Exercising Consistency: From Fitness To Flourishing

328. Choose One Signal To Win Faster and More Often: The Four Signals of Self‑Competition (18/20)

14 min · 22 jun 2026
aflevering 328. Choose One Signal To Win Faster and More Often: The Four Signals of Self‑Competition (18/20) artwork

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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. In the last episode I introduced the Three Selves and the competition between them. * The Conditioned Self is the adversary: the sum of your past reinforcement, the sparring partner that reveals what has been trained so far. * The Preferred Self is the standard: the behavioural template that defines the excellence you prefer. * The Choosing Self, that’s you, is the competitor: the faculty of volition that uses the circumstances and the four signals to close the gap. That framework gives you a way to understand self-competition. It does not tell you how to practice it without burning out. You have finite conscious attention. The adversary does not fatigue as quickly. And the gap can be measured across four dimensions simultaneously, creating a temptation the framework does not prevent: competing on all four signals at once, every session, until you are exhausted and the competition becomes something you dread or avoid outright. Today we address the calibration in your exercise practice. How to compete without burning out. How to lose a session without becoming discouraged. How to choose which signal to compete on. And when not to compete at all. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. Image generated using ChatGPT. What intelligent self-competition is not Here’s what intelligent self-competition isn’t to avoid mistakes from the start. It is not competing on every signal in every session. Your conscious attention is a limited resource. Monitoring four signals simultaneously across every set is cognitive overload. The person who tries to win on all four signals in a single session will win on none of them and leave the gym increasingly reluctant to return. It’s not treating every session as a competition. The adversary is always present, but not every session is a contest. Some sessions are maintenance. Some are recovery. Some are practice (you’re refining a standard without attempting to exceed a previous baseline). A session where the gap did not narrow is not a failure if you decided in advance that today was not a competition day. It’s not punishing the Conditioned Self for winning. When the gap widens (when last week’s weight does not move, when last session’s standard crumbles) you respond with inquiry, not self-criticism. Was recovery incomplete? Was the signal choice inappropriate? The loss is data. Punishment is not The Discipline. Return is The Discipline. The problem with competing on everything at once You, The Choosing Self, cannot outwork the Conditioned Self. Your conscious thinking is slow, deliberate, and inefficient, handling an estimated 40-50 bits of information per second. The Conditioned Self is fast, automatic, and highly efficient, handling millions of bits of information per second. When you get overwhelmed, you stop choosing. The Conditioned Self takes over and defaults to what it’s been trained to do, by chance or by past choices. Three things happen when you try to compete on too many signals at once. Attention fragments. Each signal consumes a different type of focus: intensity demands willingness to face difficulty, volume demands patience to stay, density demands discipline to compress, and quality demands precision to hold the standard. Divided across all four, each receives a fraction of what it requires. The gap does not close on any dimension. Feedback becomes noise. If you changed all four signals in the same session, you cannot know which change moved the gap. The data is contaminated. You lose the ability to learn what works. The competition becomes aversive. Competing on four signals every session guarantees you will lose on at least two. Repeated failure, when not handled skillfully, can lead to avoidance. Instead of transforming you may choose to stop showing up. The single signal The fix is the same principle that calibrated every signal in this series: choose one thing. One dimension of the competition. Hold it for a cycle. Let the others ride. The single signal is the decision to compete on one dimension of the gap between the Conditioned Self and the Preferred Self for a defined period, typically a training cycle of four to twelve weeks. You select the signal; the other three are maintained, not competed on. The feedback is clean. The attention is undivided. Here’s what you do: Choose the signal. Where is the Conditioned Self furthest from the Preferred Self? If the load has stalled, choose intensity. If work capacity is insufficient, choose volume. If recovery is slow, choose density. If the standard has been drifting, choose quality. You do not choose the signal on a whim. You choose the signal most appropriate to realizing your most important current goal. Define the cycle. One