Modern Wisdom #1077 – Chris Bailey: Why Some Goals Feel Effortless (and Others Hurt)
Host: Chris Williamson
Guest: Chris Bailey, author of "Intentional: How to Finish What You Start"
Date: March 28, 2026
Episode Overview
Chris Williamson and productivity expert Chris Bailey explore the central question: Why do some goals feel effortless while others feel like a chore? Drawing on Bailey's research and his new book, the conversation dives deep into the science of values, intentions, habitual behavior, procrastination, and how we can align our goals to make progress feel natural rather than forced. They discuss practical strategies, the surprising shortcomings of SMART goals, and how to design intentions that truly motivate lasting change.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. The "Graveyard of Forgotten Goals" (00:00–03:40)
- Bailey’s motivation: Despite being highly productive, Bailey noticed many of his own goals falling away, like unused exercise equipment.
- Quote:
"We all have a sort of graveyard of forgotten goals. Every single person on the planet does." – Chris Bailey (00:43)
- Initial exploration: Why do some goals stick while others fade? Key factors include procrastination and, crucially, values.
2. Understanding Values: The Science Behind What Drives Us (03:40–09:05)
- Bailey references research by Shalom Schwartz, identifying 12 fundamental human values:
- Self-direction, stimulation, hedonism/pleasure, achievement, power, face, security, tradition, conformity, humility, universalism, benevolence.
- Most people are a unique blend of some strong, some weak values.
- Quote:
"My value of self-direction is so high...but I love a gigantic plate of butter chicken at the end of the day." – Chris Bailey (06:15)
- Knowing your dominant values helps explain why certain goals are motivating for you.
3. Intentions, Goals, and the "Intention Stack" (09:05–13:29)
- Pyramid of Intention:
- Present intentions (to-do list), Plans, Goals, Priorities, and Values.
- Alignment: Goals aligned with your underlying values create motivation (“effortless” progress).
- Example:
- Fitness for "face" (appearance) vs. for "security" (longevity) vs. "pleasure" (feeling good) yields very different motivation profiles.
- Quote:
“When we have a goal that’s aligned with a value, that becomes far, far more motivating than a goal that isn’t.” – Chris Bailey (11:44)
4. The Slipperiness of Intentions and the "Prediction" Reframe (15:18–18:29)
- Goals often serve as predictions, not guarantees.
- Rigid expectations can lead to disappointment; it’s healthier to adapt or drop goals that lose resonance.
- Most New Year's resolutions fail because they are set on hope, not real alignment.
- Quote:
“Every goal is a prediction at where you believe your current and your planned actions will take you.” – Chris Bailey (16:03)
5. Deliberate vs. Default Intentions (18:29–23:48)
- Default intentions = habits, often formed unconsciously, driven by environment, biology, or social context.
- Deliberate intentions spring from "moments of awakening" and self-reflection.
- Becoming intentional means regularly shifting out of autopilot and aligning behavior with what you actually want.
- Quote:
“The more we do that…the more we end up accomplishing of what we want. We need these moments of awakening.” – Chris Bailey (19:56)
6. Where Do Defaults Come From? The Role of Environment & Habit (20:38–25:21)
- Influences: social contagion, biological urges, learned lessons, and reflection.
- “Scatter focus”—mind wandering during downtime—often helps surface goals and intentions we might not notice otherwise.
- Gaps in your day are fertile ground for forming new, deliberate intentions.
7. New Year's Resolutions, Planning, and Critique of SMART Goals (27:22–32:54)
- Many goals are simply unstructured ruminations.
- SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, Timely):
- Bailey finds little scientific support for their effectiveness; challenging goals are more motivating.
- Quote:
“Realistic goals often aren't good enough. We're limiting our potential when we make a goal merely realistic.” – Chris Bailey (29:36)
8. The Science and Solutions for Procrastination (32:54–39:21)
- Procrastination = Not a logical issue, but emotional aversion.
- Six triggers of task aversion:
- Boring, frustrating, unpleasant, far in the future, unstructured, meaningless.
- Solutions:
- Add structure (the lowest-hanging fruit), delegate, adjust framing to connect with values, pair tasks with rewards (habit stacking), and aversion journaling.
