The Real Reason Your Bad Habits Keep Winning

Join me today as we delve into the insightful practices employed by monks to break bad habits. Our exploration begins by understanding the intricate process through which habits form, providing us with essential insights on effectively breaking them.
Learn more from Dr. K in his Guide to Mental Health: bit.ly/3Pw29nG
Not sure which module to start on? Take our quiz: bit.ly/47dGzKj
In this video, we'll unravel the mechanisms behind habit formation, exploring the psychology and behavioral patterns that contribute to their establishment. By comprehending the foundations of habit formation, we can then embark on a journey to dismantle these patterns.
▼ Timestamps ▼
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00:16 - Struggling with habits
01:24 - All monks break their bad habits
01:54 - Understanding how a habit forms
03:36 - What is a habit?
04:32 - The problem with breaking bad habits
05:04 - What do monks do?
05:58 - The potato chip addiction
08:06 - How habits relate to addictions
09:50 - What happens in the brain when we raise awareness
11:00 - The secret of how monks break their habits
────────────
DISCLAIMER
Healthy Gamer is an online community and resource platform for gamers and their families. It does not provide medical services or professional counseling, and it is not a substitute for professional medical care. Our coaches are peer supporters, not professionally trained experts, and they cannot provide medical service. If you or a loved one are experiencing an emergency, please call your nation's emergency telephone number.
All guests of Healthy Gamer are informed of the public, non-medical nature of the content and have expressly agreed to share their story.
#healthygamergg #behavior #badhabits

Пікірлер: 990

  • @HealthyGamerGG
    @HealthyGamerGG11 ай бұрын

    Full video: kzread.info/dash/bejne/Zm1sj8SfYqXOl7Q.html

  • @jspace1764

    @jspace1764

    11 ай бұрын

    Interesting

  • @Craffunky

    @Craffunky

    10 ай бұрын

    this is the same link ?

  • @saneness-cq9pe

    @saneness-cq9pe

    10 ай бұрын

    yes@@Craffunky

  • @pentasquare

    @pentasquare

    10 ай бұрын

    Why?

  • @gifi4

    @gifi4

    8 ай бұрын

    Someone made a mistake? We're all human and that seems likely.@@pentasquare

  • @terryh.9238
    @terryh.9238 Жыл бұрын

    ILL TAKE A POTATO CHIP... AND EAT IT!

  • @theblinkingbrownie4654

    @theblinkingbrownie4654

    Жыл бұрын

    WHILE BEING FULLY AWARE OF WHY I'M EATING IT!

  • @XxguaxinimxX.

    @XxguaxinimxX.

    Жыл бұрын

    * insert that choir soundtrack of death note *

  • @SzaboB33

    @SzaboB33

    Жыл бұрын

    I was at the beginning of the video when I read this comment and I kinda knew the video was about mindfulness :D Does this count as pre-study?

  • @forgoroe

    @forgoroe

    Жыл бұрын

    Keikaku doori

  • @Mankind5490

    @Mankind5490

    Жыл бұрын

    This comment needs to be pinned lmfaoooo

  • @InfectedEnnui
    @InfectedEnnui Жыл бұрын

    in summary: when you're craving a bad habit, don't try to resist. do it mindfully, paying attention to every aspect of the experience

  • @Tokmurok

    @Tokmurok

    Жыл бұрын

    Bruh that's trash advice I did not stop eating a terrible diet by observing it myself I just studied how bad it was and at the same time resisted and I haven't gone back.

  • @oskardahle2478

    @oskardahle2478

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tokmurok Many people are completely aware of how unhealthy their bad habits are and have tried to resist them but failed. This is an alternative way of trying to break the habit that could for many people. I don't think it hurts to try this if they have already failed at going raw turkey.

  • @alishaanimations3058

    @alishaanimations3058

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tokmurok you probably unknowingly adapted what they video said btw..

  • @alishaanimations3058

    @alishaanimations3058

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tokmurok thats how you observed it..by researching

  • @AClarke2007

    @AClarke2007

    Жыл бұрын

    Not summarised by ChatGPT?

