One Year, No Excuses

Motivation Is a Lie (Here’s What Actually Works)

8 min · 3. touko 2026
jakson Motivation Is a Lie (Here’s What Actually Works) kansikuva

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Week 11 of One Year No Excuses—and this one gets real. This week wasn’t perfect: ·       Missed prayer ·       Partial progress on reading ·       Broke carnivore with Easter sweets But instead of spiraling, I reset and kept going. In this episode, I break down why motivation is unreliable—and why relying on it is one of the biggest reasons people fail to stick with their goals. We’ll talk about: ·    Why motivation fades (and always will) ·    The difference between motivation and habits ·    What actually creates long-term consistency ·    How I’m applying this in real time (fasting,diet, podcast, and building my new TikTok channel: CarnivoreChris) If you’ve ever struggled with staying consistent, this one might challenge how you think about discipline entirely. Sources referenced: ·       American Psychological Association – Behaviorchange and willpower research ·       University College London – Habit formationstudy (Lally et al., 2009) ·       James Clear – Atomic Habits

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12 jaksot

jakson Motivation Is a Lie (Here’s What Actually Works) kansikuva

Motivation Is a Lie (Here’s What Actually Works)

Week 11 of One Year No Excuses—and this one gets real. This week wasn’t perfect: ·       Missed prayer ·       Partial progress on reading ·       Broke carnivore with Easter sweets But instead of spiraling, I reset and kept going. In this episode, I break down why motivation is unreliable—and why relying on it is one of the biggest reasons people fail to stick with their goals. We’ll talk about: ·    Why motivation fades (and always will) ·    The difference between motivation and habits ·    What actually creates long-term consistency ·    How I’m applying this in real time (fasting,diet, podcast, and building my new TikTok channel: CarnivoreChris) If you’ve ever struggled with staying consistent, this one might challenge how you think about discipline entirely. Sources referenced: ·       American Psychological Association – Behaviorchange and willpower research ·       University College London – Habit formationstudy (Lally et al., 2009) ·       James Clear – Atomic Habits

3. touko 20268 min
jakson Rebounding from Failure kansikuva

Rebounding from Failure

Week 9 didn’t go perfectly—and that’s exactly why this episode matters. In Episode 10 of One Year No Excuses, I break down what to do when you miss habits, fall short of your goals, or feel like you’re slipping. This week’s updates include: ·       30.4 pounds lost in 2026 so far ·       Progress in my AI certification ·       Improved sleep and recovery ·       A new weekly fasting routine But more importantly, we talk about: ·       Why most people quit after small mistakes ·       The “what-the-hell effect” and how it derailsprogress ·       Why perfection is the wrong goal ·       Practical steps to recover immediately and keepmoving If you’ve ever felt like one bad day ruinedeverything—this episode is for you.

1. touko 202610 min
jakson Sick, Stalled, and Starting Again kansikuva

Sick, Stalled, and Starting Again

Week 7 didn’t go as planned. I was sick. Low energy. Foggy. Unmotivated. This episode is an honest reflection on pausing goals to focus on recovery — without quitting. I talk about what it means to temporarily step back, the psychology behind accountability and motivation, and how public commitment impacts follow-through. I also share insights from finishing the books of Exodus and Leviticus this week — what they reveal about structure, discipline, and human nature. No checklist this week. Just recovery, reflection, and restarting. Sources referenced: ·       American Society of Training and Development(ASTD) study on accountability and goal completion ·       Dr. Gail Matthews, Dominican University –goal-setting research

29. huhti 202610 min