Exercising Consistency: From Fitness To Flourishing

315. Volume Is Staying Longer: The Four Signals of Self‑Competition (5/20)

10 min · 9. juni 2026
episode 315. Volume Is Staying Longer: The Four Signals of Self‑Competition (5/20) cover

Description

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. The last four episodes about intensity explored one way to signal self-competition: choose harder. Increase the demand. Send the body a reason to adapt that it cannot ignore. But intensity is only the first signal. It’s the loudest, the most immediate, the easiest to access. And it has a limit. You cannot choose harder forever. Eventually, the weight stops moving. The proximity to failure becomes failure itself. The body, honest as always, says no. When intensity reaches its ceiling, a second signal becomes necessary. Choosing to stay longer. Today we begin a deep dive on volume with a definition. What volume is in physical training. Why it matters. And what might be misunderstood about it. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. Image generated using ChatGPT. What volume is Volume is the total amount of work performed in a training session, a week, or a cycle. It is not a single set. It is not a single effort. It is the accumulation of every rep, every set, every session over time. Where intensity asks “How hard?“ — volume asks “How much?“ In practical terms, volume is measured by the number of sets, reps, and exercises performed for a given muscle group or movement pattern. If you bench press three sets of ten reps, your volume for that movement is thirty reps. If you do that twice a week, your weekly volume is sixty reps. If you add a third session, it becomes ninety. The math is straightforward. The signal is not. Volume is the signal of endurance. The endurance of effort. The willingness to stay in the work after the initial demand has been met, after the novelty has worn off, after the easy adaptation has been made. What volume is not Volume is not mindless accumulation. Adding sets for the sake of adding sets is not volume. That is busyness. The signal only counts if the work is meaningful. If each additional set, each additional rep, represents a real demand on the system. Volume is also not a replacement for intensity. You cannot substitute one for the other and expect the same result. Three sets of five reps at a challenging weight and ten sets of five reps at a trivial weight are both volume. Only one sends a signal the body must adapt to. Volume without sufficient intensity is motion. Not training. And volume is not infinite. The body has a recoverable threshold. Beyond it, additional work does not produce additional adaptation. It produces fatigue that masks whatever adaptation was underway. More is not always better. More is only better when the system can absorb it. Why volume matters as a signal Intensity tells the body: This is different. Pay attention. Adapt. Volume tells the body something else: This is not going away. Build accordingly. A single hard set sends an acute signal. The body responds by marshaling resources for a short-term demand. But sustained volume (the same movement performed across multiple sets, multiple sessions, multiple weeks) sends a chronic signal. The body responds differently. It does not just strengthen the muscle. It reinforces the connective tissue. It increases work capacity. It builds the infrastructure required to sustain effort over time. This is the difference between being able to do something once and being able to do it repeatedly. A single heavy deadlift proves that you can generate force. Ten sets of deadlifts prove that you can sustain force. The first is a display of capacity. The second is a signal to expand it. In the language of the signals: Intensity is the spark. Volume is the fire that keeps burning. How volume shows up in training Volume takes several forms in the gym. The simplest is more sets. If you currently perform three sets of an exercise, performing four sets increases the volume for that movement by roughly thirty-three percent. The increase is not dramatic. It