Barking Up The Wrong Tree June 14th, 2021 ---------------------------------------------------------------
Before we commence with the festivities, I wanted to thank everyone for helping my first book become a Wall Street Journal bestseller! To check it out, click [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- This Is How To Quit Bad Habits Without Willpower: 4 Secrets From Neuroscience ([Click here]( to read on the blog) Why do we do the things we do? [Aristotle]( said everything we do was in service of happiness. We weigh the options and pick the thing that is likely to make us happiest... Boy, was Aristotle wrong. Your brain just does not work like that. How many times a day do we really make deliberate, rational choices? People fall into college majors, into jobs, into relationships. Itâs quite rare that we deliberately weigh costs and benefits and make explicit choices about anything. Weâre usually on autopilot. Best example? Bad habits. But what triggers these bad habits to keep happening? Usually, itâs anxiety. Some are already responding, âBut Iâm not anxious!â (That was probably said anxiously.) If you donât like the word anxiety, fine, call it something else. But we all know The Itch. That unease that prevents you from just sitting still and placidly enjoying life like a Zen Master. Nope, sit still for too long and itâs a three-second countdown to feeling bored, or FOMO, or âI should be productive.â Call it what you want. Itâs always something different which means itâs always the same. The reason we donât recognize The Itch more often is because about 0.3 seconds after feeling it weâre already self-medicating with bad habits. Check your phone. Eat some chips. Procrastinate. Good lord, do something to assassinate that feeling so we can get back to autopilot. And once things have been abnormal long enough you donât know what normal is anymore. A hum of agitation followed by bad habits doesnât feel like compulsion -- it just feels like who you are. Bad habits are a barnacle on the side of life, casting us into a recursive Hades of our own making. We waste time we could be using for fun or meaningful stuff and often make our lives worse in the process. Weâd like to quit bad habits but we all know how difficult that can be. Hiding a body is easier. But why donât any of our solutions work? Because most of them are shallow fixes that ignore the neuroscience of how our brains actually function. Call it the ouroboros of our bad habits or the samsara of self-discipline, but the cycle of not learning lessons when it comes to bad habits needs to be broken. So how do we do it? Mindfulness. When it comes to bad habits, mindfulness is a penicillin-level magic bullet. From [Unwinding Anxiety]( ...we found that mindfulness training was five times better than the current leading treatment in helping people quit smoking. And smoking is the hardest chemical addiction to quitâyes, harder than cocaine, alcohol, or heroin.
And it works for all habits. So whether youâre engaged in a semi-abusive relationship with your smartphone, Doritos, or your Xbox, mindfulness can help. Who is gonna be our guide? Not me. I am a one-man bad habit nightmare colossus. (I never make the same mistake twice. Three or four hundred times, yes, but never twice.) Instead, weâre gonna go to the expert of experts... Jud Brewer is a psychiatrist and neuroscientist focusing on addiction at Brown Universityâs Medical School. His book is [Unwinding Anxiety](. (Weâll also draw some insight from [The Molecule of More]( Letâs get to it... The Neuroscience of Bad Habits Hereâs how it goes. Life is fine. But then The Itch pops up. So your brain asks itself, âWhat makes me feel better?â Problem is, itâs not the rational thinky part of your brain â the prefrontal cortex (PFC) -- that answers the loudest. The PFC would say, âFresh vegetables, getting enough sleep and properly managing your 401K.â But the part of the brain most eagerly raising its hand in class, shouting to the teacher âPICK ME!â is the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC). The OFC is like a big database of what youâve done and how good it felt. When you did stuff in the past, the OFC chunked the feelings that resulted and assigned it a pleasure âcredit score.â So the OFC shouts over the PFC saying, âWE FEEL BETTER WHEN WE AVOID WORK, CHECK SOCIAL MEDIA AND EAT FRENCH FRIES!â This all happens in the blink of an eye and youâre rarely cognizant of it. And now that neurotransmitter dopamine is on the case. People have a lot of wrong ideas about dopamine. Itâs not about pleasure; itâs about prediction and anticipation. Serotonin, oxytocin, and endorphins are more associated with âhere and nowâ good feelings. Dopamineâs about craving something in the future. Now your PFC is not silent through all of this. It squeaks, âExcuse me, kind sir, but werenât we assiduously endeavoring to do less of those behaviors you just mentionedâ¦?