
Don’t Let Short-Term Emotions Override Long-Term Identity - Nat Galloway
Don’t Let Short-Term Emotions Override Long-Term Identity
Everyone feels tired, feels unmotivated and can come up with a reasonable excuse.
The difference isn’t who feels it. The difference is who lets it decide.
Most people make decisions based on emotion:
“It’s been a long week.”
“I deserve a break.”
“I’ll start Monday.”
That’s short-term thinking.
Identity-based thinking sounds different:
Not: “Do I feel like training?”
But: “Am I someone who trains?”
That removes negotiation.
During COVID, I took two buses and a long walk just to get to the gym. Two and a half hours of travel. I had every excuse available. None of them aligned with who I am.
So I went. Not because I was motivated. Because training is part of my identity.
Here’s the important part:
I don’t put pressure on my sessions to be amazing. I put pressure on myself to show up.
If something feels off, I adjust.
If energy is low, I scale it back.
If all I can do is walk on a treadmill, I do that.
But I go. Because showing up protects identity.
Psychology backs this up: we become what we repeatedly do. Every action is a vote for the type of person we believe we are.
Miss once? Human.
Miss twice? That becomes a new habit forming.
Miss consistently? That becomes identity.
When life gets busy, don’t remove the habit. Lower the standard — not the commitment.
Instead of 90 minutes, do 30.
Instead of heavy, go light.
Instead of hard, just move.
Short-term emotions fluctuate. Identity is stable.
Next time you don’t feel like training, ask yourself:
“If I listen to this emotion, does it move me toward the person I want to become?”
Short-term emotions are normal. Letting them override long-term identity is optional.
If you want to think long-term about your training — how to stay consistent, resilient, and make progress as an athlete — you can learn more at www.masterathletic.com.
Nat Galloway
Coach, Master Athletic Performance
