Why can't I stick with anything I start?

There are moments that don't feel important enough to remember. A food container left in the fridge. A gym reminder you snooze without thinking. A guitar that stays in its case for one more week. A journal with three entries and a promise to come back tomorrow. None of these moments feel like failure while they're happening. "Why can't I stick with anything I start" explores the quiet psychology behind unfinished habits—not through motivation or productivity advice, but through the ordinary decisions that slowly reshape a life. It's a story about how consistency disappears, why starting over becomes harder than continuing, and how identity can linger long after behavior has quietly changed. Rather than focusing on dramatic turning points, this film follows the nearly invisible moments that accumulate over months and years. The habits we abandon rarely end with a conscious decision to quit. More often, they fade through small postponements that seem too insignificant to matter until the pattern is impossible to ignore. If you've ever searched for answers about procrastination, self-sabotage, habit formation, losing motivation, or why it's so difficult to stay consistent, this story may feel strangely familiar. It's less interested in fixing the problem than in observing it closely enough to understand how it happens. The Boring Disaster is a series of quiet psychological stories about everyday collapses—the slow erosion of habits, relationships, careers, finances, and identity through choices that barely register in the moment. Not because they're dramatic, but because they're ordinary. Sometimes the smallest decisions leave the longest shadows. If these kinds of stories resonate with you, you're welcome to subscribe for more. --------------------- Some failures happen in a single moment. Most don't. The Boring Disaster is an animated series about the slow, quiet kind of collapse — the habit, the relationship, the body, the system that doesn't break all at once, but erodes one small unnoticed choice at a time. No lectures. No five-step fixes. Just a close, second-person look at the moment right before things fall apart — and the quiet recognition of "this is me" that comes after. New episodes regularly. ------------- #TheBoringDisaster #Psychology #Habits #SelfAwareness