by Oli Anderson, Transformational Coach for Realness
Why Choosing the Real Path of Discipline is the Only Way to Grow into Who You Actually Are
“Discipline” is one of those words that can either make people nod with quiet respect or recoil as if they’ve just been told to wake up at 5am and eat cold porridge for the rest of their lives.
For some, it’s a word that feels like freedom but for others it sounds like more of a punishment.
This article is about the truth about discipline, how to be real about it, and how it can change your life for good:
The bottom line is that if you’re serious about transformation and becoming more real, more whole, and more aligned with what actually matters to you, then discipline isn’t just a nice option – it’s absolutely essential.
This isn’t because life is ‘meant’ to be hard and so we have to force ourselves against it and it’s definitely not because we should be harsh with ourselves:
It’s because growing real requires us to move against the gravitational pull of what is easy, familiar, and unreal (a.k.a. the ego).
We’re going to explore what discipline actually is, what it’s not, and how you can begin to cultivate it in a way that supports your realness rather than crushing your humanity because discipline – when understood properly – is not about control but about alignment.
Let’s dig a little deeper:

Discipline & Realness: What We'll Cover in this Article
- Why Choosing the Real Path of Discipline is the Only Way to Grow into Who You Actually Are
- Why Discipline is Unavoidable If You Want to Grow Real
- The Two Selves: Why Inner Conflict is Built Into Being Human
- Why Discipline Matters in this Inner Battle
- What Discipline Really Is: Choosing the Real Over the Unreal From Moment to Moment
- Discipline is Not Suppression of Emotions or Desires
- From Effect to Cause: Discipline and Responsibility
- The Deeper Truth: Discipline as Devotion to Reality
- How to Cultivate Discipline Without Becoming A Robot
- The Real Reward of Discipline
Why Discipline is Unavoidable If You Want to Grow Real
If we want to transform our lives and grow into our realness, then it requires discipline:
Not the kind that comes from self-punishment (which is always driven by underlying shame) or fear, but the kind that keeps us aligned with our vision even when it’s uncomfortable, inconvenient, or emotionally challenging.
It’s important to understand that real growth isn’t an automatic process and so it doesn’t just happen because we keep living. Instead, it happens because we keep making better, more real choices – over and over again – especially in those moments when it would be easier not to.
Discipline is the key to making these REAL CHOICES because it’s what keeps us showing up for our lives when our old habits, emotions, and conditioning are pulling us in a direction we don’t really want to go in.
In other words, discipline is what allows us to stay oriented towards truth rather than slipping back into familiar patterns of resistance, reactivity, and fragmentation.
If realness is about living in alignment with what is true about ourselves, the world, and reality, then discipline is the muscle that allows us to embody that alignment in a consistent way.
Without discipline, realness remains a philosophy but with discipline, it becomes a way of life.
The Two Selves: Why Inner Conflict is Built Into Being Human
The reason discipline is essential is because every human being is – at the very least – two human beings in competition with one another.
Every wisdom tradition has named this in different ways but they all point to the same inner dynamic:
Some speak of the higher and lower self.
In the Bible, we hear of the spirit and the flesh.
In the philosophy of realness, we talk about realness versus ego.
This is not metaphorical or merely theoretical – it’s deeply experiential and we can all recognise the feeling of wanting two different things at once:
There’s a ‘part’ of us that knows what’s ‘right’, true, and aligned and then there’s a ‘part’ that just wants comfort, familiarity, distraction, or emotional protection.
Your realness is who you are when you’re aligned with the truth about yourself, the world, and reality – it’s the ‘part’ of you that can participate fully in life rather than hiding from it and that allows you to move towards wholeness, connection, and flow.
Your ego, by contrast, is who you’ve become conditioned to think you are because of underlying emotional ‘stuff’ like shame, guilt, and/or trauma and your fear of facing these things combined with outdated biological wiring and erroneous social programming.
You’re ego isn’t ‘evil’ and you can’t ‘kill’ it (because it’s not real – it’s just an idea you treat as being real) but it is reactive, defensive, and attachment-based which stops you from growing and flowing with your own life.
The ego is the “lower” self not because it’s bad but because it operates at a lower level of awareness:
It’s focused on protection, control, validation-seeking, and avoidance of the truth which is why it keeps us fragmented (which means we’re split between what we know is real and what feels emotionally safer in the moment).
Your realness allows you to be present in your own life but your ego pulls you away from it.
