If you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always gotten.
The real sting here lies in its indictment of comfort—not laziness, but the insidious belief that our circumstances are fixed when they're actually just habitual. Most people read this as a simple call to action, but Robbins is pointing at something darker: the way we mistake familiarity for inevitability, then use that confusion to excuse ourselves from trying anything different. A person might spend twenty years in an unfulfilling career, telling themselves change is impossible, when really they've simply never risked the awkward first week of learning something new. The quote matters because it exposes this sleight of hand—the game we play where we blame fate instead of admitting we've chosen the known over the uncertain.
“When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive — to breathe, to...”
Marcus Aurelius“Drive your business. Let not your business drive you.”
Benjamin Franklin“Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.”
Seneca“An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”
Benjamin Franklin