Persistence in Review
“Success is stumbling from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.” – Winston Churchill
Last week I hit a milestone I once thought impossible
One full year of working out without missing a day.
Five days a week.
365 days.
Zero excuses.
(Read “Year in Review” for more on this)
It might sound like a fitness achievement, but to me, it was something bigger.
It was the clearest lesson I’ve had in what persistence truly means.
The Old View: Persistence as Insanity
For a long time, I thought persistence was the same as insanity. Keep doing the thing, over and over, until eventually it sticks.
Push through pain.
Push through doubt.
Push through laziness.
And when I failed to stick to habits in the past, I thought it was because I wasn’t pushing hard enough.
But brute force alone doesn’t last.
You can’t ram through a wall every single day.
The New View: Persistence as Navigation
This year taught me persistence isn’t about endless force.
It’s about navigation.
Think of it like sailing through choppy waters.
The wind changes
The waves shift.
If you don’t adjust
You sink.
Persistence means finding the way forward
Even if it looks different today than it did yesterday.
Too tired to keep pace? Slow down. My one-hour workout sometimes took an extra 45 minutes. The task was still complete.
Couldn’t work out at my fixed time? Do it later at night. The task was still complete.
Motivation at zero? Break the workout into smaller chunks. Keep moving.
What worked yesterday won’t always work today.
Persistence is creativity applied to consistency.
The Hidden Benefits
Reframing persistence this way unlocked two surprising benefits.
Willpower: I became comfortable delaying gratification.
No reward until the work was done.
And when I finally earned it
The reward meant more.Observation: I began studying my resistance instead of fighting it.
Was I stalling because I genuinely needed rest?
Or was it just fear of starting?
Sometimes persistence meant forcing the first rep.
Other times it meant starting softly and building momentum.
This practice of showing up sharpened my ability to listen to myself, to the situation and to what the moment actually required.
Why This Matters
We tend to glorify persistence as brute force.
Grinding no matter what.
Grit.
But that’s only half the story.
True persistence isn’t rigid.
It’s adaptable.
It bends but doesn’t break.
It looks for openings when doors are closed.
It keeps moving forward, even if the speed or direction shifts.
As Calvin Coolidge once said:
“Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; genius will not; education will not. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.”
The Takeaway
Persistence is not about doing it the same way every time.
It’s about finding a way, every time.
And when you realize that, persistence becomes less of a motivational cliché and more of a state of mind
One that can be cultivated
One failure
One adjustment at a time.
Life doesn’t show us how close we are to the finish line.
It only shows us how far we’ve come.
And if you keep showing up, no matter how, you’ll always get there.
Keep pushing
In your own way.
You made it to the end. That means you liked it or you’re very patient. Either way, subscribe, share, and tell your friends. I need a big network for reasons.
For moving pictures and questionable facial expressions, check out YouTube @dygres.