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Mind & Habits

Why Motivation Comes and Goes

A1 A2 B1 B2

Motivation is a wave, not a machine. When you build small habits, protect rest, and shape your environment, you can keep moving toward work and money goals—even on low days.

A1 Level

Small habits help you on tired days.

Why Motivation Comes and Goes

Small habits help you on tired days.

Minho comes home after a long workday.
He checks his phone. He wants to study his online course.
But he feels empty. His body feels heavy.
He thinks, “Not today.”

Some days, Minho feels strong. He studies for one hour.
He feels proud.
Other days, he feels tired. He does nothing.
Then he feels guilty.

Motivation is not the same every day.
It goes up and down like the weather.
Sleep, stress, and daily problems can change your energy.

One evening, Minho tries a small rule.
He says, “I will not wait for big motivation.”
He opens the course. He watches only two minutes.
Then he writes one word in his notebook.

The next day, he does it again.
His notebook has short notes on many days.
Not perfect. Not big. But steady.

This small habit helps his work, too.
When he keeps a routine, he feels more control.
Even on low days, he is still moving.


Key Points

  • Motivation goes up and down. This is normal.
  • A small habit can help you keep going on low days.

Words to Know

motivation /ˌmoʊtɪˈveɪʃən/ (n) — the feeling that makes you want to act
energy /ˈenərdʒi/ (n) — strength to do things
habit /ˈhæbɪt/ (n) — something you do often
routine /ruːˈtiːn/ (n) — a set of daily actions
tired /ˈtaɪərd/ (adj) — needing rest
guilty /ˈɡɪlti/ (adj) — feeling bad about something
control /kənˈtroʊl/ (n) — power to guide your actions
steady /ˈstedi/ (adj) — not changing a lot


📝 Practice Questions

A1 – True/False

  1. Minho always feels motivated after work.
  2. Motivation can go up and down.
  3. Minho makes a tiny habit: two minutes and one word.

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What does Minho do on a low day?
    A. He studies for three hours
    B. He opens the course for two minutes
    C. He buys a new phone

  2. Motivation is like:
    A. the weather
    B. a rock
    C. a locked door

  3. What helps Minho feel calmer?
    A. Waiting for big motivation
    B. Doing nothing and sleeping late
    C. Being “still moving” with a small routine

A1 – Short Answer

  1. Where is Minho in the story?
  2. How many minutes does he watch?
  3. What does he write in his notebook?

A1 – True/False

  1. False
  2. True
  3. True

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. B
  2. A
  3. C

A1 – Short Answer

  1. At home
  2. Two minutes
  3. One word
A2 Level

Don’t trust the feeling. Trust your plan.

Why Motivation Comes and Goes

Don’t trust the feeling. Trust your plan.

Ana and her friend Malik sit in a small café. Ana looks worried. She says, “I keep waiting for strong motivation. Then I start late. Then I panic.”

Malik nods. “My motivation changes too,” he says. “Some weeks I feel great. Some weeks I feel low. So I don’t build my life on that feeling.”

Motivation comes in waves

Motivation often rises and falls. A busy week at work, family stress, or poor sleep can make your energy drop. When energy is low, your brain wants comfort and easy rewards. Studying, saving money, or doing extra work can feel too hard.

Habits protect your day

Malik shows Ana his simple routine: “Every evening at 8:30, I study for 15 minutes. No debate. After that, I can stop.” He also keeps one rest night each week. “I don’t trust motivation,” he says. “I trust my routine and my rest.”

Researchers at Harvard often explain that routines reduce decision stress. When you decide once, you don’t have to fight your feelings every day.

A small money lesson

If you wait for motivation, you may delay important work. Delay has a cost: missed practice, missed skills, and sometimes missed income.

Try this gentle plan:

  1. Pick one small daily action (15 minutes).
  2. Choose one rest time (one evening).
  3. Make your space simple (phone away).

Ana smiles. “Maybe my goal is not ‘high motivation,’” she says. “Maybe my goal is a steady life.”


Key Points

  • Motivation changes with sleep, stress, and life events.
  • Small routines reduce daily “fighting with yourself.”
  • Rest helps motivation return and prevents burnout.

Words to Know

cycle /ˈsaɪkəl/ (n) — a pattern that repeats
stress /stres/ (n) — pressure that makes you feel tense
comfort /ˈkʌmfərt/ (n) — a safe, easy feeling
reward /rɪˈwɔːrd/ (n) — something you want to get
routine /ruːˈtiːn/ (n) — a planned daily habit
rest /rest/ (n) — time to recover
delay /dɪˈleɪ/ (v) — to do later, not now
income /ˈɪnkʌm/ (n) — money you earn
steady /ˈstedi/ (adj) — stable and regular
panic /ˈpænɪk/ (n) — sudden strong fear


📝 Practice Questions

A2 – True/False

  1. Ana often waits for strong motivation and starts late.
  2. Malik studies only when he feels excited.
  3. Rest can help motivation come back.