session is too short. Four weeks is a minimum. Twelve weeks is a standard training block. You commit. For example, “For the next eight weeks, I am competing on intensity. Everything else is maintenance.” Maintain the other signals. Maintenance means holding the current baseline. Twelve working sets per week stays at twelve. Three minutes of rest between sets stays at three minutes. Do not progress these signals. Do not let them regress. They are the circumstances under which the competition occurs. Compete on the chosen signal. Move the selected variable toward the Preferred Self. Add weight when you complete the prescribed reps. Add a set when it recovers. Compress rest by fifteen seconds. Hold a higher quality standard. Whatever the variable, that’s the one you focus on moving. Clean measurement is the result. Review at the end of the cycle. Did the gap narrow? Select the same signal or a new one where the gap is now widest. Did the gap widen? Ask why. Was the signal appropriate? Were conditions favorable? The review is neutral. You do not punish yourself for a lost cycle. You learn and return. When the adversary wins Some cycles the gap does not narrow. The Conditioned Self held its ground. Or the gap widened. Your response determines whether the competition continues. Accept the result. The logbook reports what happened. The Conditioned Self squatted 185 for five reps last cycle and 185 for four reps this cycle. That is a fact. Facts are not judgments. They are data. Ask why. A cycle where intensity was the focus but sleep averaged five hours is not a failed competition. It was a competition held under circumstances that had unexpected complications. Adjust the circumstances or adjust the signal. Do not punish. Sparring partners win rounds. If the adversary never won, it would not be a competent adversary. Punishment is not productive. It stops behaviour, but suggests no way forward. And, worst case, it stops any further attempts. Instead adapt and return. The next session is always open. The next cycle is always available. You cannot lose permanently because the competition has no final round. The match continues as long as you choose to return. When not to compete There are times when you must not compete. You must learn to distinguish competition from maintenance, recovery, and practice. Maintenance sessions. The work is done at the current baseline. The gap is not being measured. The Conditioned Self is being reminded of the standard. Maintenance sessions are the floor that prevents regression. Recovery sessions. The weight is light. The volume is low. The density is generous. You are allowing the Conditioned Self to recover and consolidate its learning. You’re ensuring the conditions under which the next competition becomes possible. Practice sessions. You refine a standard without attempting to exceed a baseline. The standard is being installed, not tested. Practice precedes competition. If you cannot distinguish these from competition, you will compete until something breaks down and wonder why the gap never closes. Why the single signal works One signal held for twelve weeks results in significant progress. It’s the accumulation of that signal intelligently enforced across forty to sixty sessions, hundreds of sets, thousands of reps. A clear signal, repeated consistently, produces a clear adaptation. Four signals, applied inconsistently, produce noise. The single signal works because it respects your finite conscious attention. It produces clean feedback. It prevents the competition from becoming aversive. And it turns self-competition from a demand for constant winning into a practice sustainable across a lifetime. What comes next Self-competition is now defined and calibrated. The Conditioned Self is the adversary. The Preferred Self is the standard. The Choosing Self competes on one signal at a time. What remains is the recognition that this competition is not confined to the gym. The Conditioned Self follows you into every room, every conversation, every decision. You have the same finite attention at work, in relationships, in thought, as you do when hanging from the pull up bar. In the next episode, we look at self-competition everywhere: how the Three Selves and the four signals appear in daily life, and what it means to compete against your conditioning in domains where there is no logbook and the scoreboard is invisible. Until then: choose one signal for your next session. Which dimension of the gap between where you are and where you want to be is widest? Compete on that signal. Maintain the others. Notice what changes in the quality of your attention. The Choosing Self that can focus on one thing is a Choosing Self that can win. As William James, the American psychologist and philosopher, put it: The faculty of voluntarily bringing back a wandering attention, over and over again, is the very root of judgment, character, and will. An invitation To exercise consistency and become the person who uses self-competition to train for every part of your life, 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]