â But the PFC canât shout as loud as the OFC. Plus, youâre a little stressed by The Itch. Under stress, your PFC doesnât perform very well. This is why using willpower is so problematic in fighting bad habits. Youâre relying on the thing anxiety takes away to fight anxiety. Not a good plan. But now dopamine is pushing the OFCâs case. Dopamine is associated with âwantingâ but not necessarily âliking.â This is why the PFC of an alcoholic can know another drink is a terrible idea yet still grab a glass. Wanting and liking are two separate circuits in your brain â and the wanting circuit is much more powerful. So dopamine is screaming, âME. WANT. NOW.â And, buddy, you're going to need a snorkel for how deep you are. At this point youâre probably already scrolling Instagram and eating French fries. Youâre back on autopilot. If you like zombie apocalypse films, youâre in luck. Bad news is: youâre the zombie. Most habit breaking methods suggest substituting a good habit for the bad habit. That can work but itâs far from a perfect solution because the OFCâs database has not been updated. It still has a big green checkmark next to procrastination. So when youâre stressed, youâre going to revert to your old ways, as we all have, innumerable times. Whatâs the solution? Consider this: how often would people go to work if their job stopped paying them? Exactly. In the end, itâs all about the reward. Lifehacks often focus on what triggers your behavior but the trigger is the weakest part of the loop. Alter the reward and you stop doing the thing. But telling yourself, âI donât enjoy what I enjoyâ never seems to work. Why? Because thatâs your PFC thinking it can just override the OFCâs database. Not gonna happen â at least not consistently. So how can your weakling PFC get the OFC 500lb gorilla to update its records? You need to rub the OFCâs nose in its own poop. Gross, but thatâs not me talking, thatâs renowned MD and PhD addiction expert, [Jud Brewer]( ...if you want to change it, you have to rub your brainâs little orbitofrontal cortex nose in its own poop so that it clearly smells how stinky it is. Thatâs how your brain learns. Behavior doesnât change if the reward value of that behavior stays the same.
Weâre not going to go full âClockwork Orangeâ here, but you get the point. PFC thinking doesnât cut it. To change the OFCâs pleasure database, we must update how the reward of any behavior actually feels. (To learn more about how you can lead a successful life, check out my bestselling book [here]( So the answer is mindfulness? Yes â but not yet. Right now we gotta figure out whatâs really going on in your OFC. With apologies to Christopher Nolan, first we must plan our mind heist... Map The Behavior Life causes problems and your brain has evolved to solve problems. Thereâs a Trigger (hungry), then your brain responds with a Behavior (eat food) and a Reward (feel better.) Good work, Mother Nature. But bad habits leverage the same system. Trigger (anxiety), Behavior (Instagram and French fries), Reward (Numbing bliss.) Problem is, youâre on autopilot most of the time and never even notice this process until your life starts to fall apart. Figuring out what your Trigger is can be helpful. What leads to the Behavior? But whatâs even more helpful is looking at the Reward. Ask yourself, "What do I get from this?" I know, I know, asking âWhy do I like French fries?â seems really obvious. They taste good. But you need to go deeper. If youâve ever wondered why the things you say you wanna do and the things you actually do donât line up, this is where the answer lies: "What do I get from this?" Itâs not a rhetorical or judgmental question. Saying that eating a gallon of ice cream makes you feel "safe" makes intuitive sense. But now that we know what the OFC database says we can leverage that to update its records. (To learn the #1 ritual you need to do every day, click [here]( Okay, all this planning stuff is great but it wonât be long before youâre reaching for your phone or the chips again. So how do we stop that from happening? Easy: donât. Give in. (Yes, you have been waiting all your life for this permission.) But thereâs one caveat. (Câmon, you knew there was gonna be a catch.) When you give in, you have to do one very important thing... Pay Attention Hereâs the plan: by shining the light of attention on the rewards of the habit, weâre going to help the OFC update those pleasure credit scores. (I do realize anything requiring focus these days qualifies as an Olympic event. Try your best.) Give in to the bad habit, but pay attention. Notice how you feel. âThanks. Procrastinating and eating ice cream feel awesome.