Why ‘Trying Harder’ Doesn’t Work (And What Does)

Your coach yells, “Try harder!”

So you grip tighter. Muscle up. Force it.

And somehow… you perform worse.

What’s happening?

The Trying Harder Trap

Effort matters. Obviously. But there’s a difference between productive effort and destructive tension.

When you “try harder,” you usually:

  • Tighten muscles that should be loose
  • Rush movements that should be smooth
  • Force outcomes instead of executing process

You’re working harder, but you’re working against yourself.

They don’t try harder. They focus better.

Instead of “I need to try harder,” they ask: “What’s the ONE thing I need to do right here?”

Not seventeen things. One.

Then they execute THAT with full commitment.

The Focus Shift

Bad game? Don’t try harder. Simplify your focus.

Missing shots? Don’t force it. Trust your mechanics and let it happen.

Feeling tight? Don’t muscle through. Breathe, reset, go again.

“Don’t try harder. Focus sharper.”

Pick one thing. Do it well. Build from there.

That’s how you break through when effort alone isn’t enough.

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