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All or Nothing: Why Perfectionism Kills Progress

All or Nothing: Why Perfectionism Kills Progress

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It's January 1st. You've got new workout clothes, a gym membership, and your plan is perfect. Shoes laid out, lunch packed, ready to go. Day 1? You crush it. But what happens on day 5? What about when the kids go back to school, you catch a cold, or work explodes?

For most people, the answer is: "I already missed today, so I'll start fresh Monday." And Monday becomes next month. Next month becomes next year.


This is the all-or-nothing trap, and it's everywhere in January. Fitness culture is screaming at you to go from zero to six days a week, eat perfectly, and transform your entire life by February. But here's what research actually shows: perfectionism doesn't get you results—it gets you stuck in a cycle of starting and stopping.


In this episode, we break down why all-or-nothing thinking is probably your biggest barrier to progress. We explore studies on exercise adherence showing that rigid approaches predict dropout while flexibility predicts long-term success. We talk about why January makes this worse, how your brain tricks you with dichotomous thinking, and why "perfect" is actually self-sabotage.


Then we get practical: how to build consistency over intensity, what "minimum viable progress" looks like, and why planning for imperfection is the key to sustainable change. You're not trying to survive a 30-day challenge—you're building something that works for 30 years.


If you're tired of the all-or-nothing cycle and ready for an approach that actually lasts, this episode is for you.

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