Breaking a bad habit can feel like swimming against a current. You know it isn’t serving you, but your brain defaults to it anyway.
Fortunately, there are ways to rewire your brain and break a bad habit.
1. Spot Your Triggers
2. Replace, Don’t Just Remove
3. Start Small
“When people are intrinsically motivated — doing something because it feels good — they persist longer. Starting small lets them experience that satisfaction early, which reinforces the cycle,” says Samantha Gambino, PsyD, a clinical psychologist based in New York City.
An example of a small step might look like swapping a sweet treat for a fruit-and-yogurt bowl you genuinely enjoy once a week. Increase the frequency as the action starts to feel satisfying on its own, since that intrinsic enjoyment creates a self-reinforcing cycle, says Gambino.
4. Use Visualization
To practice visualization, close your eyes and picture yourself encountering a trigger. Instead of engaging in a bad habit, visualize yourself pausing and choosing a different action.
5. Ask for Support
The reason? People are more likely to stay accountable to their goals when they know others expect them to follow through. “In group therapy programs, clients who connect with peers have greater habit adherence than those who try to change in isolation,” Gallagher says. Having someone to check in with or share progress adds a gentle nudge and keeps momentum going.
6. Stack New Habits Onto Old Ones
7. Practice Mindfulness
8. Reward Progress
Small, external rewards often reinforce new behaviors, which makes them more likely to stick at the beginning.
“Extrinsic motivators can be powerful for getting started,” Dr. Gambino says. These may look like earning medals in a fitness app, treating yourself to a massage for completing a healthy habit for 30 days in a row, or investing in clothes or tools that make the habit more appealing. “Over time, the activity itself becomes enjoyable, shifting motivation from external to internal,” Gambino says.
9. Make Bad Habits Inconvenient
Most people try to change behaviors through willpower alone, which means asking the brain to fight against established neural pathways, Gallagher says. Creating environmental friction disrupts these automatic patterns before they can fully begin, making it easier to pause and choose a different response.
10. Be Patient
Habit change doesn’t happen overnight. “Meaningful habit change happens over months, not weeks,” explains Gallagher. Expect setbacks, they’re part of the process, not proof you’ve failed.
11. Get Help if You Need It
The Takeaway
- Breaking a habit is about retraining your brain’s automatic patterns with consistent, science-based strategies rather than relying on willpower alone.
- Start small, identify your triggers, and gradually replace bad habits with healthier ones. Habit stacking, visualization, mindfulness check-ins, and social support make follow-through easier.
- Expect setbacks and plan for them by resetting cues and recommitting to your tiny version of the habit.

















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