TL;DR Stop chasing the perfect day. What you want is a “consistency floor” that you can hit on your worst day. And if you have one, lean on it during the crashes.

We’re going to build two routines:

When the motivation is gone and you’re in crash mode, you shouldn’t try harder. You should make the action easier and get more prompts. And then when you’re not feeling like yourself, lean on you in motion to pull your mood forward (behavioral activation style) and then re-evaluate.

If you know something is going to crash (predictable), build an if/then plan. “If X happens, I will do Y (a tiny version)” You can literally plan for the crash even.

If you’re sitting around waiting to be “motivated so you can get going” your motivation already crashed, and you missed doing the thing on the not-perfect day. And it’s not going to magically get better because you tried harder. In a perfect world, your habits wouldn’t break when your motivation crashes. They’d shrink. You’re not trying to win the day – you’re trying to keep the habit alive so you can scale back up tomorrow.

YOUR CONSISTENCY PLAN

Real consistency is what you do on the bad days. You’re tired, stressed, and/or hormonal. You’re burnt out or grieving or sick. You’re overloaded and just not okay. “You just have to be disciplined” isn’t real advice or practical guidance. This is how to build a system that works through all those things, minus the fantasy you’ll feel great every day.

Informational note (not medical advice): Low energy and low mood can have many causes (stress, sleep debt, depression, anxiety, medication side effects, thyroid problems, anemia, chronic illness and so on). If symptoms are persisting, worsening, or affecting your daily life, see a qualified healthcare professional.

How to quickly self-check: what kind of “crash” is this?

You can behave differently according to which crash is occurring. An energy crash needs smaller bottons and more recovery, a mood crash needs gentle structure and meaning (distraction – no self-critiquing), a motivation crash feels unclear and needs a lowering of friction.

the core idea: build a “consistency floor” (your minimum viable habit)

Consistency floor = tiny tiny version of habit that still “counts.” So small it’s almost harder not to do it. It’s there for the crash days. If you can’t do it when you’re drained it’s not a floor, it’s a second ceiling.

Table of examples of a “consistency floor” (tiny actions that keep the habit alive)
Goal area Standard plan (good day) Consistency floor (crash day) Why it works
Exercise 45-minute workout Put on workout clothes + 5-minute walk (or 5 bodyweight reps) Preserves identity and momentum; reduces restart friction
Writing / studying 60-90 minutes focused work Open the document + write 3 sentences (or read 1 page) Turns “starting” into the win; keeps project warm
Cleaning / home care Full kitchen reset Set a 3-minute timer and clear one surface Stops the “all-or-nothing” spiral
Nutrition Cook a balanced meal Drink a glass of water + add one easy protein/fruit/veg Supports energy without demanding a full plan
Relationships Long catch-up call Send one thoughtful text Maintains connection even with low capacity

Rule of thumb: your floor should be doable even when you’re at about 30% capacity. If you regularly “fail” at your minimum, the minimum is still too big.

A better definition of consistency (so you stop punishing yourself)

Most people measure consistency as “Did I do the full plan?” Try this instead: consistency = “Did I follow the protocol for the day I actually had?” That protocol includes crash days on purpose. Step-by-step: the Crash-Proof Consistency System

  1. Start with fewer priorities (because crashes shrink capacity)
    When you’re at a low point, every new commitment adds to the overwhelming snowball. You can build on these things later, but start with picking one “primary habit” (the habit that makes easier other things) and 1-2 “supporting habits.” For example: sleep schedule + movement + 5-minute planning ritual.
  2. Build a two-tier plan: Standard Day vs Crash Day
    Write your two-tier plan in a place you actually look at (notes app, planner, whiteboard). The key insight here is that Crash Day is not a “failure plan”—it’s your actual plan for low-capacity days.
Template: turn one habit into a crash-proof two-tier plan
Habit Standard Day Crash Day (floor) Exact start trigger
Move Gym 3x/week + 8k steps 5-minute walk after lunch After I put my lunch plate in the sink, I put on shoes and walk to the corner and back
Plan 20-minute daily plan + review 2-minute “next step” list After I open my laptop, I write the next 1 task on a sticky note
Learn 30 minutes course 5 minutes + one note After I make coffee, I open the course and watch until the timer runs out
  1. Use if-then plans to pre-decide what you’ll do when you crash
    Crashes often come with decision fatigue. If-then plans (also called implementation intentions) have been show to decrease the amount of negotiations you need to do with yourself in the moment by linking a situation (“if”) to a specific response (“then”).
Common crash scenarios → if-then plans you can copy
If this happens… Then I will… Make it even easier by…
I get home drained and want to collapse Do my 2-minute habit before I sit down Keeping a “crash-day checklist” on the door or fridge
I miss the morning routine Switch to the afternoon floor (not “start over Monday”) Scheduling a backup time block labeled “Plan B”
I feel anxious and avoid starting Set a 10-minute timer and do the first tiny step Writing the first step as a verb (open, send, draft, rinse)
I’m sick / in pain Do the “care floor” only (meds, water, one basic task) Defining in advance what “rest counts as progress” means for you
I’m tempted to quit because I’m behind Do the smallest action that reduces tomorrow’s friction Choosing “prep” actions: lay out clothes, open tabs, pre-fill forms
  1. When motivation is low, increase ability (make it simpler)

“A practically useful model of crash days is that behavior is more likely if motivation, ability (i.e. simplicity), and a prompt are all in the right place at the right time, and that for most of us that prompt is no environmental accident, it’s dangling by a string from our own brains. And if our motivation is low, the lever we control most easily is actually simply ability: we should try to make the desired behavior so easy that it is hard to stop doing.” Leverage reducing steps: pre-pack the gym bag, pre-open the document, pre-fill the water bottle. Reduce time: swap out “work out” for “2 minutes.” You can always keep going.

