Question: “I know what I need to do. I have the planner. I have the workout app. I have the goals written down. But I keep falling off track. Why can’t I stay consistent?”
Answer: Most people assume consistency is a motivation problem.
It usually isn’t.
If you can start something but struggle to keep doing it, the issue is often that you’re relying on memory, energy, or willpower to carry too much weight.
Think of your life like a house.
Motivation is the guest who shows up when she feels like it.
Systems are the load-bearing walls.
One is nice to have.
The other is what keeps the structure standing.
When women tell me they can’t stay consistent, I usually see one of three things happening:
1. The task depends on remembering
You intend to do it.
You even want to do it.
But there is no trigger that tells your brain, “This happens now.”
The result?
The task floats around your mental dashboard all day until it gets pushed aside by something louder.
System fix: Attach the habit to an existing routine.
Instead of:
- Journal daily
Try:
- Journal while drinking morning coffee
Instead of:
- Weekly budget review
Try:
- Budget review every Sunday after grocery planning
The goal is to remove the decision point.
2. The system only works on good days
A lot of routines are built for your best-case scenario.
They assume:
- Plenty of energy
- No interruptions
- Perfect focus
- A clear schedule
Real life rarely looks like that.
A system that only works when conditions are perfect is not a reliable system.
System fix: Create a minimum version.
Ask yourself:
“What is the smallest version of this habit that still counts?”
Examples:
- Ten-minute walk instead of a full workout
- Five minutes of planning instead of a complete weekly review
- One page instead of an hour of reading
Consistency grows when the floor is low enough to step over.
3. You’re tracking outcomes instead of actions
Many people focus on results:
- Lose 20 pounds
- Save $10,000
- Get promoted
Those goals matter.
But results arrive later.
Actions happen today.
When you only measure outcomes, it can feel like nothing is working.
System fix: Track the action you control.
Instead of:
- Weight lost
Track:
- Workouts completed
Instead of:
- Money saved
Track:
- Weekly transfers made
Actions are the inputs.
Results are the outputs.
Systems improve the inputs.
The Real Shift
Consistency is rarely about becoming a more disciplined person.
It’s about reducing the number of times your brain has to negotiate with itself.
Every decision costs energy.
Every reminder takes mental space.
Every forgotten task creates friction.
A good system lowers the friction.
That’s why the question isn’t:
“How can I become more motivated?”
The better question is:
“What would make this easier to repeat?”
Because consistency is not built through force.
It’s built through design.
This Week’s Experiment
Choose one thing you’ve been struggling to stay consistent with.
Then ask:
- Does it have a clear trigger?
- Does it work on hard days?
- Am I tracking actions or outcomes?
Pick one adjustment.
Not three.
Not ten.
One.
Run the experiment for seven days and see what changes.
Small system shifts often create bigger results than another burst of motivation ever could.