Motivation Is Not Reliable
Motivation feels strong in the moment.
But it does not last and for very good reason.
Many women think they fail because they are “not motivated enough.”
That is a lie you have to stop telling yourself.
The truth is motivation is not meant to be stable.
Women who stay consistent with exercise, money habits, or business growth are not chasing motivation. They are using structure that creates a healthy habit for them. You can do this as well!
This is what science has been showing for years.
Your brain does not run on motivation. It runs on patterns, habits, and systems.
When you understand this, everything changes for the better.
The Truth About Motivation and the Brain
Your brain is wired to seek reward. It likes new things, quick wins, and fast results.
This is where dopamine comes in. Very addictive and can be very dangerous if not tapped into properly.
Dopamine is about “wanting,” not “doing”
Dopamine is a brain signal that pushes you to chase something.
It helps you start things but it does not help you finish them. Have you ever had a diet your tried and was only able to commit to it for a few days? Yeah, thats it!
That is why:
- You feel excited at the start of a new goal
- You lose interest after a few days
- You wait for motivation to come back
- Then you start it all over again
This is not a personality flaw but normal brain behavior. When you become aware of this, you can start implementing the changes you need.
Why motivation always goes up and down
Motivation changes based on sleep, strees, emotions, daily life demands, and overall mental health.
For women who manage work, family, and personal goals, mental load is high. Especially when you are working from home! This uses a lot of brain energy. Something men will never understand.
So motivation drops low quick like a credit score. Not because you are failing, but because your brain is overloaded with information.
Why High-Achieving Women Feel Stuck
Women carry multiple roles such as career responsibilities, family care, emotional support for others, personal growth goals, managing multiple schedules, and sexual needs of their husbands.
This creates something called mental load fatigue. When your brain is overloaded, it avoids extra effort. This can cause you to delay task you need to complete, feel behind, and make you think you need more motivation when you actually don’t.
You need to lessen the load you have on your mind!
Why Motivation-Based Plans Fail
Motivation relies on your emotion at the moment and emotions are temporary. You feel great, you will do it. You feel like you are having a hard day, you may stop or not do it at all. Then the cycle begins again because you feel guilty for not doing it/finishing it.
“I will start when I feel ready” is not the answer.
Create Systems to Replace Motivation
A system is a simple structure that tells you what to do, even when you don’t feel like it. The thought process is removed and that is the key! No more thinking, no more mental overload.
Systems reduce daily stress
When you have a system, you dont have to decide everyday, argue with yourself or waste energy thinking.
Look at meal prepping for example. If you create a meal for the next 3 days to follow a diet, you just have to pull it out the fridge and heat it up for a minute or 2. You are less likely to go to a fast food restuarant because you don’t want to spend the time cooking or thinking of what to cook. It is already done!
Simple Systems That Build Consistency
You don’t need a complicated system or a million apps to follow. Just use the Small Start (SS) rule. Here are a few examples:
- Physical health is your goal > Do a 10 minute walk a day
- Want to start reading more > 2 pages a day
- Need to clean the house > Do a section in a room a day
- Want to save money > Move $10 a week to a savings account
You are not in competition with anyone. You just have to be a better version you were of yourself from yesterday. Small actions builds momentum which builds long-term success.
The Power of Friction
Part of keeping a system is removing the tempations and making your system easy to access!
Here are a few tips:
- Want to workout more > Layout your workout clothes the night before
- Reducing your sweet intake > Don’t have any in the house
- Looking to save money > Have it on auto transfer
- Want to read more > Keep the book next to your bed
The key is to make your system easy to do and bad habits harder to access.
The Big Shift You Need to Make
Stop looking for ways to stay motivated and start looking for ways to be systematic. Look for ways to create automatic systems! Stop trying to feel ready and start building a system that creates joy and ease.
If you are tired and looking to stay on track with the system you implemented, lower the task. Do the smallest version of it because consistency matters more than intensity.