doesn’t need to be. More sessions. Training a movement twice a week instead of once. Three times instead of twice. The per-session volume may stay the same, but the weekly accumulation compounds. The signal becomes: This pattern is recurring. Adapt to it. More exercises. Adding a second movement for the same muscle group. A row to complement the pull-down, a lunge to complement the squat. The total demand on the system increases without any single exercise becoming excessive. More time under tension. Slowing the tempo across multiple sets turns the same rep count into a longer total demand. Three sets of ten with a two-second eccentric is sixty seconds of tension. The same sets with a four-second eccentric is one hundred and twenty seconds of tension. The rep count is identical. The volume, as experienced by the body, is not. The common thread: volume is cumulative. No single set, no single session, defines it. It is the sum of the work. And the sum, over time, is what the body responds to. How most people misunderstand volume The most common misunderstanding of volume is that more is always better. This is false. Volume is subject to diminishing returns. Beyond a certain point, each additional set produces less adaptation than the set before it, until eventually the marginal benefit approaches zero. Or becomes negative, as fatigue accumulation outpaces recovery. The second misunderstanding is that volume and intensity are independent. They are not. They exist in a reciprocal relationship. As intensity increases, the volume the body can tolerate decreases. You cannot perform ten sets at ninety percent of your maximum. You cannot perform one set at fifty percent and expect meaningful adaptation. The art of programming is the management of this relationship. Volume and intensity rise and fall together, in inverse proportion, across a training cycle. The third misunderstanding is the most relevant to self-competition. Many people treat volume as a mechanical variable (sets x reps x weight) and miss what it signals about the person doing the work. What volume signals about the person Intensity signals willingness to face difficulty. Volume signals willingness to stay. Anyone can show up for a hard set. The set ends. The demand is over in thirty seconds. But staying for the fourth set, the fifth, the sixth, when the initial stimulus has already been delivered and the body is asking you to stop. That is not a test of strength, it is a test of something else. Volume tests your relationship with boredom. With discomfort that does not peak but persists. With the voice that says you’ve done enough when enough is not the standard. The first set is always easier to commit to than the last. The first session of the week is always easier to show up for than the third. Volume reveals whether your discipline has duration or whether it is a flare: bright, brief, and quickly exhausted. This is why volume is the signal of endurance. Not the endurance of muscle fibres. The endurance of identity. The person who stays in the work after the easy adaptation has been made is signalling something about who they are becoming. Someone whose commitment does not disappear when the novelty does. What comes next Knowing what volume is does not tell you how to apply it without overwhelming yourself. The mistake most people make is treating volume like intensity; pushing it until something breaks. But volume is not meant to be maximized. It is meant to be calibrated. In the next episode, we look at how to apply volume intelligently in training. Not more for the sake of more. More for the sake of the signal and the discipline to stop before the signal becomes noise. An Invitation To exercise consistency and become the person who uses these signals in your own practice, join The ACT Score Challenge [https://www.skool.com/exercising-self-control-1199/about]. 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]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Exercising Consistency: From Fitness To Flourishing community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

