One of the best things that can happen to you as an athlete, a performer, or a professional?
You crush it on a day when you feel like crap.
It's what I lived for as a coach. And often resulted in breakthroughs after. Why?
It breaks one of the most damaging myths in performance: I need to feel great to perform well.
Most of us unknowingly build a fragile relationship with performance.
We link our best results to perfect conditions: great sleep, light legs, clear head, high motivation.
Then, the moment reality doesn’t match the script, panic sets in.
“I’m off today. This won’t go well.”
It’s a fragile foundation, and fragile things break.
We link our best results to perfect conditions: great sleep, light legs, clear head, high motivation.
Then, the moment reality doesn’t match the script, panic sets in.
“I’m off today. This won’t go well.”
It’s a fragile foundation, and fragile things break.
The truth? Performance is complex and messy.
You can be flat, tired, unmotivated, anxious… and still deliver.
That’s not optimism talking.
It’s reality backed by neuroscience: your feelings are lousy predictors of your actual capacity.
You can be flat, tired, unmotivated, anxious… and still deliver.
That’s not optimism talking.
It’s reality backed by neuroscience: your feelings are lousy predictors of your actual capacity.
Your body doesn’t always send accurate status reports.
In endurance sports, this is called the “lie” of the first miles, you often feel worse at the start than you do halfway through.
In creative work, the days you want to quit are sometimes when breakthroughs come.
Our perception of capacity is elastic.
In endurance sports, this is called the “lie” of the first miles, you often feel worse at the start than you do halfway through.
In creative work, the days you want to quit are sometimes when breakthroughs come.
Our perception of capacity is elastic.
This is why the “I crushed it on a bad day” experience is so powerful.
It severs the link between mood and outcome.
It tells your brain: “I don’t need perfect conditions. I can adapt.”
Once that belief takes root, a bad warmup, bad sleep, or bad mood stops feeling like a death sentence.
It severs the link between mood and outcome.
It tells your brain: “I don’t need perfect conditions. I can adapt.”
Once that belief takes root, a bad warmup, bad sleep, or bad mood stops feeling like a death sentence.
So how do you train this?
1️⃣ Occasionally practice in less-than-perfect conditions.
2️⃣ Keep a record of days you overperformed despite feeling awful.
3️⃣ Reflect on what worked—what cues or adjustments helped you still show up?
That’s the blueprint you pull from the next time the fog rolls in.
1️⃣ Occasionally practice in less-than-perfect conditions.
2️⃣ Keep a record of days you overperformed despite feeling awful.
3️⃣ Reflect on what worked—what cues or adjustments helped you still show up?
That’s the blueprint you pull from the next time the fog rolls in.
Stop obsessing over “Do I feel ready?” and start asking “How can I be effective right now?”
Your focus moves from evaluation to execution.
That’s where resilience lives—not in the absence of discomfort, but in the ability to act in spite of it.
Your focus moves from evaluation to execution.
That’s where resilience lives—not in the absence of discomfort, but in the ability to act in spite of it.
So if you ever find yourself winning, PR’ing, or delivering great work on a “bad” day...don’t dismiss it.
That’s gold.
That’s evidence that you’re stronger than your feelings.
And once you know that, you’re free.
That’s gold.
That’s evidence that you’re stronger than your feelings.
And once you know that, you’re free.
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