We often wait for motivation to appear, like a sudden spark that makes everything easy.
But motivation is not something you find. It is something you build, one small challenge at a time.
Psychologists and authors such as Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Daniel Pink, Richard Ryan & Edward Deci, and recent neuroscience studies all point to the same truth:
The human brain loves progress, not perfection.
1. The Sweet Spot Between Easy and Impossible
Think about a video game.
If it is too easy, you get bored.
If it is too hard, you give up.
But when it is just challenging enough — something you almost can do — you keep playing.
That balance is what Csikszentmihalyi called the Flow Channel in his book Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience.
It is where your skills and the challenge meet in just the right proportion.
Too little challenge creates boredom, too much causes anxiety, but the right amount keeps you focused and curious.
This is incremental challenge — the idea of taking on something slightly harder than before.
It is not about pushing to extremes, but about stretching just a little beyond comfort.
That is where growth and motivation begin.
2. Why Small Wins Feel So Good
Neuroscience shows that every small step forward releases dopamine, the brain’s natural reward signal.
It is not given for success, but for progress itself.
That feeling of “I am getting somewhere” is what keeps you going.
Stefano Di Domenico’s study The Emerging Neuroscience of Intrinsic Motivation explains that small, manageable goals activate motivation circuits in the brain, while overly difficult tasks can shut them down.
This is why you can lose track of time while painting, coding, or writing — your brain is enjoying progress, not waiting for a trophy.
3. How to Stay Motivated Without Forcing It
In Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us, Daniel Pink describes three key elements of motivation:
- Autonomy – You have the freedom to choose.
- Mastery – You keep improving.
- Purpose – You know why it matters.
Incremental challenge lives in mastery.
It gives you that sense of “I am getting better.”
Each small success fuels the next one.
You do not need pressure from others; progress itself becomes your source of energy.
4. The Psychology Behind It
According to Self-Determination Theory by Richard Ryan and Edward Deci, we all share three psychological needs:
- Autonomy (control over our choices)
- Competence (the feeling of being capable)
- Relatedness (connection with others)
Incremental challenges satisfy the need for competence.
They make you feel capable and growing.
Good mentors or leaders understand this — they build steps, not walls.
Every achievable challenge strengthens confidence and keeps motivation alive.
5. Growth Feels Better Than Glory
Success is reaching a goal.
Growth is becoming someone new while reaching it.
Money, status, or titles fade quickly, but growth stays with you.
Every small challenge reshapes your brain, training it to find joy in effort itself.
As Professor Cho Byuk once said, “Happiness begins when we live a life of contribution.”
And contribution begins with growth — even the smallest kind.
6. Try This in Real Life
You can build your own motivation system:
- Pick one meaningful goal.
- Break it into small, specific steps.
- Choose one that feels slightly hard but still possible.
- Celebrate every bit of progress.
After a few weeks, you will see that motivation was never missing.
It was just waiting for movement.
Final Thought
You do not need to do big things to change your life.
You only need to do slightly bigger things than yesterday.
That is how your brain learns to enjoy effort again.
Motivation is not about hype or discipline; it is about small, steady growth — and the quiet confidence that says, I can do this, and I can do a little more.
References
- Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990). Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. Harper & Row.
- Pink, D. H. (2009). Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us. Riverhead Books.
- Ryan, R. M., & Deci, E. L. (2017). Self-Determination Theory: Basic Psychological Needs in Motivation, Development, and Wellness. Guilford Press.
- Di Domenico, S. I., & Ryan, R. M. (2017). The Emerging Neuroscience of Intrinsic Motivation. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 11, 145.