356 episodes

episode 355. The No-Input Rule That Restores Your Focus: The Science of Cognitive Recovery (Part 2 of 3) artwork

355. The No-Input Rule That Restores Your Focus: The Science of Cognitive Recovery (Part 2 of 3)

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. You finish a long work session. Your brain is fogged. The tank is empty. You pick up your phone. You scroll social media for ten minutes. Maybe you switch to a news app. Maybe you watch a few short videos. Then you return to work and discover that nothing has changed. You still feel drained. The fog has not lifted. The tank is still empty. The problem is not that you failed to stop working. The problem is that what you did was not rest. Your brain was still processing input the entire time. The Default Mode Network never activated. The prefrontal cortex never recovered. You took a break. You did not engage in downtime. And the distinction between those two things makes all the difference. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. This is Episode 2 of 3 on the science and practice of cognitive recovery. In the last episode [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/354-why-your-brain-needs-downtime], we established why the brain requires downtime. Today we answer the question that follows naturally from that science: If downtime is essential, what actually counts as downtime? And what are you doing right now, in the name of rest, that is keeping you stuck in a state of low-grade cognitive engagement? The Break That Is Not a Rest The distinction is simple but easily missed. Rest is not simply the absence of work. Some activities feel effortless while still placing demands on attention. The brain cannot activate the Default Mode Network (DMN) while processing new input. The DMN requires a specific condition: the absence of directed attention. If your eyes are on a screen, if your ears are receiving language, if your thumbs are scrolling, your brain is still in processing mode. The executive networks are still engaged. The recovery cycle has not started. This is why the most common form of what’s mislabeled rest is also the least effective. You finish a focus block. You pick up your phone. You scroll. The content is light. It feels like a break. But your brain is still decoding symbols, processing language, evaluating images, and making micro-decisions about what to engage with next. The attentional networks are still online. The DMN is still suppressed. You return to work with the same depleted prefrontal cortex you had when you left. The same applies to podcasts, audiobooks, news, and conversation that requires active listening. These are not passive activities. Language processing is cognitively engaging. The brain is working. It’s just working on something different. The cognitive load has shifted, but it has not been removed. This is not an argument against these activities. It’s an argument against calling them rest. Scrolling is entertainment. Podcasts are learning. Neither is recovery. And if you treat them as recovery, you will wonder why you are still exhausted after a day full of breaks. The Three Types of Real Downtime The brain requires three distinct forms of cognitive rest. Each serves a different function. Each activates different neural networks. And each must be protected from the creeping intrusion of input. Micro-Rest Micro-rest is the shortest form of downtime. 1 to 5 minutes. The purpose is to reset attentional circuits between focus blocks and prevent the vigilance decline that typically sets in after 45 to 60 minutes of sustained concentration. Here’s what you do. Step away from the screen. Let your gaze go unfocused. No input. No goals. No phone. No music. No conversation. Just let the mind drop out of directed attention for a few minutes. Look out a window. Sit quietly. Stand and breathe. Micro-rest works because it interrupts the accumulation of cognitive fatigue before the fatigue becomes a deficit. The prefrontal cortex gets a brief reprieve. The attentional networks reset. When you return to the task, the brain registers the goal as fresh rather than stale. Studies show that workers who take brief, unstructured mental diversions maintain focus for 50 minutes with no decline. Those who push through without breaks show measurable degradation far earlier. The key is that micro-rest must be genuinely idle. Checking a notification is not micro-rest. Reading a headline is not micro-rest. The brain must be free of input for the reset to occur. Deep Rest Deep rest is the middle tier. 20 to 60 minutes. The purpose is to allow the Default Mode Network to fully activate so that memory consolidation, emotional processing, and creative recombination can occur. This is the biggest cognitive return on investment of the day. The DMN is responsible for integrating new information with existing knowledge, processing emotional content that was suppressed during concentration, and generating the