Exercising Consistency: From Fitness To Flourishing
To exercise consistency and become the person who follows through, join The ACT Score Challenge [https://www.skool.com/exercising-self-control-1199/about] today. Here’s a scenario. Two people wake up on a Wednesday morning. Both intend to exercise. The first lays in bed, and a stream of consciousness begins to unspool: “I have to get out of bed. I am tired. I have to kick back the covers. Stand up. Walk to the bathroom. Get dressed. Make breakfast. Make sure the food is healthy. Put away the dishes. Get the gym bag together. Make sure I have everything. Get in the car. Drive. Find parking. Walk in. Find a locker. Remember the combination.“ And on it goes. Every granular step is imagined in full detail. The mental load is exhausting before the workout has even begun. No wonder the snooze button wins. The second person thinks: “I’m going to the gym today.“ That is the entire thought. The same steps exist. But the brain has compressed all of it into a single chunk. The cognitive load is zero. The action feels inevitable. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. Psychologists call this chunking. The brain takes repeated experiences and encapsulates them into one concept. What once required deliberate attention at every step becomes automatic. System 2 (the prefrontal cortex, the conscious agentic aspect of the brain) has done the work often enough that System 1 (the default, non-conscious, automatic aspect) takes over. You stop thinking about kicking the covers off because you no longer need to. You simply get up. The person with the habit is not more motivated than the person without it. Their brain has simply done the neural work of compression. The thousand granular steps have become one step. And one step is easy to take. Three traditions, separated by centuries and continents, arrived at the same insight. The Philosopher Zen Buddhism offers a teaching story attributed to the eighth-century Chinese poet and philosopher Layman Pang: Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. The outward actions are identical. The internal experience is radically different. The tasks that once felt like a mundane grind are no longer chores. They are simply what you do, performed with presence and clarity. The fundamental requirements of life never disappear. What changes is the quality of attention you bring to them. Fulfillment is not found in some far-off leap of progress but in the simple, incremental steps of the here and now. The Physician Oliver Wendell Holmes, the American physician and polymath, put it this way: I would not give a fig for the simplicity on this side of complexity, but I would give my life for the simplicity on the other side of complexity. The simplicity before complexity is shallow ignorance. It’s the person who says “I just need to work out more“ without ever confronting what that actually requires. The simplicity on the other side is mastery. It’s the person who has wrestled with programming, periodization, recovery, and the psychology of adherence, and has emerged with a handful of principles so clear they fit on an index card. The Martial Artist Bruce Lee, in The Tao of Gung Fu, described the same progression: Before I learned the art, a punch was just a punch, and a kick, just a kick. After I learned the art, a punch was no longer a punch, a kick no longer a kick. Now that I understand the art, a punch is just a punch and a kick is just a kick. The Arc of Mastery The stages are universal. Every person who has built a consistent exercise practice has traveled this arc. The beginner acts on unrefined instinct, without awareness or a technical framework. Movement is natural but unexamined. The student becomes immersed in complexity. The mind is saturated with rules, mechanics, and techniques. Every action requires conscious attention. This is the stage where most people quit, because the effort of holding everything in working memory is genuinely exhausting. The master transcends the analysis. The art has become so deeply integrated that conscious thought is no longer required. Action returns to simplicity. But now it is simple with precision, not simple with ignorance. The repetition, the consistency, the thousands of small choices to act despite resistance, those are what built the neural pathway. The brain learned that the Choosing Self, as I put it, was serious. And eventually, the brain relented and made the path automatic. What This Means for Your Training This is why a minimum standard works. The ACT Score, the Crawl standard of two minutes of movement, is not a compromise. It is a simple, doable-on-your-worst-day, input that still triggers the adaptation. Two minutes done daily rewires faster than 60 minutes done sporadically because consistency is the signal the brain needs to automate the behaviour. The body responds to stimulus, not to duration. When the input is small enough to be non-negotiable, the brain receives a clean, consistent signal. No special pleading. No negotiation. No variance. The same action, day after day, until the pathway is built. That is the Shu stage I talked about in Episode 272. Shu Ha Ri: The Three‑Stage Path to Unbreakable Self‑Control [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/272-shu-ha-ri-the-threestage-path]. Follow the form without exception. Reliability over creativity. Continuity over intensity. No Hack Replaces Repetition I used to look for shortcuts: affirmations, visualization, neurolinguistic programming, self-hypnosis. Far too many avenues. Far too much time spent searching for an easy answer. I learned many interesting and sometimes truly valuable lessons. But what I learned in the end is that there is always a point at which you must make the choice consciously, deliberately, and often enough that the brain understands you mean it. There is no hack that bypasses this. The simplicity on the other side of complexity is earned. You cannot jump to it. You cannot think your way to it. You must work through the complexity one repetition at a time. The leaps will happen, but not if you refuse to take the small steps. The outward actions of the beginner and the master look almost identical. Both wake up. Both exercise. Both go about their day. But the internal experience is fundamentally different. The beginner concentrates on every step. The master simply moves. The same actions. A different mind. That is the simplicity on the other side. That is what consistency builds. An Invitation If you’re ready to upgrade the quality of your consistency, join The ACT Score Challenge [https://www.skool.com/exercising-self-control-1199/about]. Stack days of follow through, not excuses. That’s it for today. Catch you next time. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stoicstrength.substack.com [https://stoicstrength.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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