  • @gabrielakrasteva9798
    @gabrielakrasteva9798 Жыл бұрын

    Great video again! Here is what I learned: - a behaviour is reinforced when it's pleasurable and dopaminergic. - when you try to change a habit you're using your frontal lobe which doesn't make the good habits pleasurable because the frontal lobes and the reward system of the brain are two different circuits - monks do not practice resistance, they focus on cultivating awareness - the awareness can help with addictions because the person with addiction is blind to what got them to use again after a period of being sober. Most of the times these people are emotionally triggered in some way and they cope by using the substance again. However, if they are aware of these stressful situations and their feelings, they'll have better understanding of what triggered them and made them use again. - everytime you do the bad habit with full awareness you're strenghtening connections between the frontal lobe and habit circuitry. This works because bad habits are not enjoyable the whole time you're doing them. For example when you start a video game you're thrilled but after 10-20 minutes you're not as enagaged as in the beggining. If you're aware the whole time you're going to catch that point where you stopped enjoying playing the game. Another example I can think of is to watch a KZread video but scrolling on social media on your phone. You are neither fully aware of the video nor the social media posts and this is how a few hours of your life can slip by. - tldr - do one thing at a time and be fully aware of your bad habits

  • @williamblancomorrissey9788

    @williamblancomorrissey9788

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @eeaglllee

    @eeaglllee

    Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate this.

  • @MrVevo73

    @MrVevo73

    Жыл бұрын

    thank you for saving my time

  • @spite3217

    @spite3217

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn, I relate so much to that video while on my phone thing. I’ll be playing a video game and I’ll alt tab between games/lives to watch videos and sometimes I’ll have my phone too.

  • @muffin9124

    @muffin9124

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for taking the time to write this bro

  • @eggman6605
    @eggman6605 Жыл бұрын

    Potentially helpful tips: 1.Observe how ego and judgements interact. "This action is bad, but it feels good, therefore I must be bad." 2. Observe sensations and emotions fully. What happened before the habit? How are your feeling? "I didn't sleep well. I feel apathetic." When does the pleasure stop? When does the fun end and compulsion begin? How do you feel afterwards? "The cake tasted so good on the first mouthful, but by the third it was just sweetness. I felt like I had to finish it, even though I wasn't enjoying it anymore." 3. Acknowledge what the bad habit does for you. It may be a bad habit, but it was/is a solution to a problem you have. Binge eating reduces stress. Gaming masks inadequacy. Pr0n distracts from emptiness. Anger issues protect us. They are poor solutions, but it never would have turned into a habit if it didn't work at some point. So rather than outright rejecting them, be grateful. Acknowledge what bad habits give, as well as take.

  • @thuc753951

    @thuc753951

    Жыл бұрын

    great notes

  • @Hemlocker

    @Hemlocker

    Жыл бұрын

    Funnily enough I stumbled upon #2 recently. I started taking notes on how I felt after indulging in certain things, and came to a similar realisation.

  • @IIIISai

    @IIIISai

    Жыл бұрын

    This was beautiful bro, your explanations on where they stemmed from and the different examples, just perfect, the Pron from Emptiness is accurate to me, don't get me wrong alot of it is lust it really is, but I found whenever I search rule 34 again outside of lust, the images I always like the most are always two people with strong chemistry whether it's couples or friends, one side of it is lust and how good the art and image is or video, the other side is this my thoughts of oh that can be me one day with a partner, that's what i noticed, for game your thing is accurate but i also just play it if im bored, i never related to stress eating i actually eat because im skinny and even then i barley eat, yea anger does protect me, but i rarely get angry but because its so rare that when i do, it feels like protection, And your comment at the end about dont just blindly reject it but moderate and be aware, was awesome your perspective is so original and useful, im not even addicted to any of these thingbs I really got awareness earlier this year, but because i struggle to find an interview for a job, and my life is on repeat with nothing fresh, these things just add pleasure, thats me personally, like im not addicted and multiple times i took month breaks, so it's weird, im not addicted, im self aware, but i still do these things because im empty, if i had a job i can really excite my life more

  • @levylost8550

    @levylost8550

    Жыл бұрын

    These are very good tips, thank you so much

  • @v.kut7307

    @v.kut7307

    11 ай бұрын

    @@IIIISai very true, good point you added there, I also engage more with couple orientated or good chemistry Pron and now I realize why that is. I started recently to find my purpose and gratification without a relationship, because I found that I connect my value to relationships and the "Family Future"

  • @jadebaxter8181
    @jadebaxter8181 Жыл бұрын

    the wisdom of a monk under the perspective of a Harvard psychiatrist, this dude is a gem

  • @0num4
    @0num4 Жыл бұрын

    This makes sense. I stopped drinking in 2018, not mindfully at first. But once I started paying attention to the urges my brain was focused on, it became easier to understand and regulate the habit. It wasn't forcibly stopping a detrimental habit. It was the act of thinking about my circumstances during and adjacent to alcohol consumption that allowed me to stop altogether. I still feel the urge, years later, but I'm definitely better off than I was before I quit.