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aflevering 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 jul 20267 min
aflevering 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]

Gisteren9 min
aflevering 350. Stop Trying To Be Disciplined, Do Disciplined Things: Architectural Consistency (Part 3 of 3) artwork

350. Stop Trying To Be Disciplined, Do Disciplined Things: Architectural Consistency (Part 3 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. A system is a structure. But a structure without a foundation will not survive. The architecture we built in the last episode (the Floor, the trigger, the binary metric, the Scope of Effort, the written protocol) can keep a behaviour alive through almost any conditions. But there is one question the architecture alone cannot answer. Why keep going? The answer is not motivation. Motivation is an intermittent emotional state with no fixed schedule. The answer is identity. When the system becomes an expression of who you are rather than a list of things you do, consistency is no longer a battle. It is a default. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. This is the final episode of three on Architectural Consistency. In the first episode (#348) [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/348-routines-break-systems-endure], we established the distinction between routines and systems. In yesterday’s (#349) [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/349-build-an-exercise-system-that], we built the system: five components, each addressing a specific failure point. Today we integrate the system into identity so that consistency becomes not something you chase but something you express as you move through the world. The DO-BE-HAVE Sequence There is a popular model of personal development called BE-DO-HAVE. First, BE the kind of person who succeeds. Then DO what that person does. Then HAVE the results. The sequence sounds logical. In practice, it’s not only weak, it’s harmful. It treats identity as a prerequisite for action. But you cannot think your way into a new identity, any more than you can think your way into becoming strong enough to squat heavier weight. Identity, like physical strength, is a consequence of repeated action. The actual sequence is DO-BE-HAVE. You train consistently and long enough that “disciplined” becomes an accurate description of you. You didn’t declare it, you demonstrated it. Action creates identity. Identity stabilizes behaviour. And the results emerge downstream. The system, when enacted, is the DO. The five components are how you act. And when you act consistently over time, the BE emerges. You do not wake up one morning as a disciplined person and then start training. You train, and gradually, the person who trains is who you are. There is no becoming. There is only being, expressed in the present moment of Enacted Choice. Character is the retrospective pattern of past choices, never a fixed state. And definitely not the result of merely declaring who you are. The 84-Day Commitment The system needs a container. A defined cycle with a fixed starting line and a fixed review date. Without a container, the system drifts. Small exceptions become larger exceptions. The protocol shifts based on mood. The trainer (System 2, the conscious, agentic aspect of the brain) becomes inconsistent, and the student (System 1, the non-conscious, automatic aspect of the brain) receives conflicting data. I use an 84-day cycle. Twelve weeks. The research on exercise adherence supports this window. The sharpest spike in dropout occurs between weeks 6 and 10. By day 90, roughly half of all people who start a new exercise program have quit entirely. But those who survive past the three-month mark have an 80% probability of remaining active a year later. 84 days gets you past the inflection point. Past the point where novelty has worn off and the new behaviour is still fragile. Past the point where most people quit. And once you are through that window, the behaviour has begun to stabilize, because the neural pathways have had enough consistent input to begin solidifying. The commitment is simple. Write the protocol once. Lock it for 84 days. Execute without negotiation. Review only at the end of the cycle, not within it. The loop continues: observe, compare against the standard, act, receive feedback, adjust, repeat. But the major course corrections and adjustments happen between cycles, not during them. The Root The architecture keeps the behaviour alive. The container gives it time to stabilize. But there is one more layer beneath both. Without it, the system eventually drifts regardless of how well it is designed. That layer is your values. I have talked about this all the way back in Episode 34: The Consistency That Ensures Consistency [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/the-consistency-that-ensures-consistency]. There is a distinction between consistent behaviour and consistent living of your values. Behavioural consistency is what you do. Values consistency is why you keep doing it when the reasons to stop accumulate. When your system is aligned with what you genuinely value, the question “Why keep going?“ answers itself. If you value your health, the exercise system is not a chore you endure. It’s an expression of who you are. If you value presence with your family, the system that protects your evening time is not a restriction. It is a reinforcement of your deepest commitments. The Stoics understood this. Epictetus, the ancient Stoic teacher, organized his entire philosophy around three disciplines, and the first was the Discipline of Desire: train yourself to want only what is within your control. When your desires are aligned with reality, you are free. When they are pinned to externals, you are a slave to whoever controls those externals. And if no one controls them, it comes down to random chance. Align the system with your values and consistency becomes self-sustaining. The behaviour flows from your values rather than fighting against your impulses every morning. The system is not something you have to do. It’s something that makes sense to do because it reflects who you choose to be when you exercise virtuous self-control. The Foundation Think of the structure as a building. What you see from the street are the actions: the individual choices, the single workouts, the one completed protocol. They are visible. They are measurable. They are what other people notice. But they are also the furthest element from the ground. They sit at the top of the structure. And anything that sits at the top depends on everything beneath. Directly beneath the actions are the routines. The specific sequences you execute day to day. The “What do I do next?“ that makes action possible. Beneath the routines is the system. The architecture. The five components that ensure the behaviour keeps happening when conditions deteriorate. The Floor. The trigger. The binary metric. The Scope of Effort. The written protocol. This is the load-bearing structure. Without it, the routines and actions that sit upon it have nothing to reinforce them. And providing support to the entire system, at the very bottom, extending deep into the ground, is the foundation: your principles and your values. What you genuinely believe matters. What you are unwilling to compromise on. The system rests on this. If the foundation shifts, the architecture cracks. If the foundation is solid, the system can weather almost any storm. Most people start at the top. They focus on actions and routines. They build a morning sequence, a workout plan, a productivity checklist without asking what architecture will hold it up or what foundation it rests on. Then life disrupts the sequence and the whole thing collapses, because there was nothing underneath it. Start at the bottom. Clarify the foundation. Build the architecture on top of it. The routines and actions will follow. What Remains You don’t want to be fighting yourself every morning for the rest of your life. And you won’t if you are regularly designing a structure that makes the fight unnecessary. The body does not wake up and decide what needs doing. The systems and sub-systems are in place. They run because the architecture demands it and because the architecture is aligned with the organism’s most important goal: survival. The system that is your life, aligned with your values and standards of personal excellence, can reach the same status. Consistency need no longer be a daily struggle. It can be the default output of a structure that you, as the architect, have designed to produce it. An Invitation When you’re ready to turn consistency from an idea into a solid system, start your Day 1 inside 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]

