thinkaboutit

🗝️ The Key to Habit Change

🤔 What neuroplasticity has to do with habits…

“We are creatures of habit.”

“Old habits are hard to break.”

“New habits are hard to keep.”

How many of these ideas ☝️ do you believe?

So much about improving our health requires changing our habits. That’s true for physical, mental, and emotional health. But in order for new habits to stick, we also need to retrain our brains.

It’s called neuroplasticity 💡 and is basically like rewiring old patterns into new ones on a subconscious level.

Here’s the great thing about neuroplasticity:

✅ The more you trigger neural pathways in the brain, the stronger they get.

❌ The less you trigger other neural pathways in the brain, the weaker they get.

That means every time you lace up your walking shoes instead of sitting on the couch, you’re training your brain to believe you’re a person who exercises. Every time you drink water instead of wine, you’re training your brain to believe you’re a person who stays sober. Every time you take a deep breath instead of yelling, you’re training your brain to believe you’re a person who stays present and relaxed.

The key to making neuroplasticity work in your favor is to practice your positive and health-promoting habits in little bits often:

🗝️ Little & Often 🗝️

That’s how you train your brain, and that’s how you make habits stick.

Watch for my next post because I’m going to share some **specific neuroplasticity exercises** you can do little & often.

Any ideas what some might be? Give me your guesses in the comments. ⤵️

🤔 Can we rewire our brains?

Ever feel like your brain is keeping you stuck? 

Maybe it’s…

❌ Anxious Thoughts

❌ Negative Self-Talk

❌ Caving to Cravings

❌ Feeling Unmotivated

❌ Trouble Concentrating

These are just a few examples of feelings and behaviors that can be hard to break—like an endless cycle—that so often we blame our brains 🧠 

But here’s what you need to know:

You have the power to retrain your brain! 


Think of it like rewiring. You can teach the brain to form new connections: to strengthen pathways that serve you and weaken pathways that don’t. 

💡  It’s called neuroplasticity. 

Neuroplasticity is the reason we’re able to recover function after a stroke, learn new skills, and reprogram our thoughts. 

It’s the key to behavior change and breaking free from past patterns that keep us feeling stuck. 

Want to know more about neuroplasticity? 

Be sure to like & follow because I’ll be sharing more on this topic soon!