This piece is part of my 2016–2026 archive migration. Some original formatting, content, and external links may be missing, changed, or not be optimized.
Redefining discipline and people’s capacity to be disciplined
Most people think disciplined people:
Workout daily
Are super healthy and fit
Are consistently productive
Wake up at 4–5 am every day
Set goals and accomplish them without fail
Usually implement habits that lead to successful outcomes and ultimately have all their shit together
Though this might be true, other thoughts about discipline and its meaning are worth exploring. Let’s start with a more general definition of a disciplined person: someone who is consistent with their habits.
What does this mean for you? Well, believe it or not, if you don’t feel like you are disciplined, you are. In fact, everyone is a disciplined person.
15 Examples of Disciplined Habits
People who routinely smoke
People routinely eat out
People who routinely live above their means
People who routinely watch television or stream content
People who routinely drink alcohol
People who routinely oversleep
People who routinely don’t work
People who routinely don’t make progress on their goals
People who routinely watch porn
People who routinely watch the news
People who routinely think negatively or pessimistically
People who routinely spend more than they earn
People who routinely don’t invest to build wealth
People who routinely don’t read, learn, or grow
People who routinely allow others to cross their boundaries
Do you routinely integrate any of these fifteen habits into your life? If so, congratulations, you are a disciplined person.
All of fifteen of these habits consistently lead to a specific outcome. Is the outcome productive? Probably not. But it does not take away the fact that these people know how to be consistent, and if you know how to be consistent, you know how to be disciplined.
Everyone has the capacity to be disciplined, consistent, and productive with the habits they decide to live by. The question should not be how disciplined a person can be but which habits a person will choose to be disciplined in.
If you think you lack discipline, think again.
If you consider yourself to struggle with implementing consistency in specific areas of your life, think again.
If you can be disciplined in one area of your life, you can apply this discipline to another (or multiple) area(s) of your life.
Someone at the gym recently gave me a perfect example.
He mentioned that if a person can be disciplined to wake up and go to work at 9–5 every day or go to school and complete classes, they can apply the same level of discipline to their health, finances, or any other area of their life. It’s a choice, and the only blocker to integrating discipline in one area into another is you.
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You can no longer say you are an undisciplined person or don’t have the mentality of a disciplined person; this excuse is now classified as total bullshit.
Discipline Is Direction, Not Personality
The mistake most people make is treating discipline as a personality trait instead of a directional choice.
Discipline isn’t something you’re born with or without. It’s something you aim. You’re already disciplined — the question is where that discipline is currently pointed.
Right now, it might be aimed at comfort, avoidance, distraction, or short-term relief. That doesn’t mean it can’t be redirected.
This is why motivation is overrated. Motivation is emotional and inconsistent. Discipline is structural. You don’t need to feel inspired to do what you already do every day. You wake up. You check your phone. You show up somewhere. You follow patterns. Those patterns didn’t require hype — they required repetition. The same mechanism applies to building strength, wealth, skill, and confidence.
Another misunderstanding is thinking discipline has to be extreme.
It doesn’t. It starts with one non-negotiable. One habit you do whether you feel like it or not. Once that habit is locked in, you stack another. Momentum builds quietly. Over time, the identity shifts. You stop trying to “be disciplined” and simply become someone who follows through.
Discipline also removes decision fatigue. When something is decided in advance, it no longer drains mental energy. You don’t debate whether you’ll work out, save money, or write — you just do it because that’s what you do.
Freedom isn’t the absence of structure. It’s the presence of structure that works.
People who claim discipline feels restrictive usually haven’t experienced the freedom on the other side of it. Discipline gives you options. It gives you leverage. It gives you self-trust. And self-trust changes how you move through the world. You stop negotiating with yourself. You stop making excuses sound intelligent.
If you want proof you’re capable, look at what you already do consistently — even the habits you don’t like. That’s your evidence. You already know how to show up. You already know how to repeat actions. All that remains is choosing better targets.
Discipline isn’t missing from your life. It’s misallocated. Redirect it, and everything changes.
Choose discipline over motivation
This content is for informational purposes only — not professional advice. Consult a qualified professional before making any major decisions.
This content is for informational purposes only — not professional advice. Consult a qualified professional before making any major decisions.