
Episode Summary:
Momentum is one of those things we rarely question when it’s there — and immediately panic about when it disappears. One week you’re in full flow, feeling strong, clear, connected… and then, almost overnight, everything slows. Your energy drops. Your routines dissolve. Your motivation slips through your fingers.
It can feel like failure. It can feel like you’re losing yourself.
But in reality, momentum doesn’t vanish because we’re weak — it fades because the body and mind are finally asking for rest.
In this episode, I explore the quieter truth behind losing momentum, and what actually happens after intense periods of life. We’ll look at why the nervous system often collapses after big highs, how emotional stress drains motivation just as much as physical overload, and how small, gentle actions can slowly rebuild our inner spark again.
Because losing momentum isn’t a personal flaw.
It’s a biological recalibration.
In This Episode:
• Why momentum often drops after big events, highs, or periods of intensity
• The physical crash: stress hormones, nervous system shifts, and post-event fatigue
• The emotional layer: how uncertainty, decisions, and relationships affect motivation
• The “dissolving phase” — when habits quietly fall away
• The 2am moment that sparked a gentle turning point
• The science of rebuilding momentum through small actions
• Why self-compassion restores energy faster than discipline
• Habit stacking and micro-steps as a realistic path back to flow
• Reconnecting to your “why” as a sustainable source of motivation
Key Insight:
“Momentum doesn’t return through force. It returns through the smallest possible beginning.”
Reflection Prompt:
Where in your life have you quietly lost momentum?
And what is one tiny, almost laughably small action you can take today to begin again?
Mentioned Concepts:
Dopamine and the “small wins loop”
Nervous system regulation and post-stress recovery
Habit stacking and micro-behaviours
Self-compassion and emotional regulation
Values-driven motivation
The psychology of overload and rest
Final Thoughts:
Losing momentum isn’t a sign that something is wrong with you — it’s a sign that your system needed to pause. And rebuilding it has nothing to do with pressure or perfection. It begins in the smallest, most honest ways: with breath, with presence, with one simple step that tells your body, “I’m here again.”