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is Malik’s routine?
    A. 15 minutes at the same time each evening
    B. Five hours only on weekends
    C. Studying only after midnight

  2. What can lower motivation?
    A. Good sleep
    B. Stress and busy weeks
    C. Drinking water

  3. What is one “money lesson” in the article?
    A. Delay can have a cost
    B. Motivation never changes
    C. People should never rest

A2 – Short Answer

  1. Where do Ana and Malik talk?
  2. What does Malik trust more than motivation?
  3. Name one part of the gentle plan.

A2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. B
  3. A

A2 – Short Answer

  1. In a café
  2. His routine (and rest plan)
  3. Example: 15 minutes daily / one rest night / phone away
B1 Level

When motivation drops, your system decides your results.

Why Motivation Comes and Goes

When motivation drops, your system decides your results.

Lera works in sales. In spring, she feels powerful. She makes calls early, meets clients, and earns good bonuses. She even saves money each month. Then summer comes. She sleeps less, scrolls more at night, and feels “flat” in the morning. Her calls drop. Her income becomes unstable, and her stress rises.

The wave problem

Lera’s manager notices a pattern: her performance follows her energy waves. This is common. Motivation is not a steady fuel. It reacts to sleep, health, and daily events. When motivation is low, the brain looks for easy rewards—short videos, snacks, chatting—because they feel good now.

In money and work, this creates a real trade-off: comfort now vs. progress later. Economists would call it a short-term choice with a long-term cost.

Discipline is the bridge

Together, Lera and her manager build a “minimum plan” for low days:

  • 5-minute planning at the start of work
  • a small number of “minimum calls”
  • one short learning task (10 minutes)

This is discipline, not as a harsh rule, but as a bridge. It carries her across low-energy days.

Environment makes action easier

They also change her environment:

  • phone notifications off during call time
  • a quieter corner desk
  • a simple board showing “Today’s 3 tasks”

Harvard Business Review often discusses how small work systems can protect performance when feelings change. Gallup reports on engagement also suggest that stress and burnout can reduce effort over time.

Lera’s results do not become perfect—but they become stable. And stability matters in income, savings, and self-trust.

Try one simple exercise: track your energy for 30 days (high / medium / low). Then plan a “minimum habit” for low days.


Key Points

  • Motivation waves can create unstable work results and unstable income.
  • A “minimum plan” helps you act even when you feel low.
  • Your environment can reduce distraction and protect focus.

Words to Know

performance /pərˈfɔːrməns/ (n) — how well you do work
unstable /ʌnˈsteɪbəl/ (adj) — changing a lot; not steady
trade-off /ˈtreɪdˌɔːf/ (n) — giving one thing to get another
comfort /ˈkʌmfərt/ (n) — easy, safe feeling
discipline /ˈdɪsəplɪn/ (n) — ability to act even when it’s hard
minimum /ˈmɪnɪməm/ (adj) — the smallest necessary amount
distraction /dɪˈstrækʃən/ (n) — something that pulls attention away
notification /ˌnoʊtɪfɪˈkeɪʃən/ (n) — a phone or app alert
engagement /ɪnˈɡeɪdʒmənt/ (n) — interest and involvement in work
bonus /ˈboʊnəs/ (n) — extra money from work
stable /ˈsteɪbəl/ (adj) — steady and reliable
burnout /ˈbɝːnaʊt/ (n) — extreme tiredness from long stress


📝 Practice Questions

B1 – True/False

  1. Lera’s income becomes unstable when her motivation drops.
  2. On low days, the brain often wants easy rewards.
  3. Turning on more notifications helps Lera focus.

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is Lera’s “minimum plan”?
    A. A plan with small required actions
    B. A plan to work only one day a week
    C. A plan to wait for strong feelings

  2. What is the “trade-off” described?
    A. Comfort now vs. progress later
    B. Coffee vs. tea
    C. Walking vs. driving only

  3. What environment change helps Lera?
    A. More phone alerts
    B. A quiet space and fewer notifications
    C. A louder desk near the door

B1 – Short Answer

  1. What job does Lera do?
  2. What happens to her performance in summer?
  3. What does the article suggest tracking for 30 days?

B1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. A
  3. B

B1 – Short Answer

  1. Sales worker
  2. It drops / becomes weak
  3. Energy (high/medium/low)
B2 Level

In modern work, stability comes from design—not constant drive.