- Quote:
“Aversion journaling…always leaves me with something I can do to make it less ugly for myself.” – Chris Bailey (44:19)
9. Dealing With "Ugly" vs. Attractive Goals (45:11–48:54)
- If a goal remains “fugly” after reframing, consider dropping it unless necessary (e.g., health goals).
- “Sepia-toned goals” are fantasies that sound good but don’t deliver daily satisfaction (e.g., getting up at 5:30 AM when you’re a night owl).
10. Social Contagion, Goal Cosplay, and Conformity (48:54–54:47)
- Many adopt trending or socially-approved goals that don't fit.
- Knowing your value for conformity (or its lack thereof) helps filter which goals will actually work for you.
- Quote:
“We have kind of a similar status projection with our goals sometimes...” – Chris Bailey (52:41)
11. Making Intentions Deeper and More Sustainable (54:47–57:35)
- Enhance motivation with social support: join groups aligned with your goals (running club, knitting circle, etc.).
- Human connection reinforces positive habits.
12. Practical System for Intentional Living: How to Build and Align Goals (57:35–64:50)
- Intentionality is a skill: You can increase "follow through" with practice.
- Procrastination hacks: Shrink task size/duration, be kind to yourself.
- Edit goals so they reflect top values (know your strongest 2).
- Rule of Three: At the start of each day, choose 3 main things to finish—forces prioritization and links daily progress to weekly, monthly, and value-level intentions.
- Quote:
“The best, most aligned goals…feel effortless, like just an extension of who we are.” – Chris Bailey (61:31)
13. Most Overlooked Insight: Marveling at Default Intentions (65:17–68:30)
- Your habitual actions ("default intentions") reveal what you truly value.
- Not all habits are bad; many are to be admired.
- “For our days to be different, our life needs to be different.” Daily habit shifts, even small ones, compound over time.
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
- “We all have a graveyard of forgotten goals.” – Chris Bailey (00:43)
- “When a goal is aligned with a value, that is what makes it feel effortless.” – (11:44)
- “Every goal is a prediction in disguise.” – (16:03)
- “Our values are made out of the things that we do by default.” – (65:17)
- (On conformity and goal cosplay): “We have kind of a similar status projection with our goals sometimes…” – (52:41)
- (On editing ugly goals): “If you edit a goal extensively and it’s still fugly, sometimes that’s a sign it could be worth dropping.” – (45:31)
- (On the best pen): “My wife and I got in an argument…turns out we were both talking about the Pilot Precise V5 RT.” – (43:18)
Timestamps of Important Segments
- 00:00–03:40: Introduction, "graveyard of goals," why some goals stick
- 03:40–09:05: Core values as drivers of motivation
- 09:05–13:29: The intention stack and alignment
- 15:18–18:29: Intention as prediction; dropping/adapting goals
- 18:29–23:48: Deliberate vs. default intentions; habit energy
- 25:21–27:22: Importance of gaps/downtime for self-reflection
- 27:22–32:54: Critique of SMART goals
- 32:54–39:21: The roots of procrastination and how to overcome
- 45:11–48:54: “Ugly” vs. attractive goals; knowing which to drop or pursue
- 48:54–54:47: Goal "cosplay," conformity, and filtering for your own values
- 54:47–57:35: Deepening intentions via social contagion and support
- 57:35–64:50: Building an intentional life—Bailey’s step-by-step system
- 65:17–68:30: Most overlooked insight: marveling at your defaults
Actionable Takeaways
- Clarify your values—Know your top two, and shape goals to align with them.
- Edit your goals often. Reframe “have to’s” into “want to’s” when possible.
- Shrink tasks to overcome resistance and procrastination; reward yourself.
- Use the Rule of Three daily and weekly for prioritized intention-setting.
- Reflect regularly—use downtime to check if you’re on autopilot or being deliberate.
- Leverage social environment—join groups that support your ambitions.
- Marvel at your habits—even your defaults say something positive about who you are.
Further Resources
- Chris Bailey’s new book: Intentional: How to Finish What You Start
- Chris Bailey’s newsletter & work: chrisbailey.com
- Socials: @Chris_Bailey
- Host: Chris Williamson @chriswillx
For anyone seeking to make lasting change, Bailey’s insights make clear: the secret to effortless goals lies in knowing yourself—and continually aligning your actions, habits, and priorities with the values that make you tick.