Why Discipline Matters in this Inner Battle
Understanding this distinction is crucial when we talk about discipline and how to cultivate it:
Your realness will consistently invite you to grow, expand, and move towards your deeper vision and so it will call you into truth, responsibility, creativity, and connection.
Your ego will consistently pull you back into what is familiar, emotionally comfortable, and socially conditioned even if it no longer serves you.
The whole point of discipline is to ensure that you take the actions and embody the qualities that support your growth into deeper realness rather than giving in to your ego and its desire to keep you in a state of fragmentation and unreality.
The reason this takes discipline is simple:
The ego runs on autopilot and so it follows habits, emotional patterns, and conditioned responses without you having to ‘do’ anything – it’s always ‘easier’ in the short-term to live from the ego because it requires no conscious effort (in the long-term it messes your life up, though, because you end up being detached from yourself and your life and living in the Void).
Discipline is what allows you to step out of the ego’s gravitational pull and get your real life back – it’s what enables you to interrupt old habits, question illusions, and choose differently.
At first, this requires effort but as you realign with reality and move back into flow, what once felt hard begins to feel natural and you develop a state of effortlessness that carries you deeper into yourself and life.
Discipline is not about forcing yourself to be something you’re not – it’s about returning to what you actually are.
What Discipline Really Is: Choosing the Real Over the Unreal From Moment to Moment
At its core, discipline is about consistently making the real choice over the unreal choice by focusing on what matters the most (discipline, focus, and consistency are always a winning combination).
That means two fundamental shifts in how you live your life:
1. Living by vision and principles rather than feelings
When you lack discipline, you allow our moment-to-moment feelings to dictate your actions:
If we feel tired, we stop; if we feel insecure, we hide. If we feel bored, we distract ourselves. If we feel emotional discomfort, we resist and go into hiding.
Discipline is not about ignoring or suppressing feelings but about CHOOSING not to be ruled by them:
It’s about knowing what your vision is – your values, how to embody them, who you’re becoming, what you stand for, and what’s real for you – and choosing in alignment with that, even when your emotions are pulling you in different directions.
Your feelings are information that change from one moment to the next but your vision is a compass that doesn’t change what it’s pointing towards (your realness).
Without discipline, feelings pull you off course; with discipline, feelings are acknowledged, allowed, and then integrated into conscious choice.
2. Living for the long term rather than the short term
Discipline is also about choosing what serves your future self rather than what gratifies your present self (not that you shouldn’t be present but be present with your realness, not your ego):
The ego lives for immediate relief, comfort, and stimulation; realness lives for meaning, growth, and alignment.
This doesn’t mean becoming rigid, controlling, or joyless – it just means making choices from the awareness of who you’re becoming as you go deeper into expressing your realness.
Sometimes, this might look small and pretty ‘ordinary’ – like choosing whole foods instead of the cream bun, going for the walk instead of scrolling, or getting up and doing the work instead of waiting for “motivation”.
These are all actions that are aligned with where you want to be taking yourself – they’re votes for the future version of you that you know is (even more) real.
Discipline is Not Suppression of Emotions or Desires
One of the biggest misunderstandings about discipline is that it requires denying or suppressing our emotional feelings or desires.
It absolutely doesn’t.
Suppression is always an ego strategy that creates fragmentation by pushing parts of ourselves away. It leads to emotional tension, burnout, and disconnection from our inner life.
Real discipline, on the other hand, is about acceptance and choice:
What this means is that you allow your feelings to be whatever it is that they are by listening to what they have to teach you, feeling them fully, but also recognising that you are not your feelings (they’re just something you have – not that you are) and that you can choose to act from your deepest vision and purpose.
Discipline essentially says:
“I honour what I feel but I choose what I become“,
This is not coldness – it’s emotional maturity.
From Effect to Cause: Discipline and Responsibility
Discipline is also about taking literal responsibility for your own growth:
This means moving from living in effect (“life happens to me”) to living in cause (“I participate in life and make things happen”).
You are not omnipotent and you can’t control everything but you’re not powerless either which means that you can always take responsibility for how you show up within what is given or presented to you.
In a practical way, you can take responsibility for three fundamental areas of your life that will keep you growing real:
1. Action
Discipline means knowing your vision, your goals, and your habits and acting accordingly without waiting to “feel like it” or waiting for “motivation” to magically show up out of nowhere.
Motivation is unreliable because feelings change but discipline is devotion to what is real (and what’s real is always real).
