Success Is Where Most People Fail

Most people don't fail at the top. They fail on the way down , and they never see it coming. Statistically, more mountaineers die descending Everest than climbing it. Not because the climb down is harder. Because the second the goal is reached, the brain switches off the exact focus that got you there. In this video, we're going to explore why reaching the summit of your goals is never the finish line you think it is, and learn how to survive the dangerous drop-off that follows every major win. #Psychology #SelfImprovement #BehavioralScience #Neuroscience #Mindset #GoalSetting #PersonalGrowth #Discipline #Motivation #Everest #Dopamine #DeepFocus #HighPerformance #SuccessMindset #HabitFormation #mentalstrength #TheMindRecast Timeline 00:00 – The Deadliest Part of Any Climb Isn't the One You Think 01:15 – The Psychology of "Arrival" (and Why It's a Trap) 02:30 – May 10th, 1996: The Everest Disaster That Proves It 04:15 – How This Shows Up in Your Business, Body, and Relationships 05:30 – The Second Summit Framework: How to Survive Your Own Descent 07:45 – The Mindset Shift That Actually Makes Success Last If this reframed how you think about "winning," hit subscribe — The Mind Recast breaks down the hidden psychology behind focus, achievement, and the frameworks high performers use to actually sustain what they build. Search Queries: Psychology, Self Improvement, Human Behavior, Behavioral Science, Behavioral Psychology, Neuroscience, Productivity, Cognitive Biases, Emotional Intelligence, Habit Formation, Decision Making, Mental Models, Discipline, Personal Growth, Brain Science, Arrival Fallacy, Tal Ben-Shahar, hedonic adaptation, goal achievement psychology, why success feels empty, psychology of achievement, dopamine and goals, why I feel empty after reaching my goals, Everest 1996 disaster, Rob Hall Everest, death zone decision making, post achievement depression, self sabotage after success, sustaining success, hyper-vigilance and focus, losing motivation after winning