The secret reason...

Mar 26, 2025 9:01 am


Yesterday I touched on one of the positive effects of consistency, which is the fact that it gets people to Know, Like and Trust you and your brand. 


Which in turn leads to them recommending you to their friends and loved ones, which leads to easy sales for you. 


But I think one underrated benefit of consistency is how easy showing up becomes once you hack it. 


The early stages of consistency can be very hard


You’ll struggle and drag your feet to show up each day and do that thing. 


This can go on for days, weeks and sometimes even months. 


But once that “initial gra-gra” stage is over, the stage that follows is considerably less difficult. 


All of a sudden, showing up becomes easier. 


Heck, it now feels like the new normal to you, and a day without doing that activity doesn’t feel complete. 


Just the same way it doesn’t feel normal if I don’t sell or promote any of my products or services in a day, both physically or online. 


This is what happens at that point when you get into the rhythm of consistency


Everything just flows easily. 


And as a result of the sheer amount of reps you have put in while building this rhythm of consistency,


You just get significantly better at that thing without even trying. 


That’s another hidden benefit of consistency. 


The reason you still struggle with doing a lot of things, like:


  • Selling
  • Coding
  • Singing
  • Reading
  • Speaking
  • Writing copy
  • Posting online
  • Creating content


And so on… is because you simply haven’t built a rhythm of consistency around that endeavour yet. 


It doesn’t matter what it is. 


I promise you that if you show up for 30 days straight, just 30 days, without missing a single day…,


By the end of the 30 days, you would have experienced so much growth, made so much progress, and built such a high-level rhythm of consistency. 


So much so that you wouldn’t even want to stop it anymore.


That’s the secret behind why I sometimes do these 21-day or 30-day challenges. 


Because it helps me get into that rhythm of consistency, and helps me get better overall in the end. 


It’s why I am darn good at what I do. 


Because I show up daily. 


Now it’s your turn. 


Tell me, what do you want to get considerably better at?


And how much time (days) are you willing to commit to getting better at it?


Plus, what would having someone to hold you by the hand and keep you accountable do for you?


Reply to this email and tell me. 


And I’ll see you in tomorrow’s email. 


Have a lovely day ahead. 


— KD™



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