14 jul 202611 min
aflevering 349. Build an Exercise System That Actually Lasts: Architectural Consistency (Part 2 of 3) artwork

349. Build an Exercise System That Actually Lasts: Architectural Consistency (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. The difference between a good workout and a consistent exercise practice is not a matter of intensity. It’s architecture. Most people spend years trying to build a better routine and never ask the question that determines whether the behaviour survives. A routine becomes effective once the system is established. A system is the structure that ensures the behaviour keeps happening when there are good excuses to quit available. That structure has an anatomy. Five components. Each one addresses a specific failure point. Skip one, and the whole thing becomes fragile. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. This is Episode 2 of 3 on Architectural Consistency. In the last episode [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/348-routines-break-systems-endure], I established the distinction between routines and systems. Routines are procedural. Systems are architectural. Routines are linear, step by step. Systems are cybernetic, looping continuously through observation, comparison, action, feedback, and adjustment. Without that loop, there is no system. Only repetition. Today we build the system, answering questions and addressing issues the routine cannot. The Floor The first component is a minimum standard you can meet on your worst day. The trend is to set a ceiling. Many people aim to optimize right out of the gate. They define what success looks like under ideal conditions: an hour at the gym, a full morning routine, perfect execution. When conditions degrade, the ceiling becomes unreachable. They skip the session entirely. The all-or-nothing ceiling produces nothing far more often than it produces all. Setting a Floor works in the opposite direction. It defines the minimum that counts as continuity. The intensity does not matter. What matters is that the behaviour occurred and the pathway was reinforced. The body does not optimize for peak performance. It optimizes for continuity. Your heart does not decide to skip a beat because conditions are not ideal. Your system, modeled on the same principle, keeps running at whatever capacity is currently available. The standard adapts to conditions. The standard never drops to zero. Consistency first, intensity when it makes sense. The Trigger The second component is an environmental trigger, a circumstance, that removes decision from the moment of action. System 2, the conscious and intentional aspect of the brain, cannot simply choose to voluntarily wake up and make the right choice when System 1, the automatic and non-conscious aspect of the brain, is working. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) only fires on concrete prediction errors, not on abstract misalignment. If the trigger is “when I feel motivated,” the behaviour will not occur. Motivation is not a trigger. It is an intermittent emotional state with no fixed schedule. A proper trigger is physical and specific. For example, “When I walk into the kitchen at 7:00 AM, then I fill my water bottle.” Or “When I close my laptop at 5:00 PM, then I change into my workout clothes and go to the office gym.” The environment itself initiates the sequence. No decision. No negotiation. The routine begins because the trigger fired, and the trigger fires because the environment was designed to make it inevitable. The Binary Metric The third component is a success condition that leaves no room for reinterpretation. Abstract goals invite rationalization. “I want to feel productive“ allows the inner lawyer to argue that scrolling social media for industry news counts as productive. “I want to move more“ allows walking to the fridge to count as movement. The standard dissolves because the standard was never specific or concrete. A binary metric answers a single question with a ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ Did the timer hit zero? Did I open the document? Did I record the completion of my workout in my journal? There is no partial credit. There is no “it depends.” The standard is either met or it is not. And the feedback is immediate. This is what the body does every second. Oxygen saturation. Blood sugar. Temperature. Each metric returns a clear value and the system adjusts accordingly. Your system needs the same clarity. The Scope of Effort The fourth component is a Scope of Effort that scales to match current capacity. A rigid routine has one operating mode. One speed. One intensity. When life disrupts that single mode, the entire routine collapses. A resilient system has tiers describing the metric involved. Each tier preserves the behaviour. The only variable is the intensity, measured in time, quality, or a subjective estimate based on personal experience. In my system there are four tiers: Crawl The lowest tier is Crawl. This is your non-negotiable. It is designed to be so small that skipping it feels absurd. Two minutes of movement at the lightest possible exertion. The subjective criteria is: “There is no way I will not get this done today. Too easy.