The Myth of Being “Ready”: Why Motivation Is a Poor Long-Term Strategy

On an Olympic track, athletes kneel at their starting positions. Their bodies tense, eyes fixed ahead, listening for the word “ready” and waiting for the sound of the gun. When the signal comes, they explode forward, running with power and precision. It is exhilarating to watch.

But the readiness you see on the track did not begin at the starting line.

It started months, even years earlier.

It began with training in the heat of the sun, in pouring rain, on days when nothing felt inspiring.

It began through pain, fatigue, disappointment, and injury.

It began when no one was watching.

It began when the athlete ran alone, lifted weights in silence, and persisted through routines that seemed meaningless at the time.

Contrary to what we think, readiness is not a state. It is the accumulation of disciplined action over time. It is forged in circumstances that feel inconvenient, uncomfortable, or even pointless. Believing you can wait until you feel ready is believing in a myth. 

Feeling ready is a signal, not a prerequisite and waiting for it is a delay disguised as preparation.

Why the Myth Persists

People cling to readiness because it offers comfort. It tells us we can plan perfectly, know enough, and wait for motivation to appear. It promises that one day, conditions will align and we will naturally take action. That promise rarely materializes. 

Motivation is fleeting. 

Motivation is emotional.

Motivation cannot replace consistency, courage, or practice.

Readiness appeals to perfectionists. 

It appeals to procrastinators. 

It appeals to anyone afraid of failure. 

But the truth is simple: readiness comes from doing, not thinking. It comes from small, persistent steps, often in conditions we cannot control.

Why Motivation Is Overrated

Motivation feels good, but it is unreliable. You will not always feel inspired. Some days your energy will be low. Some mornings you will wake up exhausted or distracted. Waiting for motivation to push you forward is a strategy that fails more often than it succeeds.

Long-term results come from habits, routines, and decisions made regardless of feeling inspired. 

Motivation is a spark. 

Habits are the engine. 

Habits do not rely on feelings.

Habits create results even when enthusiasm fades.

The Practical Reality of Readiness

Readiness is an illusion because it implies a perfect alignment of circumstances, timing, and mental state. These conditions rarely exist. Success does not require feeling ready. It requires acting anyway. Every athlete, entrepreneur, artist, and leader has taken steps they were not ready for. They failed. They learned. They adjusted. They persisted. That is how results happen.

Waiting to feel ready results in delayed action. Delayed action results in missed opportunities. Every day spent waiting is a day lost to fear, overthinking, and indecision.

How to Act Without Feeling Ready

1. Start Small, Start Real

If you want to run, begin with a short route. If you want to write, begin with one paragraph. Small actions compound. They build competence and confidence.

2. Accept Discomfort as a Sign of Progress

Growth is uncomfortable. Waiting to feel comfortable is waiting for stagnation. Discomfort is proof that you are stepping beyond familiar limits.

3. Commit to Routines, Not Inspiration

The long-term engine is consistency. Show up. Repeat actions daily. Track progress. Avoid relying on emotional highs to carry effort.

4. Ignore the Perfect Moment

The perfect moment rarely exists. Resources are never perfect. Circumstances are never ideal. Action in imperfect conditions is the mark of real achievement.

5. Redefine Readiness as Preparation

Readiness should be understood not as waiting, but as preparation. Preparation is doing the work even when you do not feel like it. Preparation builds the skills, habits, and resilience that eventually make decisive moments manageable.

Athletes train when no one is watching. 

Entrepreneurs pitch ideas before they have experience. 

Writers finish books while the world doubts them. 

Leaders make difficult decisions without feeling fully equipped.

Musicians practice scales until their fingers are raw. 

All of them acted before feeling ready. All of them relied on systems, discipline, and repetition instead of waiting for motivation.

Why This Matters for Everyone

Believing in readiness creates procrastination disguised as planning. 

Believing in motivation creates inconsistency disguised as ambition. 

Action, however imperfect, generates feedback, learning, and momentum. 

Action builds confidence. 

Action produces results. 

Waiting for readiness or inspiration produces stagnation and regret.

If you are trying to launch a project, improve a skill, or change a habit, the only reliable path is doing, not waiting. 

Every day you act without feeling ready, you increase the likelihood of success. 

Every day you wait, you lose more than time; you lose confidence in your ability to lead yourself.

Final Thoughts

The athletes kneeling at the starting line did not wait to feel ready. They trained relentlessly, day after day, in conditions that were inconvenient, painful, and imperfect. When the gun fired, they were ready not because they felt ready, but because they had already done the work.

The same principle applies to your goals. Feeling ready is a luxury. Action is a necessity. Motivation will help you sometimes, but discipline and repetition will carry you further. Readiness is a myth. Action is reality. Start where you are, do what you can, and persistence will make you unstoppable.

