As long as you are trying to do better, better will come.
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About this quote

As long as you are trying to do better, better will come — but trying means deliberate, repeated actions, not wishful thinking. Stop blaming timing or luck and ask: What small habit can I repeat today that moves the needle? Track progress, cut excuses, and measure work in consistent steps rather than dramatic leaps. Accountability and daily effort create real momentum; prepare for setbacks and use them to sharpen the plan.

When to use it

  • Tell a friend who keeps making the same mistakes: 'As long as you are trying to do better, better will come — but stop making excuses and actually change one habit today.'
  • Use it as a morning line: when you feel lazy, remind yourself the day’s small task and act — trying daily produces results over time.
  • As a coach, tell an athlete: 'Keep grinding the fundamentals. As long as you are trying to do better, better will come — show me the proof in practice logs.'
  • In a performance review, push a teammate: 'If you start tracking one measurable improvement this week, you’ll see progress. As long as you are trying to do better, better will come.'