If you wait for the perfect emotional state, you’ll probably never move but if you act in alignment with your vision, your emotional state will often follow.
Real action is not about intensity but about consistently aiming at the things you know will take you where you want to be.
2. Qualities
Discipline is not just about what you do – it’s also about who you’re becoming.
If your realness is asking you to express yourself in a way that’s more compassionate, more patient, more grounded, more courageous, or more [whatever else] then discipline is about nurturing those qualities deliberately.
This might mean choosing presence instead of reactivity, listening instead of defending, or creating instead of consuming.
Qualities like this are all inner disciplines, not just behavioural ones, because they affect your relationship with yourself and life from the inside-out – you’re not just building habits; you’re shaping your character.
3. Skills
Realness must be embodied in the world and this almost always requires skills of some kind:
If your vision involves writing, you need to practise writing.
If it involves creating video content, you need to learn editing.
If it involves leadership, you need to develop communication and emotional intelligence.
Discipline is the willingness to be a beginner and then to practise, refine and to grow into the version of you that can do what you need to do.
The Deeper Truth: Discipline as Devotion to Reality
At its deepest level, discipline is knowing what you want in your realness and then making choices accordingly without suppressing your feelings but by transmuting them into real action.
This isn’t about becoming rigid or inhuman but about becoming integrated and whole in yourself and life:
When your body, your emotions, your mind, and your actions begin to move in the same direction fragmentation becomes wholeness and you’re no longer fighting yourself because you’re actually participating in life.

Check out my book Trust: A Manual in Becoming the Void, Building Flow, and Finding Peace if you want to go deeper into figuring out your realness and how to flow with it.
How to Cultivate Discipline Without Becoming A Robot
Discipline doesn’t grow through self-hatred or force but through clarity, compassion, and commitment.
Here are some practical ways to begin embodying discipline as realness rather than robotic control freakery:
1. Clarify your real vision
Discipline without vision becomes empty willpower and so it will just take you around in circles:
Ask yourself some questions to start digging into your own realness and the real purpose that stems from it:
- Who am I becoming when I’m most real with myself and life?
- What does a life of wholeness look like for me?
- What values do I want my actions to express?
Write down your answers and return to them in a few days to see if you still feel the same way.
Let your vision become something you feel in your body, not just something you think about.
Discipline is essentially loyalty to your vision and you acquire that loyalty by really knowing what it is that you want.
Check out my free 7-day course if you want to make strides in uncovering your vision: The 7-Day Personality Transplant System Shock for Realness and Life Purpose.
2. Define your principles
Principles are the bridge between vision and action.
Examples might include:
- “I choose truth over comfort”.
- “I act in alignment with my long-term growth”.
- “I respond rather than react”.
When emotions are strong or decisions feel unclear, return to your principles because they always give structure to your freedom.
Check out this article to go deeper: Personal Practical Philosophy and Code of Conduct: The Return to Truth
3. Start with one real habit
Discipline is built through small, embodied commitments carried out consistently over time so get started by choosing one habit that clearly aligns with your realness:
- Daily writing
- Morning movement
- Breathwork or meditation
- Honest reflection
- Skill practice
- Whatever
Make it simple but also make it non-negotiable – not because you “have to” but because this is who you actually WANT to become.
4. Practise choosing in emotional discomfort
This is where discipline is forged:
When you feel resistance, boredom, fear, or self-doubt, don’t suppress it but feel it, acknowledge it, and then ask yourself:
“What do I choose in my realness choose here?”
Then choose that.
5. Reflect weekly
Once a week, review your own progress by journalling.
Here are some basic prompts to get you started:
- Where did I act from realness?
- Where did I default to ego?
- What did I learn about myself?
Reflection transforms discipline from mechanical effort into conscious growth and allows you to keep going deeper over time.
If you really want to get serious about journalling and transforming your life over the next 21 weeks then check out my Flow Builder journal.

The Real Reward of Discipline
The reward of discipline isn’t external success – though that may certainly come – no, the real reward is integration.
You begin to trust yourself because your actions match your values; you feel grounded because you’re no longer at war with your own potential; you experience flow because you’re aligned with what is real.
The FACT is that discipline doesn’t make you less huma but it does make you more whole.
If you want to grow real, discipline is not something you “try to have” – it’s something you become one real choice at a time.
Stay real out there,

P.S. If you’re ready to grow real and start committing to yourself and life through real action then book a free coaching session with me and I’ll help you put yourself in the zone.