“ Crawl exists to keep the streak alive when conditions are at their worst. It is the most important tier in the entire system. If Crawl survives, the system survives. This is the Floor that I mentioned earlier. Walk The next tier is Walk. This is your reasonable, doable baseline. 10 to 20 minutes at a comfortable level of effort. The subjective criteria is: “Yeah. I can do that.“ Walk is what you can comfortably expect to execute as you go about your normal daily schedule and tasks. It is not aspirational. It is sustainable. Run Above that is Run. This is your standard of personal excellence. 21 to 60 minutes at a challenging but manageable intensity. The subjective criteria is: “This is what I aspire to do. This is me at my best.“ Run is what you aim for on days when energy and time are both available. Fly The highest tier is Fly. This is beyond your expectation. 61 to 180 minutes or more at near-maximum output. The subjective criteria is: “Wow. Where did that come from?“ Fly is not something you schedule. It’s something that happens when conditions align and the session takes over. It is flow state. Not a target. A gift. The Scope of Effort is not about lowering standards. It’s about building a system with enough redundancy to survive real life. The body does this continuously. Heart rate scales from resting to maximum output in seconds. Respiration adjusts breath by breath. Your system will work best with a similar range. This takes practice to implement with accuracy and will evolve with your skills and growing experience. The Written Protocol The fifth component is a written protocol that stabilizes everything. Your working memory holds roughly four chunks of information. It cannot simultaneously store the Floor, the trigger, the binary metric, the Scope of Effort scale, and execute the action. Something gets dropped. Maybe even be the most important thing. A written document acts as an external hard drive. It specifies every component in concrete terms. For example: * When I get to the gym, then I review my planned workout and begin my warm up within 5 minutes of signing in at the front desk. Success means I’ve completed my warm up and I’m ready to do my workout. Crawl is completing 2 minutes of the warm up. Walk is completing the warm up and 15 minutes of the workout. Run is completing the warm up and the entire 30 minute workout. The protocol is reviewed briefly before the action begins. Maybe in the car before walking into the gym. Then you lock it. The protocol does not change daily based on mood. If the trainer (System 2) is inconsistent, the student (System 1) receives conflicting data and learns something you haven’t planned. Write it once. Lock it for a fixed cycle. Execute without any negotiation. Review only between cycles, not within them. The Loop These five components form a structure. But structure alone is not a system. A system includes feedback. At the end of each week, review the binary metrics. Did you do what you said you’d do? If yes, what conditions supported that? If no, what in the design failed? Remember, you don’t want to ask, “What is wrong with me?“ That is not helpful and leads to no effective learning. Instead, you want to stay objective and ask, “What in the architecture failed to account for what happened?“ Then adjust one variable. Keep it to one. Not a complete redesign. One change, tested for another week, and reviewed again. The loop mirrors the body: * observe, * compare against the standard, * act, * receive feedback, * adjust, * repeat. The system learns. The architecture adapts. The behaviour becomes more effective and resilient over time. What Survives Intensity without continuity produces nothing long-term. A system that keeps you moving at 20 percent capacity indefinitely outperforms a routine that demands 100% effort and collapses in six weeks. The Floor over the ceiling. Crawl over the heroic push. Consistency over intensity. Build the architecture; work the system; the routine will take care of itself. Next Time Next, in the final episode of this series, we’ll look at * how to integrate the system into identity, * the DO-BE-HAVE sequence, * the 84-day commitment as the container, * and the role of values as the root that feeds the entire structure making consistency the default output rather than a sporadic surprise. An Invitation When you’re ready to turn consistency from an idea into a lived experience, start your Day 1 inside 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]

13 jul 202613 min
aflevering 348. Routines Break; Systems Endure: Architectural Consistency (Part 1 of 3) artwork

