Why I Chose the One Word I Used to Hate (My 2026 Plan)

I have a confession to make.

For a long time, whenever I heard the word “consistency” in the online business world, I flinched.

Maybe you do, too.

For creative, freedom-loving business owners, consistency often feels like a trap.

It sounds like a rigid cage.

It sounds like someone telling you that you must post on Instagram every single day at 8:00 AM, regardless of how you feel or what is happening in your life.

It feels like a hamster wheel that never stops spinning.

As someone who has rediscovered their love of focused, unrushed work, that version of consistency never appealed to me.

In fact, I actively avoided it.

But as I looked at my plans for 2026, which is pivoting my business from heavy technical work for clients toward mentorship and writing, I realized I had a problem.

I wanted more freedom and less “feast or famine” stress, but I was avoiding the one thing that would actually give it to me.

So, I did something radical, okay maybe not so radical, but I spent time sitting and thinking along with some journaling with what was bubbling up for me and something kept coming up, so I decided to make it my word of the year.

I am choosing Consistency as my Word of the Year for 2026.

But here is the catch: I am not using the definition that leads to burnout. I am redefining it.

Why Consistency Is Actually Safety

If you have ever run a service-based business, you know the cycle.

You sprint to finish a client project (high intensity), then you crash, then you scramble to find the next client.

That isn’t freedom; that is chaos.

I realized that my lack of consistency wasn’t because I was lazy. It was because I was trying to follow a schedule that fought against my natural energy.

For 2026, I am changing the definition.

Consistency isn’t about Frequency (how often I shout on the internet).

It is about Reliability (proving that I will never abandon the ship).

It’s about showing up for the business, and for YOU, in a way that feels right and steady.

The “Quiet Edge” Approach: Rhythm Over Rigidity

So, what does consistency look like when you refuse to hustle?

How do you stay consistent without burning out?

Here is how I am applying “Quiet Consistency” to my business this year.

Consistency in Systems (So I Can Be Human). I am building my business to run on “evergreen” systems. This means writing email sequences once that can nurture and help new subscribers automatically for months to come.

The Shift: Instead of needing to be “live” and high-energy every day to make sales, I rely on my systems. This allows my business to be consistent even when I am resting, traveling, or just having a quiet day.

Consistency in Practice (The “Unrushed” Work). I used to think consistency meant forcing myself to write for four hours a day. Now, I use a simpler approach. My goal is just to open the notebook.

The Shift: I do not judge the size of the step, only that I took it. Whether I write one sentence or one thousand words, I kept the chain. This keeps the momentum going without the pressure.

Consistency in Rest (The Boundary). This is the most important one. I am committing to being just as consistent with my “stop time” as I am with my “start time.”

The Shift: Burnout is the enemy of consistency. If I want to show up for you all year, I have to respect my rest. Rest isn’t a reward for being consistent; it is the fuel for it.

Why “Alignment” Wasn’t Enough

When I was brainstorming my word for the year, I almost chose the word Alignment. It’s a word that fits the “Quiet Rebel” identity perfectly.

But I realized something important during my planning: Alignment is the compass, but Consistency is the walking shoes.

Alignment points me in the right direction.

It tells me where I want to go. But consistency is the actual act of walking there, step by step, day by day.

You can be perfectly aligned with a dream, but if you don’t put on your shoes and walk, you never actually arrive.

My Invitation to You

In 2026, I am not trying to be the loudest voice in your inbox. I am just trying to be the most reliable one.

I want to build a business that feels like a sanctuary, not a source of stress, AND I want to help you do the same.

If you are curious about what “Quiet Consistency” looks like in real time, I invite you to join my newsletter.

I am documenting this entire pivot—from the messy drafts to the finished systems—so you can see exactly how to build a business that supports your life, rather than dominates it, and in early January I’ll give you access to the Permission Tapes as a thank-you.

Let’s make 2026 the year we stop rushing and start walking.

Ready to stop shouting and start building?

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