Why Can’t I Motivate Myself Anymore?

March 31, 2026

Question

I’ve been wondering lately if I’ve somehow lost the ability to motivate myself.

It’s strange because I’ve always been someone who enjoyed working towards things. I used to feel energised by goals and the sense that my life was moving forward. But recently, even though I still want the same things (e.g. a meaningful career, creative achievements, a life that feels interesting and fulfilling) I struggle to actually find the drive to pursue them.

I don’t think it’s burnout. I’m not completely exhausted or overwhelmed. It’s more like a dull mental fog where everything feels slightly too big, slightly too difficult, and slightly too far away to start.

Part of me wonders if our brains just aren’t built for the environment we’re living in anymore. Every day we’re absorbing hundreds of tiny pieces of content designed to capture our attention instantly, short videos, endless scrolling, constant notifications. At the same time, the expectations of what a successful life should look like seem bigger than ever. We’re supposed to build careers, maintain social lives, stay healthy, travel, look good, stay informed, keep improving ourselves, and somehow do it all at once.

Social media adds another layer. You’re constantly seeing people achieving things, promotions, businesses, engagements, houses, incredible holidays and even when you know it’s curated, it still creates the sense that everyone else is moving faster than you are.

The strange thing is that dissatisfaction is supposed to motivate us. If you want something more, you work harder for it. But lately it feels like the opposite happens. When everything feels so big and unattainable, it becomes paralysing instead of motivating.

Sometimes I wonder if my brain has just been rewired by constant stimulation. Maybe my dopamine levels are completely out of balance.

Is this burnout? A dopamine problem? Or just what it feels like to try and function in a world where we’re overstimulated, overexposed to other people’s lives, and expected to achieve more than ever?

How can I get that sense of drive back?

Answer

Hello reader,

What you’re describing is far more common than people admit, and it’s not simply a personal failure of discipline or ambition. In many ways, it’s a very predictable response to the environment we’re living in.

You’re right to mention dopamine, but it’s often misunderstood. Dopamine isn’t just the brain’s “pleasure chemical”; it’s the system that drives anticipation and motivation. The problem is that modern technology delivers tiny bursts of reward constantly – scrolling, notifications, short-form videos, endless novelty. Each one provides a quick hit of stimulation. Over time, the brain adapts to expecting rewards quickly and frequently.

When you then sit down to do something meaningful, for example, write, study, build a career or develop a skill, the reward is much slower. The effort required feels disproportionately large compared to the instant gratification your brain has grown used to. The result isn’t laziness; it’s a mismatch between how our reward systems evolved and the environment we’ve placed them in.

But dopamine isn’t the whole story. There’s also the sheer scale of modern expectations. Previous generations had fewer benchmarks for what a successful life looked like. Today, the list seems endless: build a fulfilling career, maintain friendships, stay physically healthy, travel, cultivate hobbies, look good, stay culturally aware, optimise your finances, optimise your mental health, and somehow remain interesting while doing it all.

When the definition of success becomes infinite, the starting line begins to feel impossibly far away.

Social media intensifies this feeling because you’re no longer comparing your life to a small group of people around you. You’re comparing it to thousands of carefully edited lives every day. Even when you know intellectually that you’re looking at highlight reels, the emotional impact is real. It quietly shifts your baseline for what “normal progress” looks like.

Under those conditions, dissatisfaction doesn’t always create motivation. Sometimes it creates paralysis.

The good news is that motivation isn’t something you permanently lose. It’s something that often returns when the conditions around your attention change. Many people find that the first step is reducing the constant competition for their brain’s reward system. This means less scrolling, fewer constant inputs, more moments where the mind is allowed to be bored again. Boredom, uncomfortable as it can feel, is often where curiosity and focus begin to regenerate.

The second shift is making ambition temporarily smaller. You’re not abandoning your goals, but shrinking the scale of what you expect from yourself in the present moment. When life feels overwhelming, the brain responds much better to small, concrete actions than to huge abstract visions of the future.

Most importantly, try not to interpret this feeling as a personal defect. You’re not broken, and your brain isn’t “rotting.” You’re navigating a world that competes aggressively for your attention while simultaneously expanding the expectations placed on your life.

Feeling overwhelmed by that doesn’t make you weak. It makes you human. And the fact that you’re reflecting on it so thoughtfully suggests that your drive isn’t gone, it’s simply waiting for the right conditions to come back.

Read more of our Advice Columns here.

Lauren is the Founder and Editor-In-Chief of The Modern Muse Magazine. Based in Melbourne, she is also a writer who loves to immerse herself in the latest trends and conversations, blending her passion for storytelling with contemporary culture.