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Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Being 80% all the time beats being 100% half the time.

We love the idea of going all in: perfect effort, flawless execution, max intensity.

But perfection is fragile.

It burns hot, then flames out.

Consistency, not occasional perfection, is what compounds into greatness.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Think about training.

Anyone can smash one “perfect” workout.

But what matters is not what you do once. It’s what you repeat.

A solid run every day beats a heroic one followed by three days of exhaustion.

Progress is built on showing up.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
The same holds true outside of sport.

Writing one perfect paragraph means little if you never write again for weeks.

A single all-nighter doesn’t outweigh weeks of consistent studying

Parenting, relationships, creativity—they’re all consistency sports.

Better to be present and steady than perfect and absent.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
It’s like investing.

The people who try to time the market often lose.

The ones who win are those who contribute steadily, even when conditions aren’t perfect.

Consistency beats timing.

In markets, in training, in life.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Psychology research backs this up.

We’re wired to overvalue peaks and undervalue consistency.

Yet habits form through repetition, not isolated intensity.

When effort is sustainable, it sticks.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Biology teaches the same lesson.

Adaptation comes not from one overwhelming stressor but from repeated signals over time.

Small stresses + adequate recovery = growth.

Big, unsustainable stress = breakdown.

The body is built to adapt to consistency, not to survive chaos.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Perfection creates fragility.

Miss one rep, one workout, one day, and the story becomes “I failed.”

Consistency creates resilience.

Miss once? You’re still on track because you’ve built the habit of showing up.

The path bends, but it doesn’t break.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
So stop chasing perfection and start building consistency.

Better to be 80% 100% of the time than 100% 50% of the time.

The wins that last aren’t built in heroic moments.

They’re built in daily, repeatable effort.

Show up, stay steady, and let consistency do its compounding work.
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