Write one if-then plan for tomorrow: "If it's [time], then I'll [exact action] at [exact place]." One sentence. Put it where you'll see it tonight.
Motivation is the match, your habits are the gas stove. The match gets the flame going, but you don't relight it every time you cook. Once the pilot light of routine is lit, the stove runs on its own. "Discipline" is a well-plumbed kitchen, not someone striking matches all day.
It's not a willpower contest. The popular "just be more disciplined" advice is built on a science experiment that no longer replicates.
Write one if-then plan for tomorrow: "If it's 7am, then I'll put my shoes on and walk for 10 minutes." Put it where you'll see it tonight.
Deciding the exact moment and place in advance is what gets the behavior to actually happen.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
The Verdict
Staying consistent isn't a willpower contest. It's the right reason to start plus a system that runs itself.
Motivation is the match. Your habits are the gas stove. The match gets the flame going, but you don't relight it every time you cook. Once the pilot light of routine is lit, the stove runs on its own. "Discipline" is a well-plumbed kitchen, not someone striking matches all day.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
Moderate
The strongest single claim here is well-supported: the "willpower is a fuel tank that runs out" model failed a large, pre-registered, multi-lab retest. The links between the right kind of motivation, planning, habit, and long-term sticking power are consistent in direction across many trials, but the exact sizes vary and most of the evidence comes from Western and clinical-rehab groups.
A credible, well-powered replication that brought the ego-depletion effect back under clearly specified conditions would reopen the question.
A pre-registered trial pitting the strategies head-to-head in a general (non-clinical) population, with 2-to-3-year sticking power as the endpoint, could sharpen or overturn the ranking.
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