associative connections that produce creative insight. The DMN cannot do this work while the executive networks are demanding resources. Deep rest creates the window. The practice is a walk outside without headphones. Sitting somewhere quiet. Light chores like dishes or sweeping, done at a slow pace without audio input. The common element is the absence of directed attention. The body is moving or occupied with something simple. The mind is free to wander. The no-input rule is most important here. No podcasts. No music. No scrolling. No conversation that requires active listening. The brain must be offline from input to shift into DMN-dominant processing. If you walk with headphones, you are not doing deep rest. You are doing walking entertainment. That has its place; it’s not the same thing. Creative Drift Creative drift is the unstructured, open-ended form of downtime. 30 to 60 minutes, typically in the evening. The purpose is to let the mind wander freely without any agenda, so that the associative networks can connect ideas that focused attention could not reach. This is where insights surface. The shower, the walk, the drive, the period of quiet before sleep. Solutions that were inaccessible during deliberate effort appear on their own. The incubation effect is real. The brain was not inactive. It was working in a different mode, one that requires the absence of directed attention to function. The practice is unstructured and low-input. A shower. Stretching. Sitting outside. Light chores. The rule is the same: no input. Let the mind drift. Do not try to solve anything. Do not direct the thinking. If an insight surfaces, capture after it appears. The goal is not to generate ideas. The goal is to create the conditions under which ideas are generated without conscious effort. What Never Counts As Rest The list of activities that do not qualify as downtime is longer than the list of activities that do. The rule is simple: if the brain is receiving and processing external input, it is not in recovery mode. Scrolling social media. Watching videos. Reading articles. Listening to podcasts. Checking email. Playing games on a phone. Engaging in text conversations. Consuming news. Switching between apps. Even listening to music with lyrics, for some people, keeps the language-processing networks engaged. None of these are to be avoided always. They are simply not rest. They are entertainment, learning, or connection. They have a place in a full life. But they do not activate the DMN. They do not restore attentional capacity. They do not allow the glymphatic system to clear metabolic waste. If you treat them as downtime, you must deal with the consequences of cognitive overwhelm at some point. This is why the person who takes frequent phone breaks throughout the day can still end the day mentally exhausted. The breaks were not breaks. They were just different forms of input. The brain never got the signal to shift into recovery mode. The prefrontal cortex never got the reprieve. The DMN never activated. The No-Input Rule The single rule that makes all three types of downtime work is this: downtime must be free of external stimulation. No input. No goals. No directed attention. This is uncomfortable at first. The brain is accustomed to constant stimulation. Silence feels like a void. Boredom feels like a problem to be solved. The urge to reach for the phone is automatic. But boredom is not a sign that downtime is failing. Boredom is a sign that the DMN is activating. The discomfort is the transition. Idle tolerance is a skill. It develops, like all skill, with repetition and practice. The first few minutes of genuine downtime feel restless. The mind reaches for input. The impulse to check something is strong. That impulse is the brain’s addiction to stimulation, not a signal that stimulation is needed. Let it pass. The DMN kicks in after a few minutes of genuine idleness. The restlessness gives way to a different quality of attention. Thoughts drift. Connections form. The mind settles. Next Up In the next and final episode, we’re going to move from the what to the how. We’ll build the daily downtime protocol. The morning reset that stabilizes the prefrontal cortex before the day begins. The micro-rest rhythm between focus blocks. The midday deep rest that gives you the biggest cognitive ROI. The evening creative drift where insights surface. We will cover the five rules that make the system work, the schedule template, and the weekly and monthly patterns that mirror periodized training. In the end, you will have the same level of clarity about recovery that you have about action. The two systems together will make your consistency sustainable across years, not weeks. An Invitation To exercise consistency and become the person who follows through on their most important goals, join The ACT Score Challenge [https://www.skool.com/exercising-self-control-1199/about]. 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]

