ISBN-13: 9783565213375 / Angielski / Miękka / 160 str.
This book explores the often-unexamined assumptions behind motivation advice-the belief that lack of motivation is a technical problem requiring the right hacks, systems, or neurochemical understanding rather than important information about alignment, capacity, or unmet needs. It examines why science-based motivation strategies often feel temporarily effective but ultimately unsustainable: the dopamine tricks that work until they don't, the discipline frameworks that require more energy than the goal itself, the constant optimization that masks the question of whether the goal actually serves you.Rather than offering techniques to generate motivation artificially, the text reframes motivation struggles as potentially meaningful-signals that something about your goal, timing, capacity, or circumstances doesn't align with your actual needs or values. It explores the patterns that keep people searching for better motivation hacks: treating lack of drive as personal failure rather than information, using discipline to override what your system is trying to communicate, pathologizing rest or resistance as problems to solve through better strategy.Through psychological insight, the book examines what motivation actually is versus what we've been taught it should be-and why forcing drive through hacks often costs more than it produces. It explores the difference between motivation that emerges from alignment versus motivation manufactured through techniques that eventually deplete you. This isn't about finding better motivation strategies or mastering discipline-it's about understanding that chronic motivation struggles might be telling you something important about direction, not revealing character flaws requiring optimization.
Chronic lack of motivation isn't always a discipline problem requiring better hacks-sometimes it's your system telling you this goal doesn't actually align with what you need.