The 3 Types of Stuck, and How to Fix Each One
You've been here before. You know something isn't working. You've thought about it, talked about it, maybe even journaled about it. You're not someone who avoids hard things. You're not lazy, or unmotivated, or incapable.
And yet...you're still stuck.
Here's what most people get wrong about being stuck: they treat it like it's one thing. One feeling, one problem, one fix. So they try harder. They make a new plan, download a new planner, get a pep talk from a podcast. And when that doesn't work, they wonder what's wrong with them.
Nothing is wrong with you. You're just applying the wrong fix because you haven't correctly identified which kind of stuck you're actually in.
There are three types of "stuck". They feel similar on the surface, but they have completely different root causes. And if you don't know which one you're dealing with, you can exhaust yourself cycling through solutions that were never going to work for you, no matter how much you tried to power through.
Type 1: Clarity Stuck
You don't actually know what you want, or you've outgrown what you decided before.
This one is sneaky because it often doesn't feel like a clarity problem. It feels like an action problem. You feel paralyzed, overwhelmed, and unable to move, and you assume you just need to push through it.
But the real issue isn't that you can't take action, it's that you're trying to execute on a decision that was never fully made, or one that no longer fits who you are now.
Signs you might be Clarity Stuck:
- Every option feels equally right or equally wrong
- You keep researching, reading, and gathering information, but never choose
- You're busy, but directionless; there's lots of motion but little true progress
- You've changed, but your goals, schedule, or commitments haven't caught up yet
What doesn't work here: pushing harder, making a pros and cons list, waiting until you feel ready. Those strategies assume the problem is motivation or information. It isn't. The problem is the decision itself hasn't been made yet.
What actually helps: stepping back from execution entirely and giving yourself permission to re-examine what you actually want. Not what made sense two years ago. Not what you told people you were going to do. What's true right now.
Type 2: Decision Stuck
You know what you want but you can't fully commit to the path.
This is the most exhausting kind of stuck. You're not confused about the destination. You can see it clearly. But something keeps pulling you back every time you try to move toward it. You make a plan and then quietly talk yourself out of it. You've been "about to" start something for months. You keep revisiting a decision you've already made.
You're not indecisive. You're in a loop. And the loop is costly.
Signs you might be Decision Stuck:
- You've thought about this so many times you're tired of thinking about it
- You make progress and then pull back
- You seek more opinions, more perspectives, and more validation, but it never feels like enough information
- You're waiting for certainty that isn't coming
What doesn't work here: more information, more time, more people's opinions. At some point, you have everything you need to decide and gathering more data is just a way to avoid committing.
What actually helps: getting honest about what you're afraid to commit to. Because underneath most Decision Stuck situations isn't confusion, it's fear. Fear of making the wrong call. Fear of what it means to actually go for it. Fear of disappointing someone. Once you name the real thing, you can actually deal with it. And then you can make a real decision, not a "let's see how it goes" decision, but an actual, clean, I'm-doing-this decision.
Type 3: Execution Stuck
You know what you want. You've decided. And you're still not doing it.
This is the one that makes people feel the worst about themselves. Because from the outside, and even from the inside, it looks like laziness. Like you don't care enough. Like you're self-sabotaging. You have the plan. You know the next step. And somehow, you are not taking it.
Execution Stuck is the most misunderstood of the three, because the solutions people reach for - more accountability, more discipline, more willpower - almost never touch the actual problem.
Signs you might be Execution Stuck:
- You know exactly what to do and you're not doing it
- You feel frustrated with yourself in a way that's starting to erode your confidence
- You keep starting and stopping the same thing
- You wonder why you can follow through for everyone else but not for yourself
What doesn't work here: shame, more accountability tools, trying to white-knuckle your way through it. These approaches treat Execution Stuck like a motivation problem. It almost never is.
What actually helps: diagnosing the real barrier, because it's usually one of three things: a structure problem (the how isn't clear or realistic), an energy problem (you're genuinely depleted and the plan doesn't account for that), or a self-trust problem (you've broken enough promises to yourself that some part of you has stopped believing you'll actually follow through). Each of those needs a different response. And none of them is fixed by trying harder.
Why This Matters
Most people stay stuck far longer than they need to. This isn't because they aren't trying, hard, or a lot of thingsIt's not because they're not trying, because they're applying the wrong solution to the wrong problem.
Trying to push through Clarity Stuck just burns you out. Gathering more information when you're Decision Stuck just delays the inevitable. Forcing discipline when you're Execution Stuck just adds shame to the pile.
And when none of it works, it's easy to conclude that you are the problem. That you're not cut out for this. That other people are just better at figuring it out.
That conclusion isn't true. But it is the natural result of spinning in the wrong direction long enough.
How to Figure Out Which Type You're In
Ask yourself these three questions honestly:
Do I actually know what I want? If the honest answer is no, or "sort of, but not really," you're likely Clarity Stuck. The work is in the decision, not the execution.
Have I truly decided, or am I still hedging? If you know what you want but can't fully commit to it, you're Decision Stuck. The work is in understanding what's making commitment feel impossible.
Do I know what to do and I'm still not doing it? If yes, you're Execution Stuck. The work is in diagnosing the real barrier, not adding more pressure.
You don't have to figure this out alone. In fact, one of the most valuable things about working with a coach isn't the accountability, it's having someone help you see clearly what you're actually dealing with, and then cut straight to what to do about it.
Ready to Get Unstuck?
If you read through this and recognized yourself in one of these types, that recognition is already something. It means you're not dealing with a vague, unfixable problem, you're dealing with a specific one. And specific problems have specific solutions.
That's exactly what Course Correction is designed for. It's a single, focused session where we identify what's actually going on underneath the stuck feeling, make a clear decision together, and leave you with a plan you can actually follow.
Not eight weeks. Not a long intake process. One session, one problem, one clear path forward.
If you're ready to stop spinning, [you can learn more and book your session here].
Photo by Tomas Tuma on Unsplash