348. Routines Break; Systems Endure: Architectural Consistency (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. The Routine That Collapses You know the experience. You design a perfect morning. Wake at 6:00. Water. Workout clothes. Twenty minutes of movement. Shower. Breakfast. Journal. Start work at 8:00. For three weeks, it runs. You feel like a different person. You tell yourself you have finally figured it out. Then one morning the alarm malfunctions. Or the baby wakes up three times. Or you travel for work. The routine breaks. And because the routine was the entire strategy, you have no backup. You skip the workout. You skip the journaling. The chain is broken. Within a week, the whole thing has unraveled, and you are back to where you started. Many would conclude they lack discipline. The real problem is they built a routine and called it a system. A routine is what you do. A system is why it keeps happening. When the routine is the only thing holding the behaviour together, a single disruption destroys it. When a system is in place, the behaviour survives. Hey there. It’s me, Kore. And you’re listening to Exercising Consistency: From Fitness to Flourishing. This is the first of three episodes on a distinction that changes how you think about consistency entirely. Most people believe they need a better routine. What they actually need is a better system. The two are not the same thing and confusing them is why most consistency efforts fail the moment life gets messy. Last episode [https://stoicstrength.substack.com/p/347-the-most-effective-metaphor-on], I argued that the body is the cleanest metaphor you have for how to run your life. It is interdependent, consistent, and brutally honest with its feedback. Today we extend that metaphor into the question that follows naturally from it: How do you actually build something that runs like that? The Distinction The distinction between a routine and a system is important. A routine is procedural. It asks: “What do I do next?“ It is a specific, sequential set of actions done at a specific time. Think of it as a train moving down the track. Highly efficient under perfect conditions. But stopped, maybe even catastrophically derailed, by a single obstacle laying on its path. A system is architectural. It asks: “Why does this behaviour continue to occur?“ It is the overarching network of rules, environments, and backups that drive a behaviour regardless of friction. Think of it as a network of city streets. If one lane is blocked, you detour. The destination remains; the streets provide options. Another way to say it: routines are linear. They start at Step 1 and end at Step X. Systems are cybernetic. They loop continuously and self-regulate to achieve specific goals. * Observe. * Compare against a standard. * Act. * Receive feedback. * Adjust. * Repeat. Without feedback, there is no system. There is only repetition. And repetition that cannot adapt is fragile. The Body Already Runs a System The body does not have a morning routine. It has a 24-hour system. Multiple overlapping subsystems, built-in redundancy, and zero dependence on mood. Your heart does not check your emotional state before deciding whether to beat. Your liver does not negotiate with the calendar about whether today counts. The systems run because the architecture demands it. The body is not trying to be consistent. It is consistent because the design makes inconsistency impossible. This is the model, from the last episode, applied to the question of structure. When you build a system, you are not designing a sequence of actions. You are designing an environment that makes the desired action the path of least resistance and the undesired action difficult to drift into without noticing. The Loop A proper system includes a feedback loop. This is what separates it from a habit tracker. A habit tracker tells you whether you did the thing. A system asks why the thing did or did not happen and adjusts accordingly. The loop is simple: observe reality, compare it against your standard, act to close the gap, receive feedback from the result, adjust the approach, and repeat. This is what the body does continuously. Oxygen drops, respiration increases. Blood sugar falls, hunger signals fire. The adjustment is immediate and the loop never closes. Most people skip the feedback step entirely. They execute a routine for weeks and then, when it breaks, they blame themselves instead of examining the design. A system treats a broken day as data, not as a moral failure. Instead of asking “What is wrong with me?“ ask “What in the design failed to account for what happened?“ Change the Question The first shift is not stopping at building a better routine. The routine is important, but not the final consideration. You need to continue beyond the routine. The routine question might be: “What should my morning look like?“ The system question would be: “What structure will ensure this behaviour survives my worst day?“ Considering the routine produces a sequence. Considering the system produces resilience. The routine depends on conditions being favorable. The system accounts for conditions being unpredictable. The routine works until life gets in the way. The system works because it assumes life will get in the way and builds around that. Next Time In the next episode we’ll look at how to build a system that actually survives, The Floor Rule, The Scope of Effort, and the written protocol as an external hard drive for the part of your brain that cannot be trusted to remember. An Invitation When you’re ready to turn consistency from an idea into a lived experience, start your Day 1 inside 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]

12 jul 20267 min