You Already Would Have
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You Already Would Have: The "Anytime" Trap in Executive Fitness
Marwan Killu | Iron Suits Podcast. If you’re a high-performing man telling yourself "I can dial it in anytime," this episode is the diagnostic you’ve been avoiding.
Listen on: Apple Podcasts | Spotify
We aren't talking about laziness; we are talking about sophisticated avoidance. In this briefing, I deconstruct why the same intelligence that built your business is being used to build the perfect excuses for your physical decline—and how to stop narrating your potential and start executing your standard.
The Excuse That Sounds Like a Plan
There is one phrase in the executive vocabulary that does more damage than "I'm too busy."
It’s quieter. It sounds like confidence: "I can dial it in anytime."
This episode of Iron Suits takes that sentence apart. This phrase is the load-bearing wall of a structure that is costing high-performing men more than they realize.
We explore why High Performer Fitness stalls not because of a lack of discipline, but because of a high level of sophistication in constructing a narrative that justifies inaction.
Why Intelligent Men Build the Best Excuses
High-performer fitness doesn't stall because of laziness; it stalls because of Pattern Recognition.
The same diagnostic intelligence that built your business—the systems thinking and the ability to construct a compelling narrative under pressure—is the exact capability being deployed to explain why right now isn't the moment.
The Precise Language of Avoidance:
"It's just a season" — Converts measurable decline into a temporary condition with no mechanism for correction.
"I'm focused on growth right now" — Creates a queue in which health is always legitimate to defer.
"I've earned the flexibility" — Exempts the user from biology on the basis of prior effort.
"I can dial it in anytime" — Keeps inaction feeling chosen rather than structural.
The Identity Threat Most Men Miss
Physical decline for a CEO isn't just uncomfortable; it’s a Structural Identity Threat.
When the threat is to your self-image—the man who is in control, vital, and at full capacity—the psychological protection becomes invisible.
You don't experience it as protection; you experience it as "clarity."
Three Principles for Men Who Are Done Narrating
We close this episode not with motivation, but with Sequence:
Truth Before Comfort: Start with a diagnostic, not a commitment. Get the labs. Get the assessment. Use external data that can't be narrated away.
Measurement Before Narrative: For most leaders, the narrative has led the measurement for years. We are reversing the order.
Action Before Identity Repair: Your identity doesn't update on intention; it updates on Evidence. Make the appointment. The identity repair is a consequence of the action.
Who This Episode Is For
If you have solved harder problems than this, yet apply rigour everywhere except your own body, this is your wake-up call. Iron Suits is not just a podcast; it is a standard.
If you know that "anytime" isn't actually a plan, it’s time to listen.
THE STRATEGIC NEXT STEP
The narrative ends where the data begins. If you’re still telling yourself you can "dial it in anytime," you are operating on an assumption, not an audit.
High-level leadership requires accurate KPIs—and your body is your most critical business asset.
Stop narrating your potential and start measuring your reality.
I’ve developed an Executive Health Audit designed specifically for men who are done with the "Anytime Trap" and ready to weaponize their physical infrastructure for the next decade of dominance.
👉 Secure Your Executive Audit & Training Framework Here
CONNECT WITH MARWAN
🔵 Facebook: Facebook.com/marwankillu 💼 LinkedIn: LinkedIn.com/in/marwankillufitness