Story Poster
Texas A&M Football

The LiucciCast: Talking Auburn loss and season's final games with The Big Truth

November 6, 2018
11,518

Hunter Goodwin "The Big Truth" joins Billy Liucci in today's episode of the LiucciCast. The duo discusses Saturday's loss to Auburn and looks ahead at the remaining homestretch of the 2018 season. 

Subscribe to The LiucciCast on iTunesSpotifyGoogle Play, Google PodcastStitcher, TuneIn, Overcast, RSS

See All TexAgs Podcasts

 

Discussion from...

The LiucciCast: Talking Auburn loss and season's final games with The Big Truth

7,384 Views | 4 Replies | Last: 5 yr ago by Cotton79
Lateralus Ag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
The big truth?

LOL
gocobra
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I just wish Billy could get Hunter to open up a little and speak his mind.





joking Hunter - please don't hurt me.
sharpdressedman
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Land the plane more frequently. Don't fly from Dallas to Houston via Spokane.
Cotton79
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Great discussion, Ags. Hunter's analogy about someone being obese and waking up one morning to "do something about it" is apropos. Yet, his follow-on is equally true: you fall off the wagon when the old habits return to haunt you, even for just a day. Psychologists will tell you that there is a scale of "pain:" one side will be "the way things are" whereas the other side will be "the things could be."

You could be obese.

You could be an alcoholic or addicted to drugs (legal, illegal, or otherwise).

You could be chronically late person who loses jobs because of the tardiness.

You could be a corporate bully.

You could be a passive personality at work, always overlooked for better opportunities.

The list is endless when it comes to personal behaviors and the weakness within.

Here's the psychological formula for change: when the psychological pain of continuing the way things are becomes more than the pain of changing your ways, then you'll make that change. Until then, the pain of change will outweigh your current status quo, and you'll just "live with it." You won't like it, but you'll live with it.

And perhaps that's where we were with Kevin Sumlin & Crew: we just lived with it for too long.

Oh, and I oughta know about these behavioral preferences; I just had triple bypass surgery two months ago.
Refresh
Page 1 of 1
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.