The Carry Forward Principle

I don’t think I realised how much energy I was wasting starting over every day.

Not physically. Mentally.

Every morning had this quiet reset baked into it:

  • “New day”
  • “Fresh start”
  • “Do better today”

And before that, even earlier, there was another version of it:

“The sun will come up tomorrow, and it won’t be nearly as bad as you think.”

That one served a purpose.

It was stabilising.

Something to hold onto when things felt like they were spiralling.


Where the reset came from

I think the reset started as a coping mechanism.

A way to:

  • reduce overwhelm
  • contain anxiety
  • get through the day

If everything feels too big, you shrink the horizon:

  • just get through today
  • count your blessings
  • take the small wins

I still do that.

I just call them micro-wins now.


Where it started to break

At some point, the reset stopped being stabilising… and started becoming expensive.

Not obviously.

But quietly, in the background.

Every day I was:

  • rebuilding context
  • reloading decisions
  • reprocessing the same thoughts

Journaling helped—but in a particular way.

It became less about reflection and more about:

getting things out of my head when it wasn’t healthy to process them

Middle of the night thoughts.
Spinning ideas.
Stuff with no resolution.

Just… park it somewhere.


A different question

Somewhere along the line, the question changed.

Not:

“What should I do today?”

But:

“Where am I up to?”

That shift did two things:

  1. It stopped the daily reset
  2. It let me pick things up without rethinking everything

Even if it had been days. Even weeks.

Sometimes the note is literally:

“Mootards isn’t dead yet.”

And that’s enough.


Bad days look different now

“If it was a bad day” used to mean:
→ reset tomorrow
→ try again
→ do better

Now it’s closer to:

there’s no such thing as a wasted day

Even if the only thing I learn is:

  • I needed to not think
  • I needed to stop
  • I had nothing in the tank

That’s still information.


The cycle I didn’t see

It wasn’t that I was ignoring reality.

It was that processing it cost too much.

Too many thoughts →
too much mental load →
exhaustion →
loss of momentum →
negative loops

So the reset helped break the loop.

But it also meant I never really carried anything forward.


What’s changed

Now it feels more like:

I don’t need to solve everything
I just need to not drop the thread

And when a day doesn’t move much?

“So what.”

That’s where the micro-wins come in.

The blessings to count.

Not as a coping mechanism—but as a way to recognise:

  • something did happen
  • something did move
  • even if it was small

A subtle difference

Before:

  • reset was about escaping the weight
  • and sometimes blaming myself for not doing better

Now:

  • carrying forward is about reducing that weight
  • and removing the need to blame

Because I’m not starting again.

I’m continuing.


Journaling became something else

It’s not just reflection anymore.

It’s:

  • offloading cognitive load
  • capturing state
  • leaving a trail

So I don’t have to hold everything in my head
or resolve it immediately


Final thought

I still believe this:

tomorrow is a new day
and it can be better

But I don’t think that requires a reset anymore.

It just means:

pick it up again
from wherever it actually is


— Epigrantitus (ongoing condition)

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