Why Motivation Comes and Goes

In modern work, stability comes from design—not constant drive.

Noor is a freelance video editor. Some weeks, work floods in: urgent deadlines, late-night edits, fast payments. She feels sharp and motivated. Other weeks are quiet. She checks her email again and again. She watches other people online saying, “If you really want it, you’ll stay motivated every day.” When Noor feels tired, she starts to believe something is wrong with her.

Then she looks at her bank app. Income comes in waves, too. Her stress rises with every low week.

Motivation is not a moral trait

Motivation is a changing resource. It moves with sleep, recovery, stress, and uncertainty. In behavioral science, researchers like Daniel Kahneman explain that our minds often choose the easy path when we feel depleted. This is not laziness. It is the brain protecting energy.

Modern work makes the wave stronger: remote work, side jobs, irregular hours, and constant digital distraction. Your environment is now partly physical (desk, light, noise) and partly digital (notifications, feeds, open tabs). When the digital world is loud, motivation drains faster.

Systems protect income and health

A coach helps Noor build a “steady base” system:

  • Daily minimum work: one small task that keeps projects moving
  • Fixed start and stop times: a clear ending reduces endless scrolling
  • Scheduled breaks: short recovery prevents burnout
  • Environment rules: app blockers, phone out of reach, one-tab editing sessions

This is not about being strict. It is about reducing daily negotiation. Richard Thaler’s “nudge” idea fits here: make the good action easier and the distracting action harder.

From a money view, this system also reduces risk. When you rely only on high motivation, you create high volatility: strong weeks, weak weeks, unstable income, and poor saving. A steady routine acts like a basic financial safety tool—small, regular actions that support long-term stability.

Reports from the OECD and the World Economic Forum often highlight burnout risk and well-being challenges in changing work cultures. In that world, rest is not “extra.” It is maintenance.

A practical self-check

When motivation drops, ask:

  1. “What is my minimum action today?”
  2. “What rest do I need this week?”
  3. “What in my environment is pulling me away?”

Noor still has waves. But she stops blaming herself for them. She builds structures under the wave—habits, rest, and a calmer environment. And slowly, her work and money life feel more stable.


Key Points

  • Motivation is a changing resource, not a constant personality trait.
  • In modern digital work, environment design strongly affects focus and drive.
  • Systems—minimum habits plus real rest—protect long-term performance and stability.

Words to Know

resource /ˈriːsɔːrs/ (n) — something you can use, like time or energy
uncertainty /ʌnˈsɝːtənti/ (n) — not knowing what will happen
depleted /dɪˈpliːtɪd/ (adj) — used up; low energy left
digital /ˈdɪdʒɪtəl/ (adj) — connected to screens and computers
environment /ɪnˈvaɪrənmənt/ (n) — the space and conditions around you
system /ˈsɪstəm/ (n) — a planned way of working
volatility /ˌvɑːləˈtɪləti/ (n) — big ups and downs
income /ˈɪnkʌm/ (n) — money you earn
maintenance /ˈmeɪntənəns/ (n) — care that keeps something working well
burnout /ˈbɝːnaʊt/ (n) — deep exhaustion from long stress
negotiation /nɪˌɡoʊʃiˈeɪʃən/ (n) — back-and-forth deciding
discipline /ˈdɪsəplɪn/ (n) — steady action even without strong feelings
resilience /rɪˈzɪliəns/ (n) — ability to recover and keep going
distraction /dɪˈstrækʃən/ (n) — something that steals attention
stable /ˈsteɪbəl/ (adj) — steady and reliable


📝 Practice Questions

B2 – True/False

  1. Noor’s freelance work and income arrive in waves.
  2. The article says low motivation always means laziness.
  3. Environment rules can reduce distraction in digital work.

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is a “steady base” system for Noor?
    A. Random work hours every day
    B. Daily minimum work plus clear rest and rules
    C. Waiting until she feels inspired

  2. What does the article mean by “volatility”?
    A. Small, steady progress
    B. Big ups and downs
    C. A quiet workspace

  3. Which idea fits “make good actions easier”?
    A. Nudge-style design
    B. Endless scrolling practice
    C. Never taking breaks

B2 – Short Answer

  1. Why does Noor feel like she is failing at first?
  2. Give one example of an environment rule from the article.
  3. What are the three self-check questions mainly trying to protect?

B2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. B
  2. B
  3. A

B2 – Short Answer

  1. Online messages say she must stay motivated; her energy drops.
  2. Example: app blocker / phone out of reach / one-tab sessions.
  3. Steady progress, focus, and well-being (avoid burnout/instability).