This Thing Called Self‑Control: Learning to Design Better Yeses by Saying No

We all talk about self‑control like it is some rare skill that only the strong have. We think it means resisting impulses in the moment and holding back until we win. But self‑control is not a heroic act of willpower on demand. It is a  practice of design. It is the choices we make in advance that shape our ability to follow through later.

Systems Over Goals

In Atomic Habits, James Clear  writes that, “You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” The idea is simple: Goals are the destination. Systems are the path. Without systems, self‑control becomes something we hope for instead of something we build.

The Habit Loop

When we think of self‑control as a momentary battle, we set ourselves up to lose. We think if we just feel stronger today, we will resist that distraction, skip that snack, stay off our phones, or work for longer. But self‑control rarely thrives on feeling. It thrives on structure.

Charles Duhigg in The Power of Habit. He tells us that habits are loops made of a cue, a routine, and a reward. Duhigg explains that when we understand the cues that trigger our behaviors, we can change the routines they lead to. This means self‑control starts not with resisting impulses but with noticing what prompts them in the first place.

Energy, Willpower, and Design

Think about it for a moment.

We usually fail self‑control at night after a long day because our energy reserves are low.

We grab the easiest thing we can find. That is how our brain is wired to conserve effort. If we want to change that, we must change the environment where the choice happens.

We must put the hard decisions earlier in the day when we have more energy. We must remove easy temptations so the default choice becomes the better one.

Another point worth noting comes from Roy F. Baumeister’s research on willpower. Baumeister and John Tierney wrote about willpower in Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength. They show that willpower is not infinite. It gets depleted as the day goes on. This means treating self‑control as something we summon in the moment is not realistic.

Instead we need to design our lives so we are not constantly draining our limited supply. We cannot make every choice a battle. We must arrange our routines so many of those choices are already made in favor of what matters.

The Real Role of Self‑Control

Almost every self‑help book that takes self‑control seriously points to the same truth. The real change happens when we choose the right context. When we remove the easy yes that leads us astray, we make it easier to say yes to what we care about. This is how self‑control stops being a daily struggle and becomes a predictable outcome of good design.

Designing the Path, Not Waiting for Motivation

Stop thinking of self‑control as resisting a pull. Start thinking of it as shaping the path we walk on. That shift is subtle but powerful. When we know what environments and routines help us, we stop relying on inspiration. We stop hoping we will feel strong enough tomorrow. We build conditions that support our goals without requiring daily battles of will.

Here is what that looks like in real life.

If we want to write more, we do not depend on feeling motivated at 10 pm. We set a writing time earlier in the day. We keep our writing space ready. We remove distractions from that space. We do not wait for mood or excitement. We build the context where showing up becomes easier than putting it off.

If we want to eat better, we do not rely on resisting snacks on the spot. We remove tempting foods from the house. We prepare meals in advance. We make the healthy choice the default choice. That way, the moment of decision does not require strength. It simply unfolds naturally.

If we want to be more productive, we stop believing that motivation is the engine. We build routines. We track our progress. We celebrate consistency, not bursts of enthusiasm. We recognize that habits are the engines that make self‑control sustainable.

The Power of Saying No

We also need to face an uncomfortable truth. Saying no is as important as saying yes. A yes to one thing is a no to something else. When we agree to every request, every distraction, every impulse, we dilute our focus. We scatter our energy. We end up exhausted by the end of the day with little to show for it.

We must learn to say no to the immediate pull so we can say yes to the long‑term gain. Saying no to a night of scrolling might mean saying yes to a stronger focus. Saying no to an unhealthy choice might mean saying yes to greater well‑being. Saying no to busyness might mean saying yes to meaningful work.

Self‑Control as Design, Not Struggle

This is a design problem. We are not perfect. We will slip. We will choose the easy yes sometimes. That is expected. The question is whether we build systems that catch us most of the time or whether we leave everything to chance.

The Long Game

When we design better yeses by saying no to the easy distractions, we take control of our days. We choose our habits rather than being chosen by them. We create conditions where self‑control is the default instead of a daily battle.

We do not have to be perfect. We do not have to be strong at every moment. We only need to build better contexts and better routines. When we do that, self‑control becomes less about resisting and more about living in a way that supports our goals.

Self‑control is not a rare gift. 

It is a set of practices. 

It is the result of choices made ahead of time. 

It is the design of our environment and routines. 

It is the better yes that appears when we have said no to the easy distractions.

Final Thought

If we stop thinking of self‑control as a struggle and start thinking of it as design, we change how we live. 

We move from hoping for strength to creating support. 

We build better habits. 

We make better choices. 

And over time, we realize that self‑control was never about resisting. It was about arranging our lives so the right choices become the natural ones.

