Lesson 1
Motivation Is Not A Personality Trait
This opening lesson reframes motivation as a fluctuating state rather than a fixed personality trait, identifying four specific conditions, low energy, unclear goals, recent setbacks, and emotional load, that commonly cause it to dip. It explains why this distinction matters: a state can be actively influenced, whereas a trait feels permanent and uncontrollable. It also helps listeners identify which condition feels most relevant to their current experience, setting up the practical tools covered in the rest of the course.
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Lesson 2
Action Comes First, Not Motivation
This lesson introduces a counterintuitive but well-supported idea: that action tends to produce motivation, rather than motivation producing action. It explains why beginning a task, even in a small way, generates the momentum that waiting for readiness rarely does, and offers a practical two-step process for using this in daily life, choosing an action small enough to need no motivation, and committing to that step alone rather than the larger task it belongs to.
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Lesson 3
Building Momentum Through Behavioural Activation
This lesson introduces behavioural activation, a structured technique from clinical psychology for building motivation through scheduled action rather than spontaneous willpower. It explains why removing in-the-moment decision-making helps on low-motivation days. It offers a three-step process: scheduling specific, time-bound actions in advance, following through regardless of mood, and keeping a simple record of what was actually done. Listeners are guided to plan two or three realistic actions for the following day.
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Lesson 4
The Confidence That Comes From Doing
This lesson draws on Albert Bandura's research into self-efficacy, explaining that confidence is built through direct experience rather than felt first as a precondition for action. It outlines the four sources of confidence Bandura identified: mastery experience, vicarious experience, verbal persuasion, and physiological state, and explains why mastery experience, direct evidence of having done something, is by far the strongest. Listeners are guided to keep a simple daily record of completed actions to make this evidence visible and usable.
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Lesson 5
Naming What Is Actually Draining You
This lesson helps listeners diagnose what is actually driving their low motivation, distinguishing four common causes: exhaustion, unclear goals, fear of failure, and overload. It explains why each cause calls for a different response, and why using a general motivation technique on the wrong underlying cause can add frustration rather than help. Listeners are guided to identify which cause or combination best fits their current experience before applying additional tools from this course.
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Lesson 6
Quietening The Critic That Says You're Lazy
This lesson addresses the harsh inner critic that often accompanies low motivation, particularly the word lazy and what it actually implies. It explains why this criticism is both inaccurate and counterproductive, since research links shame to increased avoidance rather than increased action, and offers a three-step process for responding differently: noticing the word as a signal, replacing the verdict with an honest description, and extending the same care to yourself that you would offer someone else in the same position.
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Lesson 7
Making The Task Smaller Than It Feels
This lesson introduces task decomposition, a practical technique for breaking an overwhelming task into distinct, visible components rather than leaving it as one shapeless block. It explains why a lack of visible structure, rather than actual size, often drives the sense of overwhelm, and offers a three-step process: listing every component, choosing whichever piece fits the time available right now, and completing that piece before deliberately stopping. Listeners are guided to apply this directly to an overwhelming task they are currently facing.
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Lesson 8
Using Your Body To Shift Your Mind
This lesson introduces body-based tools for shifting low motivation, distinct from the cognitive strategies covered earlier in the course. It covers four specific approaches: brief, deliberate movement, changing posture, short bursts of more vigorous activity, and real laughter, and explains the physiological basis for each. Listeners are encouraged to use these on days when thinking-based tools feel inaccessible, treating them as a short menu to reach for when motivation feels completely flat.
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Lesson 9
Borrowing Motivation From Connection
This lesson explores motivation as both a social and an internal experience, introducing four practical tools: making commitments witnessed by others, working in proximity to others' focus, spending time around people whose habits support follow-through, and directly asking for a specific kind of support. It cautions that these tools work best alongside the internal techniques covered earlier in the course, since borrowed motivation tends to fade once the social context is removed.
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Lesson 10
Building A Sustainable Rhythm
The final lesson of the course takes the longer view, returning to the opening idea that motivation is a state rather than a trait, and explaining that future dips in motivation are not evidence that the course failed. It introduces a new sequence for responding to a dip, noticing it, identifying its likely cause, and reaching for a matched tool. It encourages listeners to settle on two or three favourite tools to carry forward. The lesson closes with a final reflection on the distance travelled and a warm send-off.
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