Why your brain builds habits

morris

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By James Clear
Author, Atomic Habits

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A habit is a behavior that has been repeated enough times to become automatic. The process of habit formation begins with trial and error. Whenever you encounter a new situation in life, your brain has to make a decision. How do I respond to this? The first time you come across a problem, you’re not sure how to solve it. Like Thorndike’s cat, you’re just trying things out to see what works.

Neurological activity in the brain is high during this period. You are carefully analyzing the situation and making conscious decisions about how to act. You’re taking in tons of new information and trying to make sense of it all. The brain is busy learning the most effective course of action.

Occasionally, like a cat pressing on a lever, you stumble across a solution. You’re feeling anxious, and you discover that going for a run calms you down. You’re mentally exhausted from a long day of work, and you learn that playing video games relaxes you. You’re exploring, exploring, exploring, and then—BAM—a reward.

After you stumble upon an unexpected reward, you alter your strategy for next time. Your brain immediately begins to catalog the events that preceded the reward. Wait a minute—that felt good. What did I do right before that?

This is the feedback loop behind all human behavior: try, fail, learn, try differently. With practice, the useless movements fade away and the useful actions get reinforced. That’s a habit forming.

Whenever you face a problem repeatedly, your brain begins to automate the process of solving it. Your habits are just a series of automatic solutions that solve the problems and stresses you face regularly. As behavioral scientist Jason Hreha writes, “Habits are, simply, reliable solutions to recurring problems in our environment.”

As habits are created, the level of activity in the brain decreases. You learn to lock in on the cues that predict success and tune out everything else. When a similar situation arises in the future, you know exactly what to look for. There is no longer a need to analyze every angle of a situation. Your brain skips the process of trial and error and creates a mental rule: if this, then that. These cognitive scripts can be followed automatically whenever the situation is appropriate. Now, whenever you feel stressed, you get the itch to run. As soon as you walk in the door from work, you grab the video game controller. A choice that once required effort is now automatic. A habit has been created.

Habits are mental shortcuts learned from experience. In a sense, a habit is just a memory of the steps you previously followed to solve a problem in the past. Whenever the conditions are right, you can draw on this memory and automatically apply the same solution. The primary reason the brain remembers the past is to better predict what will work in the future.

Habit formation is incredibly useful because the conscious mind is the bottleneck of the brain. It can only pay attention to one problem at a time. As a result, your brain is always working to preserve your conscious attention for whatever task is most essential. Whenever possible, the conscious mind likes to pawn off tasks to the nonconscious mind to do automatically. This is precisely what happens when a habit is formed. Habits reduce cognitive load and free up mental capacity, so you can allocate your attention to other tasks.

Despite their efficiency, some people still wonder about the benefits of habits. The argument goes like this: “Will habits make my life dull? I don’t want to pigeonhole myself into a lifestyle I don’t enjoy. Doesn’t so much routine take away the vibrancy and spontaneity of life?” Hardly. Such questions set up a false dichotomy. They make you think that you have to choose between building habits and attaining freedom. In reality, the two complement each other.

Habits do not restrict freedom. They create it. In fact, the people who don’t have their habits handled are often the ones with the least amount of freedom. Without good financial habits, you will always be struggling for the next dollar. Without good health habits, you will always seem to be short on energy. Without good learning habits, you will always feel like you’re behind the curve. If you’re always being forced to make decisions about simple tasks—when should I work out, where do I go to write, when do I pay the bills—then you have less time for freedom. It’s only by making the fundamentals of life easier that you can create the mental space needed for free thinking and creativity.

Conversely, when you have your habits dialed in and the basics of life are handled and done, your mind is free to focus on new challenges and master the next set of problems. Building habits in the present allows you to do more of what you want in the future.
 

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why you say that?

You can have physical limitations (not damage per-se more developmental) that means that there exists many where developing habits are not that easy.

So (good) habit forming/development after a bad childhood (as part of personal discipline) is for example much more difficult for people who were abused during childhood (stress including excessive physical abuse, suffer from PTSD and/or have a dis-regulated stress response axis or an under-developed pre-frontal cortex.

This dysregulation and inability to form and maintain new (positive goal driven) habits is why the abused, even when knowing they are on a downward path, are less likely to be able to break out of it. It's why counselors in prisons and/or mental institutions will de-rigueur ask their patients about their childhood.
 

PaperEnterprise

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You can have physical limitations (not damage per-se more developmental) that means that there exists many where developing habits are not that easy.

So (good) habit forming/development after a bad childhood (as part of personal discipline) is for example much more difficult for people who were abused during childhood (stress including excessive physical abuse, suffer from PTSD and/or have a dis-regulated stress response axis or an under-developed pre-frontal cortex.

This dysregulation and inability to form and maintain new (positive goal driven) habits is why the abused, even when knowing they are on a downward path, are less likely to be able to break out of it. It's why counselors in prisons and/or mental institutions will de-rigueur ask their patients about their childhood.

Cool. But i asked that guy the question cause he made a thread about incest/teenie porn.

How was his childhood, i wanna know about how he forms good habits in his life.
 

MischievousMonkey

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Interesting point of view that showcases habits under a positive light for once.

Still, with what we know about addictions and how the world is technologically evolving, it's time more than ever to learn how to deconstruct and break habits.
 

Remote

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I read this last year.

Atomic Habits is a fantastic book and when you read his ideas on making habits stick, it all seems so obvious.

It also goes to show that goals are overrated as shyt.

fukk your goals.
What is your system?
 

intruder

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So from a technology standpoint , habits = chache.

I kinda disagree, tho. Or im not sure "habit" is the right word here when it comes to your subconscious handling tasks that you have pretty much automated.
 
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