ISBN-13: 9783565208333 / Angielski / Miękka / 240 str.
This book explores the psychology of starting-examining why beginning often feels harder than continuing, and how momentum builds not through grand gestures but through small actions taken despite uncertainty. It reframes the inability to start not as laziness or lack of motivation, but as the nervous system's resistance to unfamiliar territory, perfectionist standards that demand readiness before action, or genuine misalignment with goals that don't actually serve you.Rather than offering productivity hacks or motivation strategies, this book invites you to understand what actually prevents you from beginning-whether it's fear of imperfection, exhaustion masquerading as procrastination, or the paralyzing weight of needing the first step to be significant. It explores how momentum develops through friction tolerance rather than inspiration, and why sometimes the most honest starting point is admitting you don't want what you think you should want.Through psychological insight into decision fatigue, analysis paralysis, and the difference between strategic planning and avoidance disguised as preparation, this book offers a compassionate path toward action. It examines why starting small isn't settling for less-it's recognizing that momentum builds through repeated engagement with reality rather than perfect vision. The goal isn't finding constant motivation-it's understanding that beginning happens when you choose the smallest honest step available, even when it feels insignificant.
Momentum doesn't require inspiration or perfect conditions-it begins when you take the smallest honest step available, proving to yourself that starting is possible even when clarity hasn't arrived.