We've got the saying wrong.
It's not quality over quantity. It's quality in the quantity you can sustain.
One frames it as a tradeoff. The other frames it as a practice.
Sustainable excellence requires both working together.
Here's the problem with "quality over quantity."
It implies you choose one or the other. But that's not how mastery works.
You can't produce quality without volume.
And volume without quality is just grinding.
The real question is: how much can you do well, consistently?
It implies you choose one or the other. But that's not how mastery works.
You can't produce quality without volume.
And volume without quality is just grinding.
The real question is: how much can you do well, consistently?
Think about the best in any field.
Writers who publish for decades. Athletes who compete at the top for years.
They found their sustainable threshold. The level of output they could maintain without breaking down.
Without burning out. Without sacrificing craft.
Writers who publish for decades. Athletes who compete at the top for years.
They found their sustainable threshold. The level of output they could maintain without breaking down.
Without burning out. Without sacrificing craft.
This is where most people fail.
They go all-in for a sprint. Maximum output. Maximum intensity. Then they crash.
Or worse—they sustain the quantity but the quality erodes. They're showing up, but they're not really there. The work suffers. They suffer.
They go all-in for a sprint. Maximum output. Maximum intensity. Then they crash.
Or worse—they sustain the quantity but the quality erodes. They're showing up, but they're not really there. The work suffers. They suffer.
It's finding what you can do consistently well.
Not for a week. Not for a month. For years.
That number is different for everyone.
And it changes across seasons of life. The skill is recalibrating.
Not for a week. Not for a month. For years.
That number is different for everyone.
And it changes across seasons of life. The skill is recalibrating.
Athletes learn this lesson the hard way.
More training isn't always better.
The best coaches know this. They find the dose each athlete can absorb and adapt to.
Push beyond that, and you get diminishing returns. Injury. Staleness. Regression disguised as effort.
More training isn't always better.
The best coaches know this. They find the dose each athlete can absorb and adapt to.
Push beyond that, and you get diminishing returns. Injury. Staleness. Regression disguised as effort.
The same applies to creative work. To leadership. To parenting.
You can't give your best if you've depleted yourself giving too much.
Presence requires reserves. Quality demands energy.
You have to protect the resource that makes the work good in the first place.
You can't give your best if you've depleted yourself giving too much.
Presence requires reserves. Quality demands energy.
You have to protect the resource that makes the work good in the first place.
So stop asking "quality or quantity?" Start asking "what's the quantity of quality I can sustain?" Find that. Adjust it as life changes.
mIt's how you stay in the game long enough to do your best work.
mIt's how you stay in the game long enough to do your best work.
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