Rising Through the Storm: How to Motivate Yourself When Life Gets Brutal
When the world turns cold and your strength fades, here’s how to light your inner fire again

1. The Reality of Rock Bottom
Life doesn’t always unravel slowly. Sometimes, it hits like a train — no warning, no mercy. Whether it’s a job loss, heartbreak, financial stress, health issues, or just the exhausting weight of daily life, hard times strip us down. And in that stripped state, motivation feels like a luxury — something for better days.
But motivation isn’t just for sunny mornings. It’s survival fuel. And it’s absolutely possible to find it even in the darkest moments.
2. Change the Inner Dialogue
When things go wrong, your brain becomes a ruthless narrator. “You’re failing.” “You’ll never fix this.” “What’s the point?” But here’s the thing: these thoughts are not facts. They’re stress-tinted stories.
Try to reframe them:
“I’m stuck” becomes “I’m in a transition period.”
“I can’t do this” becomes “I haven’t done this yet.”
This simple mental shift doesn’t erase problems — it empowers you to face them.
3. Shrink the Task
Motivation dies under pressure. If the mountain feels too big to climb, you’ll sit at the base forever.
Break your goals into tiny, manageable pieces. Instead of “get out of this mess,” try:
Make your bed.
Send one email.
Drink a glass of water.
Step outside for five minutes.
Small wins restore your sense of capability. One step leads to another.
4. Let Pain Be Your Catalyst
Pain isn’t just destructive. It’s also directional. It tells you something needs to change. And if you listen closely, it can become your engine.
Use heartbreak to create, loss to reflect, and frustration to refocus. Don’t waste your pain — repurpose it.
5. Reconnect With Your “Why”
Hard times make you forget why you started. That’s why you must return to the core: your reason.
Why do you want to push through this? Maybe it’s for your child. Maybe it’s to prove something to yourself. Maybe it’s for a dream you had at 16 that still burns, buried under all the “realistic” choices.
Your "why" doesn’t need to be logical. It just needs to matter deeply to you.
6. Control What You Can
In chaos, control feels distant. So reclaim it — not all of it, just a corner of it.
Control your posture. Your breath. Your next 15 minutes. Your screen time. Your self-talk.
Motivation grows where power returns. Even if the world outside is falling apart, you can build discipline inside.
7. Silence the World
In hard times, comparison is poison. Social media is filled with wins, filtered happiness, curated success. You’re seeing someone’s highlight reel while living your blooper reel.
Mute the noise. Go inward. Talk to one friend who truly gets it. Journal your chaos. Sit in silence.
Healing doesn’t happen in the spotlight. It happens in stillness.
8. Act Before You Feel Ready
You won’t always feel like doing the thing. And that’s okay — do it anyway. Movement often comes before motivation, not after.
Clean one plate. Open one document. Walk one block.
You don’t need to believe fully in yourself to take the first step. You just need to take it.
9. Collect Evidence of Survival
Make a list of every hardship you’ve faced — and survived. Call it your resilience résumé. Breakups, disappointments, illnesses, rejections, financial holes. You lived through them.
This list is living proof that even when it seemed impossible, you still made it. Let that history remind you that this time is no different. You're not starting from scratch — you're starting from strength.
10. Remember: This Is Not the End
When you’re in the middle of a storm, it’s easy to believe this is the whole story. But storms pass. Always.
The hero in every story hits a low point. What makes them inspiring isn’t perfection — it’s persistence. And you’re still writing your chapter.
Hardship isn’t a full stop. It’s a comma. You still get to decide what comes next.
Final Thought
Motivation isn’t a spark you wait for. It’s a match you strike in the dark. When life gets brutal, you don’t have to be fearless — just willing. Willing to take one small step, again and again, until the fog clears.
You’ve made it this far. That means you have the strength to go further.
About the Creator
Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıran
As a technology and innovation enthusiast, I aim to bring fresh perspectives to my readers, drawing from my experience.




Comments (4)
Well written thank you 🙏
On another note, I am very tentative to using AI when writing. I was wondering how you used it to write this piece? I assume you don't give the AI a prompt and let it write it all for you to post, so how does it work?
I wish I found this story sooner today, because I have been at a hopeless loss for motivation today...well this week actually. I am definitely saving this to read later when I can't find the motivation again. Thanks!
I really like how you break down finding motivation in tough times. Changing the inner dialogue is so key. I've found that when I'm feeling down, reframing negative thoughts helps a lot. Also, shrinking tasks makes them seem less overwhelming. What has worked best for you when trying to reconnect with your "why"? And using pain as a catalyst is an interesting concept. I can see how it could be a powerful motivator. Have you ever turned a difficult experience into something positive? It's not always easy, but it seems like it could be really rewarding.