Reduce thinking: get it down to the first action a robot could take. “Open email draft” not “handle emails.”
Reduce discomfort: lower the intensity (gentle walk not HIIT), lower the stakes (rough draft only).
Reduce switching costs: keep your shoes where you’ll see them when you need them, keep your book on your pillow, keep that resistance band right next to your desk.

Quick test: if starting takes more than 30 seconds, you’re probably trying to squeeze too much into a crash day. Your start should feel almost instantaneous.

5) Add prompts that you don’t have to remember

Crash days are memory thieves; they compromise our ability to remember. & Like ambition prompts, “reminders” take the emotionality out of the exchange that would get us to be consistent.
Prompts are “do this thing and then the other.” Noting what we know, the more obvious the reminder is and the more tied to something we do regularly, the better.

6) Use action to pull mood forward. (Behavioral activation-style)

Having a dip in mood is tough, and historically we’ve learned that waiting to feel “like it” is usually a disaster. A therapy approach called “behavioral activation” involves scheduling and doing acts that could be enjoyable or rewarding even when you’re not motivated to do so—because those very acts can create opportunities for positive reinforcement (pleasure, connection, mastery).

  1. Identify one tiny activity that brings you (a) pleasure, (b) mastery, or (c) connection.
  2. Make it “stupid small” (2–10 minutes).
  3. Schedule it (time + place).
  4. Do it, then rate your mood 0–10 before and after (don’t judge it, just collect the data).
  5. (Optional) repeat with a second tiny activity.

If your crash includes persistent hopelessness, inability to function, or thoughts of self-harm, please seek professional help. In the U.S., you can call or text 988 for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (24/7). If you’re in immediate danger, call 911.

7) Protect the basics that stabilize energy: sleep, movement, and recovery

Some consistency issues are really recovery issues: you don’t need a perfect lifestyle, just a couple of crucial supports to help you not fall into a deeper hole.

8) Track consistency without making crashes feel like failure

Tracking works best when it acknowledges the behavior you want to reinforce. If your tracker only rewards “full intensity,” it teaches you to disappear during the hard days. Instead, what’s another way to track both versions of the habit?

A 45 minute setup session (do this once, benefit all year)

  1. Write your 3 top “crash triggers”: poor sleep, conflict, too busy workdays, slippery scrolling spirals, the thing that makes Netflix (the 24/7 doom scroll) breezily too easy
  2. Choose a single primary habit to protect, for example, your movement, planning, or sleep routine
  3. Write versions of both your Standard Day and Crash Day in a single sentence each
  4. Write 5 if/then plans that you will actually see in place for the triggers that actually trigger (not the ideal triggers you wish you had)
  5. Take one major friction point out of today: prep, drop it out, simplify your life, have the tools literally in hand
  6. Put one prompt that you literally will see in the world into today (calendar prompt x visible object prompt)
  7. Help yourself recognise what “planned rest” actually looks like, so that rest will stop feeling like quitting

Common mistakes (and what to do instead)

Mistake: To restart every week, with a giant plan for the week, after a bad week
Do this instead: Connect to a floor for a couple of days and then build back up

Mistake: To sweat, sweat, sweat, and treat guilt as fuel
Do this instead: Befriend self-compassion and a pre-decided structure (it’s stronger than emotional intensity)
Mistake: Missing a day and deciding you “can’t be consistent.” Instead: use it as a cue to reevaluate your floor or your prompts.

Mistake: Thinking pep talks can fix your motivation.
Instead: reduce your steps to almost thoughtless.

Mistake: “I need a break” turning into avoidance.
Instead: explicitly plan breaks, and stick with at least one tiny “keep-alive” action.

How to tell that your system is a go:

FAQ

Q: My crash doesn’t last days, it lasts weeks. What do I do?
A: A longer crash is a signal: time to reach out for extra support. Dial your consistency floor way back (think 1-2 minutes) and prioritize basic frunctionality and recovery. If you also notice low mood, fatigue, or lack of interest, and the symptoms seem significant or lasting, it can help to talk to a healthcare professional. There are other possible causes of those symptoms, including depression. If they feel overwhelming, it can be crucial that they’re addressed.
Q: Does self-compassion make you lazy?
A: Not in the sense of “skipping my workouts”, if that’s what you mean. In research, self-compassion is often discussed as “the warm, huggy thing that can help you bounce back after flops” and the antidote to the shame spiral that inhibits follow-through. What it boils down to practically might be that self-compassion + structure (floor + prompt) typically beats self-criticism.
Q: What do I do on an exhausted day?
A: Use a crash-day movement floor that’s almost frictionless (put on shoes + 5 minute walk, gentle mobility or a couple strength reps). Keep the goal as “show up” rather than “burn calories.” If you’re frequently or severely exhausted, consider checking sleep, stress and medical factors.
Q: What if I have an unpredictable schedule (kids, shift work, caregiving)?
A: Use event based prompts instead of time-based ones: “after I drop off the kids, after I clock out, after I make coffee.” Also build in two backup windows (“Plan A” and “Plan B”) so if you miss the morning, you haven’t lost the day.
Q: What’s the fastest way to restart since I fell off completely?
A: Do the floor today—no negotiation. Then do the floor tomorrow. After 2–3 days, once there’s momentum, build in a little upgrade (by time, by difficulty, by frequency.) The goal is to rebuild trust with yourself, not intensity.

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