Definition
Initiation Jacking
noun · action & motivation / psychological
Initiation Jacking describes the deliberate use of small, time-bounded starts to bypass hesitation and trigger momentum.
Examples in use
“I wasn’t motivated. I Initiation Jacked it.”
“Two minutes counted. The rest followed.”
“I set a timer and started badly on purpose.”
The start landed. The story shut up.
Rating on the term
An individual rates high in Initiation Jacking when:
- starting is treated as the main obstacle, not finishing
- micro-commitments are used to override delay spirals
- timers, cues, or tiny tasks reliably convert dread into motion
Lower expression appears when tasks are postponed until motivation feels complete or certain.
Deep Dive
Initiation Jacking works by shrinking the entry cost. A two-minute start reduces the weight of the imagined whole, making action easier to access than rumination.
A common method is the “two-minute rule” posture: if it can be started or meaningfully advanced in two minutes, it is initiated immediately. Another is timed ignition: a short timer is used to begin without negotiating the full task.
Some forms use outcome vividness, where a magnified end-state is briefly pictured to make the next step feel more immediate. This does not guarantee completion, but it often interrupts hesitation long enough for movement to begin.
Initiation Jacking can counter Kindertia and reduce Effort Drift by shifting the focus from intensity to entry. It is frequently used under Functional Exhaustion and can be disrupted by Signal Fat.
Variants
initiation-jacked (adjective)
initiation jack (noun)
two-minute ignition (noun phrase)
Classification
Domain: Action & Motivation
Archive: Departmental Linguistics – Qrious Vernacular
Defined by The Department of Qrious Threads.
