
World Cup Series Episode 06 | Built From Pain: How Failure, Humiliation, and Rejection Create Elite Competitors
Professor P with Dr.Peykar
Failure hurts.
Rejection stings.
Humiliation leaves scars.
Yet when we study the world's greatest athletes, one truth becomes impossible to ignore:
Their greatest victories were often born from their greatest defeats.
In this episode of The Inner Game of the World Cup, Professor P explores the psychology and neuroscience behind adversity and why setbacks are often the catalyst for extraordinary performance.
Why does the brain learn more from failure than success? How do rejection and disappointment reshape confidence? Why do some athletes crumble after defeat while others come back stronger than ever?
Drawing from sport psychology, neuroscience, and decades of research on resilience, this episode reveals how elite competitors transform pain into purpose, mistakes into mastery, and failure into fuel.
Whether you're an athlete, coach, entrepreneur, leader, student, or someone navigating life's inevitable setbacks, this episode will change the way you think about failure—and show you how to use it as a competitive advantage.
Because greatness isn't built by avoiding pain.
It's built by learning from it.
In This Episode
Why the brain learns more from failure than success
• The neuroscience of neuroplasticity and adaptation
• How rejection and humiliation shape elite performers
• The psychology of resilience and post-traumatic growth
• Why confidence is built after adversity—not before it
• The difference between pain and suffering
• How world-class athletes turn setbacks into fuel
• The RESET Method: A practical framework for bouncing back from failure