Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Disenchant Your Bad Habits



You’ve likely got some bad habits you’d like to get rid of.

Overeating.

Smoking.

Scrolling social media.

Getting angry.

Drinking too much.

Our typical approach to getting rid of bad habits is gritting our teeth and willing them out of existence.

But that approach usually doesn’t work. It’s hard to willpower a bad habit out of existence. In fact, this approach often backfires and only strengthens the desire to indulge in our less-than-ideal behavior.

There’s an easier way.

Instead of squashing your bad habit with willpower, gently and gradually snuff it out by disenchanting it.

Here’s how.

Your Brain Is a Reward-Seeking Machine

I learned about this idea of disenchanting your bad habits from Dr. Judson Brewer in a recent episode of the Art of Manliness podcast.

To understand how disenchantment works, you first need to understand that our brain is a reward-seeking machine. As we engage in behaviors, our brain monitors how rewarding or not rewarding that behavior is. If our brain notices that we feel good after engaging in some behavior, it will nudge us to engage in that behavior again. This is how habits are formed. The more rewarding the behavior, the stronger the habit.

According to neuroscience, the corollary is also true: the less rewarding the behavior, the weaker the habit.

The problem is, a behavior can feel good in one way, but not feel good in other ways.

The best example of this is drug use.

Someone who abuses drugs turns to drugs to get a high, which feels good. But everything else about their addiction — what the drug is doing to their finances, their relationships, their professional life — feels very, very bad.

Drug use does something for the user, but overall, its effect is destructive.

A similar dynamic operates with our less serious habits.

We get something out of overeating, losing our temper, and scrolling social media, but, the effect of these habits is negative overall.

To get rid of a bad habit then, our job is to get our brains to stop focusing on the limited positive side of that habit, and to start focusing on all its negative aspects.

We need to update the reward value of that habit so that we understand, on a visceral level, that it actually isn’t doing much for us.

We need to disenchant the habit.

How to Disenchant Your Bad Habits

Once you realize that a behavior isn’t actually rewarding — once you disenchant it — your desire to do it will decrease.

According to Dr. Brewer, disenchanting your habits is something you can do proactively.

In his book, Unwinding Anxiety, he uses this idea to help people be less anxious. According to Brewer, anxiety is a maladaptive habit.

Something in our environment triggers us to feel uncertain, and this uncertainty makes us feel anxious. We respond to that trigger by worrying. Perhaps counterintuitively, worrying can feel rewarding. It makes us feel like we’re doing something to resolve the uncertainty we’re facing. And there’s a pleasure in that. Also, when we worry, we sometimes get consoled by friends and loved ones. That feels good, too. The reward we get from worrying is why worrying can become a habit.

But we all know that worrying doesn’t actually do much to resolve our problems and uncertainty in life. In fact, it can get in the way of us actually taking steps to fix our problems.

Even though there’s some sort of pleasure in scratching the worry itch, overall it makes us feel worse rather than better; overall, it’s actually not that rewarding.

According to Brewer, to break the habit of worry, you need to disenchant it. You need to adjust down the now-inflated reward value of the habit to its true, nearly-worthless level.

This process is easy. You simply bring your awareness to how you really feel on a visceral level whenever you’re worried. This is an embodied awareness, not simply an intellectual one. Pay attention to where you feel stressed in your body. Do you feel tension in your stomach? Are your palms sweating? Is your heart racing?

As you pay close attention to these negative experiences, ask yourself, “What do I get from worrying?”

The answer, you’ll realize, is not a whole heck of a

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