Guy Reams (00:02.478)
This is day 112. Momentum is about sustained progress. I'm traveling still. So I'm recording remotely. Apologize for the audio. Momentum isn't a sudden burst of speed or a lucky break. It's the quiet force that builds when progress is made consistently in the same direction. It's what transform effort into results.
taking something small and turning it into something significant. But momentum is very fragile. It requires steady, intentional movement. And there are plenty of ways to kill it before it ever has a chance to take hold. Here are a few things that derail me and will probably derail your momentum if you're not careful. First, lack of clear objectives.
Imagine hiking a rugged trail with no trail markers, no car and rock stacks guiding the way. Without clear objectives, you don't know if you're making progress or you're just wandering. Momentum needs a path to find checkpoints that remind you that you're heading in the right direction. Without them, distractions will pull you off course, and before long, you'll find yourself standing still, unsure of where to go next.
Number two, shifting priorities. Momentum thrives on consistency. Every time you change direction, you reset your progress. Think of a boat trying to get on plane. The engine roars, the bow rises, and with enough forward thrust, the boat lifts and glides across the water. But if you keep changing direction, the boat never gets there. The energy spent trying to move forward is wasted in course correction.
The same thing happens in life when priorities shift too often. Momentum stalls and you never reach the speed you need to sustain real progress. Third, indecision. Momentum requires action and action means making decisions. Not every decision will be the right one, but a wrong decision is better than no decision at all. The real momentum killer is hesitation. Think back when you were a kid.
Guy Reams (02:26.56)
excited about an idea that you came up with your friends. You run inside to ask for permission from the parents only to hear, I'll think about it. That moment of hesitation crushes your energy draining the excitement out of the plan before it could even get started. Indecision does the same thing to progress.
So, momentum isn't a feeling. It's a byproduct of continuous effort in the same direction. The key is to keep moving. Set clear objectives, commit to a course, and make decisions with confidence. If you do, momentum will carry you forward, turning small wins into unstoppable progress.