The Lies We Tell Ourselves: Facing the Truth Behind Our Resolutions and How to Make Them Real

January: The Month of Self-Deception

January is peculiar. It’s the only month where collective delusion feels socially acceptable. Somehow, telling ourselves we’ll overhaul our lives in a few days doesn’t feel unrealistic but like a rite of passage.

Every new year we make promises to ourselves. January arrives, and we declare we’ll finally eat better, exercise more, spend less, or finish the side project we’ve been “planning” for months.

Two weeks in, reality hits. Nothing has changed. The gym membership is still an unused card in your wallet. Meal prep exists only in Instagram posts. Your side project is still a file called “Draft1.”

Why do we lie to ourselves so easily? Why is it that every year, we lie to ourselves about what we can do?

The answer? Because it’s easier to believe in a story than face the truth.

But what if we stopped lying and started being honest?

Being honest is uncomfortable, but it’s the only way resolutions actually work.

The Cost of Lying to Yourself

At first glance, telling yourself you’ll “fix everything” might feel harmless. It gives a temporary boost of hope. But in the long run, these unkept promises weigh on us. They reinforce a pattern of disappointment and self-criticism. Each abandoned resolution is a small reminder that we are failing, not because we lack effort, but because we set ourselves up with impossible expectations.

Being honest, on the other hand, has a liberating effect. It  recalibrates our standards. By accepting what’s realistically possible, we reduce the cycle of guilt and self-reproach that follows every missed goal.

How to Be Honest With Yourself

Honesty with oneself is rarely simple. It requires reflection, patience, and a willingness to confront uncomfortable truths. Here’s how to approach it:

1.Start With Reflection

Before writing a list of resolutions, consider last year. Which promises did you actually keep? Which ones never got off the ground? Reflecting on past patterns is not an exercise in shame but clarity. Understanding your habits, limits, and energy levels gives context to your ambitions.

2. Admit Where You Won’t Change, and Redirect Focus

If you know you won’t ever be a morning person, stop lying that you’ll suddenly rise at 5am to meditate. Be honest: “I function better later in the day.” Then adjust your goal: evening walks, night journaling, or a small consistent routine that actually fits your energy.

Instead of “I’ll wake up at 5 am to run,” say: “I’ll walk for 20 minutes after work.” 

3. Call Out Motivation Lies

Saying “I’ll go to the gym because I want to get fit” is often a lie. Motivation isn’t constant. Honesty here means identifying the real driver: social pressure, fear, aesthetics, or health concerns, and working with that truth.

Instead of pretending you’ll work out because “you love it,” acknowledge: “I hate running alone, so I’ll join a class with friends.” 

4. Recognise Your Hidden Priorities

Many resolutions fail because they clash with what we actually spend our time on. Being honest requires auditing your habits without judgment. Where does your energy really go?

You want to write a book, but Netflix consumes evenings? Schedule 15 minutes of writing after your show. Small, realistic increments beat aspirational fantasies.

5. Make it SMART

Resolutions are often abstract like “I’ll eat healthier.” Honest tracking demands specificity: what counts as success, and how will you know?

Instead of vague “eat healthier,” write: “I’ll include one vegetable at lunch and dinner every day this week.” It’s specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and time bound.

6. Admit Emotional Weak Spots

If you know certain moods or triggers derail you, own them. If stress makes you snack, don’t lie and say, “I’ll stop snacking entirely.” Be honest instead and say, “When stressed, I’ll swap chips for fruit or a walk.” In this way, you’re owning up to the behavior and creating a realistic management approach.

7. Treat Your Energy Like Currency

We often lie about what we have energy for. Honesty is about budgeting our effort realistically. Instead of promising 3-hour study blocks daily, schedule 30–45 minutes of deep work when energy is highest. 

8. Accept That Some Goals Are Timing-Dependent

Not all resolutions are about effort. Some depend on timing, opportunity, or resources. Denying that is a lie. Want to travel more but money is tight? Be honest: plan smaller local trips or a postponed major trip. 

Honesty as a Strategy, Not a Cop-Out

There’s a misconception that being honest with yourself is an excuse to aim lower. It isn’t. Honesty allows you to strategise. 

If your goal is financial health, being honest about spending habits helps you create actionable steps instead of abstract wishes. 

If your goal is creative, honesty about your available time ensures consistency without burnout.

Honesty forces a different kind of courage. It asks you to acknowledge limits, confront distractions, and accept that some dreams require longer timelines.

It asks for reflection rather than denial. The result isn’t a lesser life, but a life approached with clarity, self-compassion, and sustainable action.

A New Approach to Resolutions

This January, consider this: instead of crafting a list of sweeping promises, start with honesty. 

Identify what you can realistically commit to. 

Recognise your natural tendencies. 

Accept that some goals will need more time than others. 

We’ve told ourselves enough lies. There’s still ample time to be honest and adjust our goals. How honest have you been yourself and your goals?