 If you're struggling with procrastination and not feeling motivated, it's likely because whatever you're working towards isn't meaningful enough to you. If you want to cure that, you need a strong purpose. So, for example, when I ask my clients what they want, a lot of them, they'll start off by saying very broad and generic things, like they want more time, they want more money, they want more freedom. But why do they want that? One of my clients, he keeps it really simple. He wants to have the time, money and freedom because he's married, he has three kids, he wants his wife to be at stay-at-home mom, he wants to take his family and two to four vacations a year, and he wants to buy his dream house. And so he has all these specific reasons of why he is working and building his business and making more money. It's to fund these things that mean something to him. And so it doesn't have to be complicated, it just has to be meaningful enough to you. And a way that you could probably screw this up is if you take somebody else's purpose and someone else's goal and think that this has to be your purpose and your goal too. You need your own purpose, your own reason why, otherwise it's not going to mean anything to you and you're not going to actually work towards whatever you're working on.