busyness becomes a coping mechanism, and what urgency is really pointing to beneath the surface.Follow ...