Motivation has dipped a little this week.

Not because anything went wrong, but because life reminded us how fragile, precious and unpredictable it really is.
This weekend, my wife and I visited her best friend and her husband at their retirement home on the east coast.
We had been there just four weeks ago, but even in that short time her health had declined. She was diagnosed with dementia just over a year ago, and the change has been rapid.
For my wife, it was heartbreaking. They’ve been friends forever, through children, crises, laughter, holidays and the normal chaos of a long-shared life.
The weekend was lovely in many ways. We wrapped up warm and walked along the seafront.
We visited pubs and restaurants. We talked and laughed.
But for her friend, it all passed in a kind of haze.
Conversations were forgotten almost as soon as they began. There were smiles, warmth, kindness, and underneath it all, a quiet sadness.
Her husband, now 80, struggles with breathing problems. We had the inevitable conversations about care, support, and what the next months and years might bring.
When we came home, the weight of it all was still with me.
That evening, I sat down to check my messages and emails.
One was from a potential new client, someone I had already politely turned down before Christmas, explaining that I wasn’t taking on any more consultancy work. I had decided to take a different direction, focusing on ROPHO and my existing clients.
And for a moment, I wavered.
Should I just go back to what I know?
Should I play it safe?
Then another email arrived, someone asking for my business plan guide.
Someone in their sixties, thinking about starting something new.
And suddenly the weekend came flooding back.
Our friends had bought a pub when he was 60. They had travelled, built, explored. They had lived.
And now, time was taking its quiet, inevitable toll.
That’s when it hit me:
If ROPHO can help even a few people feel braver, more capable, more alive in this phase of life, then it’s worth doing. Even when motivation wobbles.
Especially then.
Motivation & Determination — the spark and the drive
Motivation is the spark, It gets us excited. Inspired, Energised.
Determination is the drive, It keeps us going when the novelty fades and things get uncomfortable.
Together, they’re powerful.
They help us:
- start a new hobby
- join a gym
- book a course
- launch a business
- plan a lifestyle change
But there’s a problem.
Motivation and determination are emotional, and emotions are unreliable.
Especially when it’s raining, or cold, or the sofa looks inviting, or there’s a nice glass of wine involved.
The missing ingredient — discipline (the boring hero)
Discipline doesn’t get much love, it isn’t exciting, it doesn’t shout, it doesn’t promise miracles.
But discipline quietly turns up every day and says:
“We’re doing this anyway.”
Without discipline:
- good intentions fade
- goals drift
- motivation becomes a memory
- determination becomes a story we tell ourselves
Discipline is the structure that turns wanting into doing.
It builds routines, carries us through setbacks, keeps us moving when enthusiasm disappears, turns small actions into real progress.
And no, discipline does not mean punishment, misery, or military-style living.
Especially not in your sixties.
Discipline — ROPHO style
Discipline gives you the consistency to follow your own path — not someone else’s. At ROPHO, discipline isn’t about becoming someone else.
It’s about becoming more you.
Respect
Discipline is respecting your own time and commitments. Not constantly letting yourself down.
Optimism & Opportunity
Optimism without discipline is just hope. With discipline, it becomes action.
Pride
There’s quiet pride in doing what you said you would — even when no one is watching.
Honesty, Health & Hobbies
Discipline asks:
- What really matters to me?
- What am I pretending I’ll do “one day”?
- What can I realistically sustain?
Originality
Practical discipline (for normal people over 60)
This isn’t about 5am ice baths or colour-coded spreadsheets.
It’s about simple, doable habits.
1. Set realistic goals
If it sounds impressive but impossible, it won’t last.
2. Break things down
Big goals fail. Small steps succeed.
3. Create gentle routines
Same walk time. Same writing slot. Same gym day.
Routine removes decision fatigue.
4. Celebrate small wins
Did you show up? That counts.
5. Stay flexible
Bodies change. Energy changes. Life changes.
Discipline should adapt — not punish.
A gentle truth
Motivation will come and go.
Determination will wobble.
Discipline is what remains.
And here’s the good news:
Discipline gets easier the more you practise it.
Not perfect. Not relentless.
Just consistent enough.
Closing thought
Your sixties aren’t a winding down phase – they’re a reframing phase.
With motivation to inspire you,determination to push you,
and discipline to guide you…
this can be a decade of:
- growth
- enjoyment
- pride
- originality
Not because you forced it.
But because you showed up, most days, and did a little.
And that is more than enough.
As always please share stories of your determination to prove age really is just a number.

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