Finding and remembering why you're doing anything in any situation is motivation.<p>How much we want to do anything, is relative to how energized, focused, and passionate we feel about it, or more importantly, take time to regularly reflect on.<p>Motivation, as classically defined doesn't fit techies that well because we march to own drum so much. Those that fall for someone else's koolaid can end up jaded and on the same search imho.<p>Motivation is like bathing.<p>If we don't bathe our body, we begin to smell and not feel fresh.<p>Similarly, our thoughts, feelings, and gut begin to smell from having not enough energy placed on hitting the reset button and starting fresh with a clear reminder.<p>What can do it? Remembering why. Also, things like meditation, exercise, going for a walk, etc can be very powerful to clear your senses to deeply embed the why. Over time it resonates more and more on it's own.<p>No one can learn about you for you, you have to dedicate time to it just like the time you have to dedicate yourself to technology.<p>Motivation for me is remembering why I want to do things at a very deep level. I like taking the 5 whys approach to get to a root trigger word or two.<p>Building discipline and work ethic are the two master skills that underlie any goal I'll find or want to undertake, so it's what I try to optimize on.<p>So, instead of wanting some eureka moment, I build a practice of improving my discipline and work ethic a little every day. I am part of a weekly group where we set goals and check in with each other, creating obligations around the things I want to be doing for others to force me to move.<p>The above could be a blog post in some way as I've been self employed for over a decade and have had to work on these routines to be my own best support.<p>Thoughts and input most welcome :)