
Most of us have read the advice. We know we should set goals, build habits, reflect regularly, invest in our relationships, and prioritise our mental health. We know this. And yet for most people, that knowledge sits in a kind of holding pattern — intellectually accepted, but not actually changing anything. The gap between knowing what to do and actually doing it is one of the most frustrating places a person can live.
The reason that gap exists, according to decades of research in behavioural psychology, is not a lack of information. It is a lack of emotional buy-in. We follow through on changes when we are emotionally connected to the reason behind them — not when we are following a checklist someone else wrote. As Harvard Business Review research on purpose notes, people who connect their goals to deeply personal values are significantly more likely to maintain them over time than those motivated by external pressure or comparison.
The Mindset Shift: From Discipline to Identity
The most effective shift you can make is moving from “I am trying to do X” to “I am the kind of person who does X.” This is not semantic. It is neurological. Identity-based goals activate different neural pathways than outcome-based goals. When your behaviour is tied to who you are rather than what you want to achieve, the decision-making process changes fundamentally. You do not have to decide every morning whether to exercise — you are someone who exercises. You do not have to debate whether to journal — it is just part of how you process your week.
Behavioural researcher James Clear explores this extensively in the context of habit formation, drawing on psychological research showing that identity-based habits are more durable and less effortful to maintain than those anchored purely to outcomes.
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Practical Ways to Apply This
Start by asking: who do I want to be in one year? Not what do I want to have achieved — who do I want to have become? Write that person down in specific terms. Then ask: what does that person do on a Tuesday morning? What is their relationship with their phone, their sleep, their body, their work? Work backwards from the identity to the daily behaviour, rather than trying to build behaviours in the hope they eventually create a different identity.
The Role of Self-Compassion in Making Changes Last
Research from Dr Kristin Neff at the University of Texas, widely considered the leading researcher on self-compassion, consistently shows that people who treat themselves with compassion after setbacks are more likely to try again and maintain long-term change than those who respond with self-criticism. This runs counter to the cultural narrative that beating yourself up is motivating. It is not. Self-criticism activates the threat response in the brain, which actually makes sustained change harder. Self-compassion activates the care-giving system — which supports learning, repair, and growth.
You Are Already Doing Better Than You Think
One of the most common patterns in people seeking life guidance is a tendency to focus exclusively on the gap between where they are and where they want to be, while being almost entirely blind to how far they have already come. Build in a regular practice of acknowledging your own progress — not to become complacent, but to fuel the next phase. Progress recognised is progress sustained. The version of you reading this has already navigated things that your past self was not sure you could handle. That matters.
Where to Start Today
Pick one area of your life where you feel the gap between who you are and who you want to be most acutely. Write a single sentence: “I am the kind of person who…” and finish it honestly. Then identify the smallest possible daily action that person would take. Not the dramatic action. The tiny, almost-too-small-to-matter action. Do that one thing consistently for 30 days before you add anything else. The research on behaviour change is clear: small, consistent, identity-anchored actions compound into significant transformation over time. The key is starting where you actually are, not where you wish you were.
Rubie Le’Faine is the founder of Rubie Rubie and a writer specialising in emotional well-being, self-identity, and the psychology of modern relationships. She holds a Level 3 Certificate in Counselling Skills and has spent over eight years studying attachment theory, cognitive behavioural principles, and human development — first through formal study, then through lived experience that no course can replicate. After navigating a significant relationship breakdown, an identity rebuild, and the complex terrain of rediscovering herself in her 30s, Rubie began writing to make sense of what she had learned and to offer honest, human guidance to others going through the same. She founded Rubie Rubie in 2022 as a space for women seeking real answers, not platitudes. Based in Surrey, UK, her writing is grounded in research, shaped by experience, and centred entirely on the reader’s genuine wellbeing.