â Okay. But include all the feelings. If you never had bad feelings about this behavior, you wouldnât call it a bad habit. That stinging worry that you feel you should be productive? No, thatâs not exempt. How about that guilt? Not exempt either. Extend the feeling timeline beyond the immediate. âAre you saying that the emotional reward of drinking an entire case of beer must include the subsequent hangover and soul-crushing shame?â Yes, that is what I am saying. âOh.â Ask yourself again: "What do I get from this?" Big picture. Net result. Is it really that great when all the feelings are included? Probably not so much. Youâve done this countless times in the past â just unconsciously. Ever âwake upâ in the middle of being zoned out in front of the TV and say, âThis show isnât really that goodâ and then stop watching it forevermore? Or thought, âThis relationship isnât doing it for meâ and break up with someone? You shined the spotlight of attention on something, realized it wasnât all your OFC said it was, updated its records, and then you abandoned that habit. Youâve become disenchanted with innumerable things, but you had to get off autopilot in order to wake up, file a brief with the OFC appeals court and realize, âThis isnât doing it for me anymore.â So take a second while youâre in mid-binge. Let the âthis isnât all itâs cracked up to beâ feelings sink in. (To learn the two-word morning ritual that will make you happy all day, click [here]( Itâs going to take time for this to fully kick in, but in the meantime your OFC will still be pushing for what worked in the past. When the next crave wave hits, what do you do? âHmmmâ Is Your New Mantra Be on the lookout for the next time that Trigger hits. And it will. Boom. The Itch. Brain starts asking what makes you feel better. OFC checks its records and comes up with the answer that makes your PFC facepalm. Dopamine fires⦠CRAVE WAVE INCOMING. BATTLE STATIONS! BATTLE STATIONS! Before you get pulled into the bad habit tractor beam, take a deep breath. And now what you need to do is⦠Nothing. Literally. Donât do anything. The usual advice is âDonât just sit there! Do something!â Well, Willy Wonka style: strike that, reverse it. âDonât just do something! Sit there!â Pretend you lost a staring contest with Medusa. Freeze. Okay, now youâre going to take action but that action is not scarfing down donuts while hitting the âLikeâ button on puppy pictures. The action is to observe your feelings. Mindfulness is not getting rid of thoughts; itâs changing your relationship to thoughts. Your thoughts and feelings are not âyou.â Did you decide to have them? No. They just popped up. âBut Iâm anxious!â Youâre not anxious -- there are anxious feelings present. They are not you. They are smartphone notifications in your brain. Ever âwake upâ in the middle of anger and realize âWhat the heck is wrong with me?â Then you realize you didnât get enough sleep last night â and then the anger went away? âYouâ were not angry, there were angry feelings. Donât âresistâ the habit. Just observe the feeling. Itâs not you. See it. Donât be it. Now weâre gonna use your new mantra. This is not some new age, magical nonsense. Itâs just something to focus you. Your mantra is âHmmmm.â Yes, the curiosity sound. Because curiosity is exactly what you want here. The feeling is not you so you can get curious about it and study it like a monkey at the zoo: âWow, look at that little guy go!â It can be a fun process. But right now it can feel pretty hard. Dopamine is making your desire seem sentient: ME. WANT. FRENCH. FRIES. The urge is wriggling like the black cat with the painted white stripe trying to escape from Pepe Le Pew. Donât give in. But donât resist either. Observe. Say âHmmmâ and get curious. A playful attitude helps. Donât whine âWhy wonât it stop?â but ask âWow, that little guy is really agitated. I wonder where he gets all the energyâ¦?â Curiosity is a perfect fit here because as opposed to giving in or resisting, it allows you to step out of the habit loop. Sound fluffy? Like it wonât work? Wrong. Curiosity is a scientifically legit substitute, leveraging the same reward pathways that bad habits do. From [Unwinding Anxiety]( Together, these studies suggest that the expression thirst for knowledge really is more than metaphorical. The acquisition of information follows the same basic behavioral pathways as reward-based learning and even has a literal reward value in the brain.
