Why Motivation Is the Wrong Tool for Health Change cover art

Why Motivation Is the Wrong Tool for Health Change

Why Motivation Is the Wrong Tool for Health Change

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Most people think their health struggles come down to one thing: motivation.

If they just wanted it more… tried harder… stayed disciplined… everything would finally click.

But if motivation actually worked, you wouldn't keep starting over.

In this episode of Hard Habits Podcast, we break down why motivation isn't just unreliable—it's

the wrong tool entirely for long-term health change. You'll learn why that initial surge of drive

after a doctor's visit, a bad lab result, or a frustrating moment never seems to last… and why

that's not a personal failure.

We dig into the real reasons motivation falls apart:

It's temporary by design

It reacts instead of prepares

It creates an all-or-nothing mindset that keeps you stuck in a cycle

More importantly, we shift the focus to what actually works: systems.

This episode will help you rethink how to approach your health by showing you how to build

simple, sustainable systems that don't depend on how you feel—and can hold up through real

life: busy schedules, stress, low energy, and imperfect days.

If you're tired of starting over, this is the mindset shift you've been missing.

Key Takeaways:

Why motivation feels powerful—but never lasts

The hidden cycle keeping you stuck in "start again" mode

How to move from intensity to consistency

A simple question that will change how you take action immediately

Action Step:

Stop asking,

"Am I motivated?"Start asking,

"What's the smallest action that keeps me in the game?"

Because real health change doesn't come from perfect weeks.

It comes from continuing—especially when it's not perfect.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.