Abstract
Within any discipline there is always a degree of variability. For medicine it takes the form of Health Professional’s behaviour, for education it’s the style and content of the classroom and for health psychology it can be found in patient’s behaviour, our theories and our practice. Over recent years attempts have been made to reduce this variability through the use of the Behaviour Change Technique Taxonomy, the COM-B and the Behaviour Change Wheel. This paper argues that although the call for better descriptions of what we do are useful for clarity and replication this systematisation may be neither feasible nor desirable. In particular, it is suggested that the gaps inherent in the translational process from protocol to behaviour will limit the effectiveness of reducing patient variability, that theory variability is necessary for the health and well being of a discipline and that practice variability is central to the professional status of our practitioners. It is therefore argued that we should celebrate rather than remove this variability in order for our discipline to thrive and for us to remain as professionals rather than technicians.