Willpower is painful and doesnât work very well. Curiosity is rewarding in itself. Itâs the express train back to that feeling that makes childhood so wonderful. Be a playful kid with your brain. You can have a better relationship with it and you donât even have to drag it to marriage therapy. Itâs fun to watch your brain try to Svengali you into your bad habits. Being able to step back and say, âOh yeah, this is the part where it tells me there might be an important message waiting for me on social media. Uh huh. Nice try.â The urge will fade. But, initially, it will most certainly not feel like that. Remember, these are the same reward pathways that kept our species alive, the same ones that smartly tell you to avoid rabid bears. It has evolved to be very convincing in the moment. But the urge will fade. It always does. Remember when you felt you absolutely had to buy that shiny new thing now but then you got distracted and when you came back to it⦠meh. Ironically, here is where you can be thankful for short attention spans. The urge will fade â even if itâs due to new urges. (To learn the 4 harsh truths that will make you a better person, click [here]( Okay, software patch installed. Time to round all this up â and learn the final secret to killing those bad habits for good... Sum Up This is how to quit bad habits without willpower:
- Know how your brain works: Often, your PFC is the angel on your shoulder and your OFC is that little devil. But if you use attention to rub the OFCâs nose in its own poop, it can update its database.
- Map the behavior: Ask "What do I get from this?" This is the reward your OFC thinks its gonna get. Now we know what we need to disprove.
- Pay attention: Give in, but observe your feelings. Yes, cookies taste good. Does the regret and stomachache add to the flavor? Note the full reward value.
- "Hmmm" is your new mantra: You are not your thoughts and feelings. Observe them. Get curious. The urge will fade. (Donât you roll your eyes at me. It will.)
So whatâs the bad news about the good news? This takes effort and time. Youâve had some of these bad habits forever, you expect them to vanish after one try? Get real. Remember this: short efforts, many times. You built your bad habits through repetition -- same thing here. But curiosity can make it fun. Youâve grown disenchanted with many things, many times. Now let yourself become disenchanted with your bad habits. In the end, the only way to break a bad habit is to not want the thing anymore. To change who you are. To not be the kind of person who does that. As the old maxim goes: Watch your thoughts. They become words. Watch your words. They become actions. Watch your actions. They become habits. Watch your habits. They become character. Watch your character. It becomes your destiny.
What word got repeated there? âWatch.â Itâs all about attention. Getting off autopilot and waking up. Time for a Rip Van Winkle moment because if youâre your own worst enemy, youâre also your own worst victim. As the great philosopher Ferris Bueller once said, âLife moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.â And it is so much better in this life to look and learn instead of review and regret. ***And if you want a daily insight, quote or laugh, you should follow me on Instagram [here]( Email Extras Findings from around the internet... + Want to know how to start flourishing again as the pandemic winds down? Click [here](. + Want to know how to forget bad memories? Click [here](. + Want to learn how to acquire new skills faster? Click [here](. + Miss last week's post? Here you go: [This Is The #1 Ritual You Need To Do Every Day](. + Want to know how to feel less lonely? Click [here](. + You read to the end of the email. I'm thrilled my emails are something your OFC finds rewarding. Thank you. And now, yes, it's Crackerjack Time: Occasionally we all worry that our worries are weird or crazy or make us some awful person who should be exiled to a distant island. But usually they're pretty common. Over at Reddit, someone asked therapists to chime in with the things clients are afraid to tell them that, in reality, everyone feels. So if you need a little relief that your concerns are normal and you're not alone, click [here](.
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