19. juli 202614 min
episode 354. Why Your Brain Needs Downtime: The Science of Cognitive Recovery (Part 1 of 3) artwork

354. Why Your Brain Needs Downtime: The Science of Cognitive Recovery (Part 1 of 3)

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. Muscles don’t grow stronger during the workout. That happens during recovery. The stimulus happens under the bar. The adaptation happens in the hours and days afterward, when you are doing nothing that looks like training. The brain follows the same principle. Focused cognitive effort creates the stimulus. Downtime allows the nervous system to consolidate learning, restore attention, regulate emotion, and integrate information. Remove the recovery phase, and performance gradually deteriorates even if effort remains high. Yet most people treat downtime as optional. A luxury. A gap between the real work. Something to fill with scrolling, podcasts, or whatever input is closest. The assumption is that rest is the absence of productivity. Neuroscience suggests the opposite. Rest is one half of the productivity cycle. And if you skip it, you are not working harder. You are working, to be blunt, dumber. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. Why Three Episodes on Downtime This is the first of three episodes on a topic that is systematically misunderstood, undervalued, and poorly executed. For the most part people fall into one of two camps. Either they take no meaningful downtime at all, grinding until the prefrontal cortex gives out. Or they take the wrong kind of downtime, scrolling through social media or consuming content, and wonder why they still feel drained. Neither camp understands what is actually happening inside the brain during rest. Neither camp has a system for recovery that matches the sophistication of their system for action. The result is a lopsided life. Intense focus followed by inadequate recovery. High output for a few weeks, then collapse. The pattern is familiar because it’s everywhere. The aim here is for you to understand why your brain requires downtime, how to distinguish real rest from fake rest, and how to build a daily downtime protocol that makes your focused work more effective, not less. Here’s how the three episodes are structured: * Today, we cover the science. What actually happens inside your brain during downtime. * In Episode 2, we pivot to the distinction that changes everything. What counts as real downtime, and what does not. We’ll walk through the three types of downtime your brain actually requires, and by the end of that episode, you will know exactly what to stop calling rest. * In Episode 3, we build the system. A daily downtime protocol that is as intentional and structured as your training. We will cover the rules that make it work, the schedule template, and the weekly and monthly patterns that mirror periodized training. By the end of the series, you will have the same level of clarity about recovery that you have about action. The two systems together are what make consistency sustainable across a lifetime, not just weeks. The Interval Training Analogy I’ve spent a lot of time talking about the body as a model for how to run your life. The body is interdependent. It is consistent. It is brutally honest with its feedback. And it never mistakes intensity for productivity. The body does not grow stronger during the workout. The workout creates the demand for adaptation and growth. The recovery period repairs and builds the tissue stronger to better deal with the loads used. The adaptation happens during rest. If you remove the rest, you get a different kind of adaptation. You get injury, burnout, and regression. The brain operates on the same principle. The cycle is: Focus → Recovery → Adaptation → Improved Performance Focused cognitive effort maxes out the prefrontal cortex. Attention is a finite resource. Decision-making, planning, impulse control, and emotional regulation all draw from the same processing budget. After prolonged use, the prefrontal cortex gets fatigued and becomes less efficient. Thinking slows. Distractibility increases. Judgment degrades. Emotional reactivity spikes. Then recovery resets the system. During genuine downtime, the brain shifts activity away from the executive networks and toward a collection of interconnected regions called the Default Mode Network (DMN). The DMN handles memory consolidation, emotional processing, creative recombination, and the integration of new information with existing knowledge. This is not passive time. It is active neural work happening below the surface of conscious awareness. Remove the recovery phase, and the entire cycle breaks down. You keep applying stimulus. You keep demanding output. But the brain has no opportunity to consolidate, repair, or integrate. Performance declines even as effort remains high. This is the cognitive equivalent of overtraining. And the solution is the same as it is in the gym: better recovery. What the Brain Does During Downtime When you stop directing your attention at a specific target, your brain does not go quiet. It shifts into a different mode of operation. The Default Mode Network activates. This was one of