Most people try to break bad habits the wrong way.
They rely on willpower.
They tell themselves, “I just need to stop doing this.”
They try to be more disciplined.
And then… a few days later, they’re right back where they started.
Not because they’re lazy.
Not because they don’t care.
But because they’re trying to fight something they don’t actually understand.
Why Your Bad Habits Keep Coming Back
Your habits aren’t random. They follow a pattern. Every single time.
It’s called the habit loop:
Trigger → Behavior → Reward
Once you see this, everything starts to make more sense.
The 3-Part Habit Loop (Explained Simply)
1. Trigger
This is what starts the habit.
It could be:
- boredom
- stress
- being on your phone
- a certain time of day
- a specific environment
Example:
You’re sitting on your couch at night → that’s the trigger
2. Behavior
This is the actual habit.
- scrolling TikTok
- snacking
- procrastinating
- avoiding something
This is the part most people try to change.
3. Reward
This is why your brain keeps going back to the habit.
You get something out of it:
- distraction
- comfort
- relief
- dopamine
- avoiding stress
Example:
Scrolling gives you a mental escape → that’s the reward
The Mistake Everyone Makes
Most people try to eliminate the behavior completely.
“I’m just going to stop scrolling.”
“I’m just going to stop procrastinating.”
But here’s the problem:
The trigger is still there.
The need for the reward is still there.
So your brain goes:
“Cool… we’ll just find another way to get that.”
And you end up right back in the same cycle.
What You Actually Need to Change
You don’t need to “remove” the habit.
You need to redirect it.
The key is this:
- Keep the trigger (because sometimes they are unavoidable)
- Replace the behavior
- Keep or upgrade the reward
What That Looks Like in Real Life
Let’s break it down.
Example 1: Mindless Scrolling
Trigger: Bored at night
Behavior: Scroll your phone for an hour
Reward: Distraction / mental escape
Instead of trying to stop completely:
New behavior:
- watch one intentional show
- read something easy
- go for a short walk
- listen to a podcast
Same reward: distraction
Better behavior.
Example 2: Procrastinating Work
Trigger: You sit down to start something hard
Behavior: Avoid it (scroll, snack, clean, anything else)
Reward: Relief from stress
New version:
New behavior:
- work for 10 minutes
- break it into one small task
- set a timer
Same reward: reduced stress
But now you’re also making progress
Why This Works
You’re not fighting your brain. You’re working with it.
Your brain still gets:
- relief
- comfort
- distraction
…but in a way that doesn’t keep you stuck.
The Shift That Changes Everything
If you take one thing from this:
Bad habits aren’t a discipline problem.
They’re a pattern problem.
Once you understand the pattern, you can change it.
How to Start Today
Pick one habit.
Just one.
Ask yourself:
- What’s the trigger?
- What’s the behavior?
- What’s the reward?
Then change the behavior. Keep it simple. Don’t overthink it.
If You’re Struggling to Stay Consistent
If you feel like you keep starting and stopping, or you know what to do but just aren’t following through…
You’re not alone. This is something I help 20-somethings work through all the time—building habits that actually stick in real life.