A few weeks ago, I took an unplanned break from everything. Turns out I needed a reminder of my own advice.
Around the same time, I had sent the women on my email list a survey with one question: what’s your biggest challenge when it comes to taking care of yourself?
Nearly 60% of them said the same thing.
“I know what to do, I just can’t make myself do it consistently.”
But here’s what stopped me when I read their actual responses. It wasn’t that they weren’t trying. It wasn’t that they didn’t care or didn’t know what to do. What they said, over and over, in a dozen different ways, was this:
I’m exhausted. I’m overwhelmed. And it’s really hard to be consistent when I feel like I’m running on empty.
I sat with that for a long time.
I think we’ve been sold a story about consistency that puts the blame in the wrong place. We treat it like a willpower problem. A discipline problem. A “just make it a habit” problem. And so when we fall off, we assume something is wrong with us.
But what if the problem isn’t consistency at all?
What if the problem is that we’re trying to build consistency on top of total depletion?
You can’t grow a sustainable rhythm in that soil. It doesn’t matter how good your plan is, how clear your goals are, or how much you want it. If the tank is empty, the engine doesn’t run.
That’s not a motivation issue. It’s an energy issue. And those require very different solutions.
Discipline says: push harder, track more, hold yourself accountable.
Energy says: pause, restore, find out what’s actually draining you.
The first one might get you through a few good days. But it won’t last. The second one is slower. Quieter. And it’s the only one that holds up over time.
Here’s the question I’ve been sitting with, and I’d invite you to sit with it too:
What would I actually have the energy to do, if I weren’t so depleted in the first place?
Not “what should I be doing.” Not “what would a more disciplined version of me be doing.” But what would naturally want to come through, if there were room for it.
For a lot of us, the answer is surprising. And kind of beautiful.
If you’ve been quietly carrying the “why can’t I just be consistent” shame, I want you to know: you’re not failing. You’re just trying to grow something that needs different soil first.
If you want a place to start, I made a free 5-minute audio called Everything Doesn’t Need You Right Now. It’s built for the exact moment I’m describing. No journaling. No fixing. No starting anything new. Just five minutes of permission to put it down.

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