neuroscience’s most surprising discoveries. Researchers found that the brain remains highly active during rest, and that the activity follows organized, predictable patterns. The DMN is involved in autobiographical memory, imagining future scenarios, integrating experiences, creative insight, understanding other people’s perspectives, and constructing your sense of self. Many of the “aha” moments people experience do not arrive while they are actively trying to solve a problem. They arrive during a shower, a walk, or a drive, because the DMN was connecting ideas that focused attention could not reach. The conscious mind was too busy to see the pattern. The DMN, operating beneath awareness, found it. This is the incubation effect. When conscious attention moves elsewhere, non-conscious processing continues organizing information. Solutions that were inaccessible during deliberate effort surface, seemingly, on their own. The brain was not resting. It was working in a different way. Memory Consolidation When you learn something new, it is initially encoded in a fragile form. During periods of quiet wakefulness and especially during sleep, the hippocampus replays patterns of neural activity, strengthening useful connections and integrating new information with existing knowledge. The brain is asking: What is important, what can be discarded, and how does this fit with what I already know? This is one reason why taking a break after studying often improves later recall more than studying continuously. Attention Restoration The prefrontal cortex, responsible for planning, decision-making, and self-control, becomes less efficient after prolonged use. As cognitive fatigue accumulates, you observe slower thinking, increased distractibility, poorer judgment, greater emotional reactivity, and more impulsive decisions. Downtime allows these executive systems to recover. Recovery does not always require sleep. Walking, sitting quietly, or engaging in effortless activities can partially restore attentional capacity. Glymphatic Clearance During deep sleep, the brain activates what is essentially its cleaning system. Cerebrospinal fluid circulates more extensively through brain tissue, removing metabolic waste products that accumulate during wakefulness. Reduced sleep impairs this clearance process, which is one reason chronic sleep deprivation is associated with poorer cognitive performance and increased risk of neurodegenerative disease. Emotional Regulation Without sufficient recovery, the amygdala becomes more reactive, and the prefrontal cortex exerts less regulatory control. Small frustrations feel disproportionately large. Problems that seem overwhelming late at night often feel manageable after a good night’s sleep because the brain has had time to recalibrate. Decision Fatigue Prevention Every decision consumes cognitive resources. As the number of decisions accumulates throughout the day, people increasingly default to familiar habits, easier choices, immediate rewards, and avoidance. Periods of downtime reduce this cognitive load and help preserve executive function for decisions that truly matter. What Happens Without It When downtime is absent, the cost is not subtle. It is measurable and predictable. Continuous input from notifications, tasks, and screens overloads the brain’s processing networks. Overstimulation correlates with anxiety, attention deficits, and burnout. The brain never gets the opportunity to shift out of executive mode. The DMN stays suppressed. The glymphatic system does not get the deep sleep it requires. The prefrontal cortex operates in a state of perpetual overwhelm. This is the state most people are in without realizing it. They are running a system that was never designed to run without recovery. And they keep applying more stimulus, more effort, more intensity, as if the problem were insufficient input rather than insufficient rest. The Distinction That Matters In the next episode, we are going to pivot to the distinction that changes everything. Rest is not simply the absence of work. Some activities that feel effortless still place demands on attention. Scrolling social media keeps the brain in a state of continual engagement. Switching between apps does the same. The brain cannot activate the DMN while processing new input. Even “fun” activities that involve screens or content consumption block the recovery process. We’ll walk through the three types of downtime your brain actually requires: micro-rest, deep rest, and creative drift. And we will look at the specific activities that qualify, and the specific activities that do not, so that by the end of that episode, you will know exactly what to stop calling rest. Recovery is not the opposite of productive work. It’s the mechanism that makes consistent performance possible. We’re starting to take recovery seriously when it comes to the body. Now it’s time we do the same for the brain. An Invitation To emulate the body’s system and become the person who follows through on their most important goals, join The ACT Score Challenge [https://www.skool.com/exercising-self-control-1199/about]. 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]

