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Most advice on breaking habits is either too vague—“Just stop doing it”—or overly complex, buried in charts and jargon. I’ve tried habit trackers, streak apps, and even that rubber band-on-the-wrist thing.
None of it stuck.
What finally helped wasn’t a productivity system. It was one brutally honest question:
“What am I actually getting from this?”
That question changed the way I looked at my behavior. Not with guilt—but with clarity. And that made all the difference.
Willpower Isn’t the Fix
The first instinct with bad habits is to fight them head-on. Grit your teeth. Make rules. Cut it off cold.
That works—for a while.
But motivation fades. Willpower gets tired. And the habit is still sitting there, waiting for you on a bad day.
White-knuckling your way through change rarely lasts. Because force doesn’t fix why the habit exists in the first place.
The One Question That Changed Everything
I kept repeating a specific bad habit—late-night scrolling that ruined my sleep. I knew it was a problem. I just couldn’t seem to quit.
One night, instead of trying to stop it, I paused and asked:
“What am I actually getting from this?”
The answer surprised me.
It wasn’t entertainment or information. It was comfort. A sense of control. Something easy and familiar after a chaotic day.
That answer didn’t justify the habit—but it explained it.
And once I understood the hidden reward, I could start changing the behavior without pretending that part didn’t matter.
This question helped me stop moralizing my habit as “good” or “bad” and start treating it like a system with a payoff.
How to Use the Question in Real Life
You don’t need a spreadsheet or a habit journal with custom stickers. Here’s how I made it work without over-complicating it:
1. Ask Before the Habit Hits
That moment when you’re about to open the app, light the cigarette, pour the drink—pause and ask:
“What am I trying to get from this?”
You’ll get better at hearing the real answer over time.
2. Track It Lightly
Use a notes app or a piece of paper. Jot down what the habit was and what you think you were trying to feel. No judgment. Just data.
3. Substitute the Reward
Once you’ve identified the real payoff—comfort, distraction, stimulation—look for ways to get that without the old routine.
For me, that meant switching from scrolling to a five-minute journal prompt. I still got the comfort of winding down—but I slept better.
You don’t have to be perfect. You just have to be more aware than you were yesterday.
Final Thought
Most habit change fails because we start with pressure instead of perspective.
That one question—“What am I actually getting from this?”—turned self-sabotage into self-understanding. And from there, change became possible.
You don’t need more hacks. You need more honesty. Ask the question. Let the answer guide you forward.

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