Here’s an interesting counterpoint to the whole consistency versus intensity debate:
Consistency is overrated. If you’re forcing yourself to produce against your will, your output is unlikely to be worth consuming. If you want a process that lasts, trade consistency for intensity. Do a lot when inspiration strikes, and take a break when you have nothing to add. ~ @dvassallo
It makes sense too, as much as the other side of the argument about consistency, where it’s all about doing it anyway, day in and day out, even if you’re not inspired. I can see seasons where the tweet does make sense, when “inspiration strikes” and I’m unstoppable. Productivity goes through the roof. I deeply enjoy the sense of achievement. I think back of last year in October, when I created two products in a month—Keto List Singapore and Sweet Jam Sites—which I’m still growing now. But the intensity of inspiration is notoriously unreliable, it seems. If I wait for it, I may never get anything done. Ever. The production process becomes ill-disciplined and lazy. Toxic stagnation comes. But when it returns, it’s a sweet, crazy ride. Pulse and pause seems to be the operating mode here.
Consistency then seems to help fill in the gaps in between periods of intensity. Uninspired? Then just plug at it daily, till it comes. But the danger of plugging at it when you’re not into it, is that you start to hate it so much that the resulting toxicity may make inspiration never return. Yes, I know. It too had happened to me before. Ever stuck in a job that you once loved but after some time, it evolved into a monster you just want to wish away? Yes that’s toxic consistency for you. Always on, every single day, but quality may suffer. And your heart too.
I think there’s no end to it if you set intensity up against consistency, as polar opposites. Truth is, we need both. And we need the wholesome sides of both, not the toxic sides. Intense seasons of inspiration-fuelled sprints, followed by dedicated marathons of consistent effort, step by step, building on whatever the intense sprints brought on. And always keep their evil twins at bay. Hold on too long to the inspiration seasons, and you slide into stagnation. Keep at the consistency marathons for too long, and you (and your creativity) wither and die.
So. Consistency AND intensity.