Yesterday13 min
episode 353. The Simplicity on the Other Side of Complexity artwork

353. The Simplicity on the Other Side of Complexity

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]

17. juli 202610 min
episode 352. Why 2-Minute Micro‑Workouts Outperform Zero‑Effort Every Time artwork

352. Why 2-Minute Micro‑Workouts Outperform Zero‑Effort Every Time

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. Two minutes is not enough time to do anything meaningful. That is the assumption most people make, and it’s the assumption that keeps them doing nothing at all. The reality is different. Two minutes, applied consistently, triggers a cascade of adaptations that zero minutes never will. The body responds to stimulus; duration is only one factor among many. A brief, intense demand placed on the system daily produces results that a longer session performed sporadically cannot match. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness To Flourishing. I was thinking today: If someone had only two minutes during their day, they would need movements that satisfy four criteria. * They must train the largest amount of muscle mass. * They must require little or no equipment. * They must scale easily from beginner to advanced. * And they must produce benefits that transfer broadly to everyday life. Here is what that might look across the three broad domains of fitness: strength, cardio, and stretching/mobility. Let’s start with strength. Strength The goal in two minutes is to recruit as much muscle as possible in the shortest time. Isolation exercises are out. Single-joint movements waste the window. You need compound movements that demand tension across the entire body simultaneously. An excellent single option is a paired set of push-ups and bodyweight squats. One minute of push-ups followed by one minute of squats. Between the two movements, you cover the chest, shoulders, triceps, core, quadriceps, glutes, and hamstrings. Push-ups already require substantial core stabilization, so planks become redundant. Squats provide more total work in a fixed time window than alternating lunges, which consume valuable seconds switching sides. If you have access to a kettlebell, the two-handed swing becomes the single most efficient choice. It loads the posterior chain, demands grip strength, spikes heart rate, and generates high power output. One movement. Every major muscle group. Two minutes. For pure bodyweight intensity, burpees are a full-body explosive option. A burpee combines a squat, a plank, a push-up, and a jump into one continuous movement. If you can only do one thing, do burpees. Cardio Two minutes of cardiovascular training must be driven by intensity, not duration. The goal is to elevate heart rate to near-maximum within seconds, recruit large muscle groups, and sustain output until the timer stops. The simplest option with zero friction is sprinting in place. No equipment. No setup. No transition time. Drive your knees as high as possible at maximum speed. The demand on the heart and lungs is immediate. Mountain climbers add a core and shoulder component to the same cardiovascular demand. In a plank position, drive alternating knees toward the chest at maximum speed. The movement combines cardio with stabilization, which increases the total systemic load. Jumping lunges add a balance and explosive power demand. The alternating leg drive and the need to stabilize on landing recruit more muscle than steady-state cardio while keeping heart rate at peak. Burpees appear here as well. They are the cross-domain option. A set of burpees challenges cardiovascular fitness, muscular endurance, coordination, and power simultaneously. If you want one movement that covers both strength and cardio, burpees are the answer. Stretching and Mobility Two minutes of stretching must be active, not passive. Holding a single static stretch for two minutes addresses one joint and ignores everything else. The window is too short for isolation. You need a movement that opens multiple areas simultaneously. The World’s Greatest Stretch is the top choice. It mobilizes the hips, hamstrings, hip flexors, thoracic spine, shoulders, and ankles in a single flowing sequence. In two minutes, you can cycle through several repetitions on each side. The movement combines a lunge, a rotation, and a reach into one continuous pattern. Nothing else covers as much range of motion in the same timeframe. If you want an alternative, loaded end-range holds are the most efficient use of passive stretching time. Instead of a light stretch held for thirty seconds, you move into the deepest position you can control and hold it under tension. The active component recruits the opposing muscle group, which signals the nervous system to release the tight muscle through reciprocal inhibition. A deep squat hold with the elbows pressing the knees apart addresses hip mobility, ankle dorsiflexion, and lower back release in one position. The Principle Two minutes is not a compromise. It is a Floor. It’s the minimum standard that preserves continuity when conditions deteriorate. The Crawl that keeps the streak alive. The body does not optimize for peak performance. It optimizes for continuity. A system that keeps you moving at minimum capacity indefinitely outperforms a routine that demands maximum effort and doesn’t last past six weeks. Two minutes done daily rewires the pathway. It reinforces the identity. It maintains the neural pattern that makes longer sessions possible when time and capacity return. Two minutes is not nothing. Two minutes is everything that stands between consistency and excuses. 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]

16. juli 20267 min
episode 351. The Ancient Stoic Framework for Consistent Follow-Through artwork

