The Joy of Regression
Chris Sparks is an executive performance coach who advises a select group of founders and executives on achieving peak performance, unlocking leverage, and designing lives of freedom and purpose. Find him online at forcingfunction.com or on X at @SparksRemarks.
Progress worship has hijacked self-improvement, creating an all-or-nothing pursuit of growth: maintain perfect forward momentum or we’re worthless.
When we inevitably regress—because we're human—we transform natural fluctuations in energy, focus, and circumstances into moral failings, proof of our fundamental inadequacy. One missed meditation becomes evidence that we lack “discipline." A week without writing reinforces the narrative that we aren't “real” writers.
This obsession with visible, measurable progress creates a fragile relationship with our habits and, ultimately, ourselves. We become hostages to our metrics, valuing the appearance of consistency over actual development. In this process, we’ve overlooked how sustainable change naturally unfolds, characterized by periods of advancement, consolidation, and occasional retreat.
But what if regression isn't a failure at all? What if these apparent backslides are opportunities to recalibrate our approach, refine our systems, and rediscover our purpose?
Regression isn't a bug—it's an essential feature of sustainable growth, like pruning a plant to encourage fuller, deeper development. What appears to be cutting back actually creates the conditions for moving forward with greater clarity, purpose, and effectiveness.
You Can’t Eat Streaks
The self-help industry monetizes our insecurities by pathologizing regression. We've been conditioned to conflate consistency with commitment. This narrative of continuous momentum contradicts reality, as progress never follows a straight line.
My biggest beef with the Quantified Self movement is that it often mistakes the map for the territory. We design ever more sophisticated maps—trackers, dashboards, templates—that distract us from whether the "territory" of our lives is improving. We prefer the visual predictability of our maps to the messier territory of actual development. What’s the use of beautiful patterns of progress when they exist only on paper?
Our tools often perpetuate this illusion. Consider Duolingo, which is gamified entertainment masquerading as education. Users are seduced into prioritizing streak maintenance over transferable language acquisition. This leads to foreign travelers with triple-digit streaks struggling to order a sandwich.
Mainstream meditation apps like Headspace and Calm present a striking irony: users end up obsessing over unbroken streaks of pressing play on their phones. These practices, originally designed to cultivate non-attachment to outcomes, instead reinforce exactly the achievement-oriented thinking they’re meant to help us transcend.
Absence Makes the Habit Grow Stronger
When streaks break, there can be lasting psychological damage. Without the perceived stakes of preserving the streak, lapses are likely to extend.
Day 1 lacks the urgency of protecting Day 99's investment. Why start today when tomorrow seems equally arbitrary? This leads to total habit collapse.
This binary lens overlooks regression's valuable purpose: providing contrast. Like negative space in a painting, pauses highlight what constant repetition might otherwise make invisible. We reconnect with our initial spark by seeing our commitment with fresh eyes.
Resuming a habit is like reconnecting with an old friend after time apart. There’s a curious asymmetry in how we approach relationships versus habits. We understand that friendships naturally ebb and flow and that periods of distance don’t diminish their importance. However, with habits, we catastrophize any interruption as a total failure. We extend grace to others that we withhold from ourselves.
Breaking a streak can liberate us from the prison of expectations. Without an occasional absence, we risk dulling our appreciation for what we value most.
Given how fragile streak-based reinforcement is, using a more sustainable approach is essential. Build intrinsic motivation rather than depending on extrinsic validation. Redefining success from "never missing a day" to "trusting the process" or "appreciating the benefits." Framing regression as a natural course correction ensures more resilience and speedier recoveries.
Failure as Feedback: Integrating Intelligence
When habits break down, our inner critic immediately files charges: "I failed." This observation becomes a sweeping identity claim: "I am a failure." This mental leap isn't just counterproductive; it conceals the intelligence in every setback.
When facing failure, our default response is to double down on willpower. We create even stricter versions of the very system that just failed us, paying tuition multiple times for the same lesson. The issue rarely stems from insufficient commitment—it lies in our system's design. Instead, view the break as a strategic repositioning that integrates intelligence gained from experience.
Questions to surface intelligence:
Look for patterns.
What happened before the lapse?
What would have made continuing easier?
When did things feel effortless?
When did it feel like a burden?
Look for shifts.
Did my motivation change? (Is this still a priority?)
What did I miss during the lapse?
What advice would I give someone I care about?
Engineer a more robust approach that flows with human nature rather than struggles against it. Look for places where your environment can do the heavy lifting that willpower can do once handled. A strategically placed water bottle makes hydration more likely than any amount of determination. Prepped ingredients and a preselected recipe make cooking more likely than ordering, even after a draining day.
During chaotic periods, consider a 'minimum viable' version of your habit. My rule of thumb is to set the initial bar for declaring success "so low I can't say no." This isn't settling for mediocrity; it's acknowledging that sustainability outperforms bursts of ambition. By stripping away excess complexity, we illuminate what matters most.
This systems-based approach transmutes regressions into feedback—reminders to keep iterating. Resilience isn’t about never slipping—it’s about returning sharper each time.
The Art of the Graceful Restart
The ability to skillfully restart is more valuable than never stopping—a truth that progress worship obscures.
Our internal narrative transforms regression into either an obstacle or an opportunity. When we welcome setbacks as necessary recalibrations rather than moral failures, we can extract their valuable intelligence. This shift frees us from the trap of binary thinking—the cycle of perfect compliance or total abandonment.
In this reframing, every pause becomes an opportunity to shed what isn't working and reinforce what is. What appears to be regression paves the way for sustainable development—like pruning a plant to encourage fuller, deeper growth.
The practice isn't perfection—it's graceful recovery. The next time you "fall off the wagon," resist catastrophizing. Instead, ask what intelligence this regression offers and use the pause to recalibrate your approach.
At its essence, this dance of progress and regression creates a far more meaningful rhythm than any unbroken march forward ever could. Embrace this perspective, and you’ll discover that what once appeared as missteps were the movements that seeded your most extraordinary transformations.