u/Horror-Night3336

I’ve been observing something weird for a while.

People don’t quit preparation in one big dramatic moment.

It’s much quieter than that.

First, you miss one day.

Then you tell yourself you’ll “cover it tomorrow.”

Then 2–3 days pass.

Then opening your books starts feeling uncomfortable.

Not because the subject is hard.

But because you know you’re behind.

So you avoid it.

And that avoidance slowly turns into guilt.

And that guilt turns into distance.

And one day you realize…

you’re not preparing anymore.

No big decision.

No closure.

Just… gone.

What’s worse is this happens to a lot of people.

But we label it as:

“lack of discipline”

“not serious enough”

“not meant for it”

I don’t think that’s true.

I think most people fail because:

there’s no system to catch them early

no one notices when they start slipping

no feedback on whether they’re even progressing

So everything becomes uncertain.

And when things feel uncertain,

your brain naturally wants to avoid it.

The strange part?

Everyone focuses on:

best books

best strategy

best coaching

But almost no one talks about:

how to not fall off midway??

Curious if others here have gone through this phase.

Or is it just me overthinking it?????

reddit.com
u/Horror-Night3336 — 18 days ago

I’ve been observing something weird for a while.

People don’t quit preparation in one big dramatic moment.

It’s much quieter than that.

First, you miss one day.

Then you tell yourself you’ll “cover it tomorrow.”

Then 2–3 days pass.

Then opening your books starts feeling uncomfortable.

Not because the subject is hard.

But because you know you’re behind.

So you avoid it.

And that avoidance slowly turns into guilt.

And that guilt turns into distance.

And one day you realize…

you’re not preparing anymore.

No big decision.

No closure.

Just… gone.

What’s worse is this happens to a lot of people.

But we label it as:

“lack of discipline”

“not serious enough”

“not meant for it”

I don’t think that’s true.

I think most people fail because:

there’s no system to catch them early

no one notices when they start slipping

no feedback on whether they’re even progressing

So everything becomes uncertain.

And when things feel uncertain,

your brain naturally wants to avoid it.

The strange part?

Everyone focuses on:

best books

best strategy

best coaching

But almost no one talks about:

how to not fall off midway??

Curious if others here have gone through this phase.

Or is it just me overthinking it?????

reddit.com
u/Horror-Night3336 — 18 days ago