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Why the Reason We Chase Performance Matters More Than the Effort

  • 1 hour ago
  • 4 min read

At some point, most of us have likely trained through a stretch where nothing felt right. The program was solid, the effort was there, but the internal experience of showing up had changed. It was heavier, somehow, even when the physical demands were identical. We were still doing the work, but something about doing it had shifted. The output looked the same from the outside, but the inside told a different story.


What often changes in those periods isn't fitness or capacity. It's the motivational signal driving our whole system, and it’s not just unique to physical activity...it affects everything we strive for in life. Performance matters, but what fuels that performance is worth paying attention to.

Two runners on a split path at sunrise. Left: Heart theme, lightbulb, nature. Right: Trophy, coins, and cash symbols. Motivational mood.

What Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation Are


Motivation, in the simplest terms, is the psychological fuel behind chasing goals. The thing is, not all fuel burns the same way. Intrinsic motivation refers to the drive that comes from within ourselves, sometimes thought of as the pull toward an activity because it's inherently engaging, meaningful, or satisfying in itself (i.e. the person who loses track of time during a training session or project because they're genuinely absorbed in the craft). Extrinsic motivation is the opposite, where our behavior is driven by outcomes that exist outside the activity itself (i.e. rewards, recognition, rankings, money, approval, etc.).


The distinction might sound abstract until we look at what the two systems do to our body and brain under sustained load.


How the Nervous System Responds to Each Motivational Source


Intrinsic motivation and extrinsic motivation don't just feel different; they're processed differently at the neurological level. When we engage in activity purely because we love doing it, the brain's reward system activates in a sustained, low-intensity way. The experience is one of consistent engagement rather than peak-and-crash. There's also evidence that autonomic nervous system markers, particularly HRV, tend to be more favorable when we’re pushed by intrinsic engagement.


Extrinsic motivation activates a different profile. The anticipation of external reward produces sharper dopamine spikes, which is part of why external incentives are effective at driving short-term performance, but those spikes are followed by a return to baseline that can feel like a dip. Over time, if the external reward is our primary driver, the system can begin to require increasingly significant external stimuli to generate the same motivational response. The activity itself becomes less rewarding in its absence.


Under high load, the kind that accumulates across a long season, a demanding work cycle, or a sustained period of pressure, extrinsic motivation tends to degrade faster. When results are uncertain, recognition is absent, or outcomes are out of our control, the external scaffolding that was holding the behavior in place becomes unreliable. Intrinsic motivation, by contrast, is less dependent on external conditions to sustain itself, as it draws from a more stable internal source.


The Overjustification Effect and What It Costs Us


There's a well-documented phenomenon in motivational research sometimes called the overjustification effect. It’s a pattern where introducing external rewards for activities people were previously doing for internal reasons tends to reduce their intrinsic interest over time. The clearest version of this shows up in sport: an athlete who plays purely for love of the game becomes a professional, the external incentives accumulate, and over time the intrinsic experience of playing shifts. It doesn't disappear, but it gets complicated.


The practical consequence is that performance systems built primarily on external rewards carry a hidden cost. They work efficiently in the short term but become brittle under sustained load or when the reward structure changes…as it always eventually does.


This is particularly relevant for high performers operating in high-pressure environments, where the gap between effort and outcome is often wide and unpredictable. An athlete in a difficult season, an executive navigating an uncertain market, or a tactical operator in an extended deployment are contexts where the external signals that normally sustain extrinsically driven motivation become unreliable or absent. The motivational system that survives those conditions most intact is the one with a strong intrinsic base.


How Motivational Source Shows Up


The distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation isn't just psychological. Chronic reliance on extrinsic motivation, particularly in high-pressure contexts, tends to correlate with elevated cortisol (the body's primary stress hormone) and suppressed HRV over time. The system is running on anticipation and external reward in a way that keeps the stress response partially activated even between demands. There’s never any downtime or adequate windows to recover.


Intrinsically motivated engagement tends to produce what researchers describe as a more coherent physiological signature, yielding activation that doesn't require sustained external pressure to maintain and recovery that isn't dependent on outcome validation. Our system can work hard and come back without waiting for an external signal to tell us the effort was worth it.


This is the motivational pattern that long-term performance depends on. External rewards and recognition play a legitimate role and provide real information, real feedback, and real reinforcement, especially early in skill development. With that said, the architecture underneath needs intrinsic signal to hold together when external conditions become uncertain.


The Long View on Motivation and Why Performance Matters


Many times, motivation is thought of as a resource that gets depleted or something to be rationed across a training block or a work cycle. The actual picture is much more specific than that. What depletes us relying on external motivation when external conditions become unreliable. The component that sustains through long cycles of uncertainty and pressure is the internal pull toward the activity itself, the meaning it carries, and the identity it reflects.


The question of motivation in performance isn't really about effort levels or willpower. It's about the signal source underneath the behavior. What’s truly driving us forward? Recognizing when we’re running primarily on external fuel versus internal drive gives us a more accurate read on our ability to perform than effort alone ever could.


References


  1. Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (1985). Intrinsic motivation and self-determination in human behavior. Springer.

  2. Ryan, R. M., & Deci, E. L. (2000). Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being. American Psychologist, 55(1), 68–78. https://doi.org/10.1037/0003-066X.55.1.68

  3. Lepper, M. R., Greene, D., & Nisbett, R. E. (1973). Undermining children's intrinsic interest with extrinsic reward: A test of the "overjustification" hypothesis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 28(1), 129–137. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0035519

  4. Hagger, M. S., & Chatzisarantis, N. L. D. (2007). Intrinsic motivation and self-determination in exercise and sport. Human Kinetics.

 
 

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