How to Break a Bad Habit: 11 Tips and Strategies

11 Ways to Break a Bad Habit

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.

A bad habit is a learned behavior that’s performed automatically in response to a cue; it offers quick reward, but conflicts with long-term goals such as weight loss or career aspirations.

 As Melissa Gallagher, LCSW, the executive director at Victory Bay, a behavioral health treatment center in Clementon, New Jersey, explains: “Habits are hard to break because they are stored in the basal ganglia, the brain’s automatic pilot that doesn’t require conscious thought to operate.” That’s why asking pure willpower to overrule them usually doesn’t work, she says.

Fortunately, there are ways to rewire your brain and break a bad habit.

1. Spot Your Triggers

Habits are almost always tied to an internal or external trigger, like a time of day, place, emotional state, or social situation that cues the behavior. Once that behavior is repeated in the same context often enough, it becomes automatic and difficult to change.