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This week is a habits special edition—three real questions, real science, real tools.
We start with replacing "bad" habits using the habit loop (trigger → behavior → reward) and substitution—then make it practical with friction + physical distance (because phones often work through negative reinforcement: checking relieves the stress of not checking).
Then we shift to emotional habits: why we react before we reflect, and how to strengthen the brain's "brake lines" (prefrontal cortex down-regulating the amygdala). You'll get two in-the-moment tools: movement and box breathing (including the "trace a square" trick).
We close with discouragement + self-efficacy and why the fastest way back to confidence is mini habits (1–5 minutes)—"exercise snacks" (one of my faves), tiny wins, and a simple habit inventory to reveal what you can stack on.
By James GarrettThis week is a habits special edition—three real questions, real science, real tools.
We start with replacing "bad" habits using the habit loop (trigger → behavior → reward) and substitution—then make it practical with friction + physical distance (because phones often work through negative reinforcement: checking relieves the stress of not checking).
Then we shift to emotional habits: why we react before we reflect, and how to strengthen the brain's "brake lines" (prefrontal cortex down-regulating the amygdala). You'll get two in-the-moment tools: movement and box breathing (including the "trace a square" trick).
We close with discouragement + self-efficacy and why the fastest way back to confidence is mini habits (1–5 minutes)—"exercise snacks" (one of my faves), tiny wins, and a simple habit inventory to reveal what you can stack on.