Perseverance is not a long race; it is many short races one after the other.
The real gift here is the permission Walter Elliot grants us to stop thinking in marathons. Most motivational wisdom asks us to sustain some grand vision across years or decades, which paralyzes people who can't imagine themselves in that distant future. By reframing perseverance as a series of distinct, manageable efforts, Elliot transforms an intimidating virtue into something almost tactical—you simply need to finish today's race before tomorrow's begins. Someone struggling to write a novel doesn't need the romantic notion of "staying the course for two years"; they need to believe they can write well for this one sitting, then do it again tomorrow, without the emotional weight of the entire project collapsing them.