Typo Fu Master
"Uncommon"
- Joined
- May 30, 2005
- Posts
- 3,724
I think the common idea of motivation is like a personal trainer, standing over you, humiliating you and egging you on and shouting in your ear.
That doesn't work for me. I can't do that to myself. Eventually that energy wears itself out.
Pare down the tasks to exactly what you need to do and then get in the habit of doing them. I picked 10,000 steps because that's been presented as how much exercise you need to do in a day to be healthy. I have a calorie count based on my weight and then an app to keep track.
Make it easy, don't make it fanatic. Work smarter, not harder, and rely on the power of habit.
Realistically it's about making it easy to do and then building the right habits around them so it becomes just a part of your day. Make them sustainable and reasonable and if you want to do something really big, break it down into reasonable bits and do them one by one over time.
“[...] the awesome splendor of the universe is much easier to deal with if you think of it as a series of small chunks.”
― Terry Pratchett, Mort
I rag on myself for not doing it but it doesn't work for me either. I know that I AM capable of doing what needs to be done, but I think my priorities and definitions of what NEEDS to be done might differ from yours. And I do tend to look at the big picture and see everything all at once and feel overwhelmed. So step 1 is to get organized and make a list. Step 2 is to actually use it.

I thought about a reward for accomplishing whatever goal I set but its just so easy to grab the reward without doing the work first.
And I heard it takes 3 weeks to develop a habit. That's a long time when you'd rather be killing aliens.