351. The Ancient Stoic Framework for Consistent Follow-Through

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. The moment follow-through fails is not when you skip the workout. It’s earlier. It’s the instant your brain offers an excuse and you agree with it without examination. * “I have had a hard day. I’ll start tomorrow.” * “Missing one day won’t matter.” * “This is too hard. I am not cut out for this.” These thoughts feel like you. They arrive in your own voice, dressed in the language of reasonable self-care. But they are not you. They are impressions. And Epictetus, the ancient Stoic teacher, built an entire practical framework around learning to separate impressions from reality. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. In the last episode [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/350-stop-trying-to-be-disciplined], I mentioned one of the Three Disciplines of Epictetus: the framework he designed to help the prokopton (the one making moral progress) train their mind, tame their desires, and navigate the friction of everyday life. Today we’ll look at how these three disciplines map almost perfectly onto the problem of a lack of follow-through. They turn what feels like a character defect into something more useful: a technical error you can identify, correct, and train past. The Discipline of Desire The first discipline, the one I referenced yesterday, addresses what you want and what you fear. Epictetus argued that most human misery comes from a single error: desiring things outside your control. When follow-through fails, the failure often begins before the action. It begins in the desire. You want the outcome. The finished book. The fit body. The promotion. But the outcome is distant, uncertain, and outside your control. Your brain, overwhelmed by the gap between where you are and where you want to be, seeks certainty. You might think you procrastinate because you’re lazy. More likely you procrastinate because your brain defaults to its conditioning and what feels achievable right now. You end up doing what you know because that feels comfortable. The Stoic pivot is simple. Shift your desire away from the final result and place it entirely on your immediate effort. If your goal is to write a book, strip away the desire to publish a bestseller. You cannot control publishers, algorithms, or readers. Instead, make your sole desire: “I want to sit at my desk for 30 minutes today and write words.” This is what the Floor accomplishes in the system we built over the last three episodes (348 [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/348-routines-break-systems-endure], 349 [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/349-build-an-exercise-system-that], and 350 [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/350-stop-trying-to-be-disciplined]). This is what the Crawl standard operationalizes. A minimum standard you can meet on your worst day. The desire is no longer pinned to an uncertain outcome. It’s pinned to a concrete action that’s in your power. You stop feeling anxious about a massive, uncertain future. You win the day simply by showing up. The Discipline of Action The second discipline governs the impulses to act or not act. Epictetus argued that action must be driven by duty and reason, not fleeting moods. Follow-through fails when we wait to feel like it. Motivation is an intermittent emotional state with no fixed schedule. If the trigger is “when I feel motivated,” the behaviour is a matter of chance or constant hype-up sessions that require ever greater efforts. The solution is what’s called the Stoic Reserve Clause. You commit to the action while explicitly preparing for obstacles. For example: “I am exercising tomorrow morning at 6:30, unless something physically prevents me.” If you’d like to be more traditionally Stoic you can end with “...fate permitting.” The key phrase is “physically prevents me.” Feeling tired, lazy, or uninspired is not reason enough to skip the workout. The reserve clause is not a loophole. It’s a filter. It separates genuine external obstacles from frivolous rationalization. As long as your commitment is consistent with your highest values and most important goals you are duty bound to follow through unless something physically prevents you (e.g. a traffic jam, illness, the house is on fire). Your mood is not an objective reason to break your word. The Discipline of Action turns the written protocol into a non-negotiable. The Discipline of Assent The third discipline is where the battle is won or lost in real time. It governs how you judge impressions. An impression is anything that appears to your mind: a thought, a feeling, an impulse. The Discipline of Assent is the practice of not immediately agreeing with these impressions. You pause. You examine. You ask whether the impression corresponds to reality or is just your brain generating a permission slip. This is the No-Special-Pleading Test [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/346-stop-breaking-promises-to-yourself] (Episode 346) [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/346-stop-breaking-promises-to-yourself] applied at the level of thought. When the thought “I will just do this tomorrow“ arrives, you do not accept it as a command. You stop and say: “Wait a minute, impression. Let me see what you are.“ Then you test it. Is tomorrow genuinely better, or are you wanting to escape temporary discomfort? Tomorrow is an illusion. You only ever have power in this moment. The battle is often lost here. Many have never considered, let alone learned, that they can question their own thoughts. They treat every impulse as if it were a decision already made, that it’s an accurate grasp of reality. The Discipline of Assent inserts a gap between the impression and the response. In that gap, you give yourself the opportunity to explore the accuracy of your thinking and make a better choice. The Training Cycle Epictetus did not design these disciplines as theory. He designed them as a training program. And the training cycle he proposed is completely practical. It’s over 2,000 years old yet just as effective in navigating our modern challenges. The basis of this effectiveness and practically comes down to what Epictetus taught his students: It isn’t the things themselves that disturb people, but the judgements that they form about them…So accordingly, whenever we’re impeded, disturbed, or distressed, we should never blame anyone else, but only ourselves, that is to say, our judgements. (Epictetus. Discourses, Fragments, Handbook translated by Robin Hard) When you fail to follow through, do not treat it as a moral defect. Treat it as a technical error in your training. You either desired something outside your control, let a bad mood dictate your action, or believed a lie your brain told you. Identify which discipline failed. Note the error. Reset. Train again. This is the same loop we built into the 5-component system of Architectural Consistency over the last three episodes: observe, compare against the standard, act, receive feedback, adjust, repeat. The Stoics arrived at the same structure two thousand years ago through a different door. The architecture is the same because human psychology does not change. The system keeps the behaviour alive. The Three Disciplines keep the mind clear. Desire what you can control. Act on principle, not mood. Question every thought that suggests you quit. That is the framework. That’s the training. 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]. Practice the precise daily reps that turn follow through into a lifestyle. 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]

15. juli 20269 min