60 Seconds to Stop Self-Sabotage: Noelle Pikus Pace’s “No Excuses” Rule That Forces Execution
About this Video:
This episode was a fun one for me because Noelle Pikus Pace and I didn’t meet through business—our paths crossed through track, which made the conversation feel instantly personal. We kicked things off talking about our kids (my son serving in Frankfurt, her daughter heading to Munich), and I loved how naturally faith and family were part of the background without turning the episode into something “formal.” That’s honestly how real life works—your vision isn’t separate from your home life. It’s all connected.
I’ve been trying to have Noelle on the podcast for over a year, and I wanted to keep this conversation tight and practical—because my listeners are busy. Entrepreneurs, leaders, people carrying responsibility. They don’t need another motivational quote. They need something they can use.
Noelle’s whole premise is simple but kinda dangerous (in a good way): most people don’t struggle with vision—they struggle with the tiny gap between knowing what to do… and actually doing it. She calls it the inaction–action gap, and her solution is what the book is built around: 60 seconds of ownership.
What hit me early was how she explained that excuses don’t usually sound like “excuses.” They sound rational. They sound responsible. “I don’t have time.” “Tomorrow.” “I need to research a little more.” And before you know it, tomorrow becomes next week, then next month, and you look up at the end of the year wondering what happened.
Then she dropped the line that reframed everything for me: she won an Olympic medal in about 60 seconds going 90 miles an hour down an icy track. And her point wasn’t just the sports story—it was the mindset shift: if that much can happen in 60 seconds, what else can happen in 60 seconds when you stop negotiating with yourself?
We went deep on the difference between ownership and self-blame, and I appreciated her honesty there. Ownership isn’t beating yourself up. It’s choosing intentionally. It’s being able to say, “I’m doing this on purpose,” whether that means pushing through a deadline tonight or shutting the laptop at 5PM tomorrow to be present with your family. Same action, different energy—because one is chosen and one is avoidance disguised as effort.
My favorite part was when we made it real: hard conversations. Firing someone. Confronting a partner. The stuff everyone delays. Noelle’s answer was refreshingly simple: 60 seconds is the first move—knock on the door, send the text, schedule the meeting. Notice. Decide. Act. That’s how execution begins.
She closed with a 7-day challenge called the Daily 3: write down what went well today, what didn’t go well, and how you’ll improve tomorrow. Simple on paper—powerful in real life. That’s the whole theme of this show: turning vision into reality… by executing in the moments that count.
Noelle’s Book on Amazon
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