  • @Heyu7her3

    @Heyu7her3

    Жыл бұрын

    Metacognition/ reflection

  • @BoostedPastime

    @BoostedPastime

    Жыл бұрын

    Congratulations, it is not easy to break drinking.

  • @BlackbeardEVO

    @BlackbeardEVO

    Жыл бұрын

    The same thing happened to me but with roblox

  • @160p2GHz

    @160p2GHz

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea I think when I've managed to stop eating crap foods I've unknowingly done what he's talking about where I just start paying attention to the fact I don't actually like them and was just in the habit of having them or turning to them when other things (like thirst) were going on. Well done with quitting btw :)

  • @jqy4sho

    @jqy4sho

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BlackbeardEVO hey bro i struggle with the same thing, did you overcome this struggle with roblox? and how?

  • @LoveBystroem
    @LoveBystroem Жыл бұрын

    Dealing with phone and youtube addiction through a youtube video on my phone

  • @thebenzeneboi
    @thebenzeneboi Жыл бұрын

    This video has got to be one of the most valuable pieces of content on the internet right now. I often feel so much shame and guilt trying to overcome my phone use and social media addiction through willpower. It's validating to hear that my failures are not because I'm not trying hard enough, and it's life-changing to have a path forward after watching this video.

  • @physicianskitchen

    @physicianskitchen

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe dissipating some of the feelings of shame also contributes to breaking a bad habit. Best of luck! :)

  • @zirakguzder3764

    @zirakguzder3764

    Жыл бұрын

    bro has definitely just found Dr. K

  • @littlesometin

    @littlesometin

    Жыл бұрын

    @@physicianskitchen true

  • @SuitedPup

    @SuitedPup

    6 ай бұрын

    Did you overcome your addiction?

  • @thebenzeneboi

    @thebenzeneboi

    6 ай бұрын

    @@SuitedPup Wow, it's already been 6 months. Things have definitely gotten better. I am more aware of my screen time, so I don't scroll endlessly, and I've been reading and journalling instead of going on my phone constantly. Another thing is I don't feel the same shame and guilt anymore, instead, now when I regress to my old habits, I remind myself about the life that I want to live and how I can adjust my behaviour to align better with my values of health, connection, and happiness.

  • @ratsalad178
    @ratsalad178 Жыл бұрын

    this may be one of the most important videos dr k has put out. i tried this for only a day and found massive results. for context, i generally spend nearly all day watching youtube videos or television/movies, sometimes playing video games too. i know i do it to avoid my feelings, but haven't been able to stop in years and it has really brought my life to a sickening standstill. so i followed dr k's instructions and decided to engage in my addictions, but with awareness. every time i found myself picking up my phone or my laptop, i'd start paying attention to my actions, even pointing and calling if needed (e.g. saying out loud "i'm scrolling the youtube homepage right now.") because i'm trying to be aware of my internal state too, i'd ask myself, "what am i feeling right now?" i'd name the emotion and continue to scroll. because i've been trying to practice self-compassion in the last week, as soon as i named the emotion i instinctually validated it too. all this while continuing to engage in the addiction, fully aware. what was surprising is this: while i'd usually spend hours on youtube once i started, when i did this, i watched only one video, or played only one pvp match at a time. it's not that i consciously stopped myself, i just didn't feel the NEED to keep going anymore. as a result, today was one of the most productive days i've had in weeks - i got so much stuff done, actually had the motivation to do things, all because i engaged in my addictions with awareness, which led to paying attention to what i was feeling and accepting it - as a result, i didn't lose myself in the timesuck of youtube. what i found whenever i engaged in my addictions with awareness: - i'd reach for them whenever i felt an uncomfortable emotion, e.g. sadness, anger, hurt, but most prominently discomfort at the prospect of doing a difficult task, which led to procrastination using the addictive behavior - i also reached for it when i didn't know what to do next in my day - a completely unexpected realization. i suppose feeling directionless is its own kind of discomfort. - i have a chronic pain condition, and i'd reach for my addictions when i had a pain flare-up. once i noticed this, i realized i could actually make the radical decision of, gasp, treating the pain, instead of avoiding the discomfort of it by playing video games. i automatically stopped after one match (not something i had to force myself to do!), took my meds and felt a whole lot better in a few hours, which led to more productivity. dr k, you probably won't see this comment, but you've helped me way more than anything i've tried, even therapy, which has been pretty helpful. from the bottom of my heart, a huge THANK YOU. i hope all the good you do comes back to you as punya (sanskrit for "merit" for others reading).

  • @meekatoblerone5242

    @meekatoblerone5242

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm really happy you have this technique for yourself now you go :)

  • @emjhendrickson8290

    @emjhendrickson8290

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your experience. It helped me understand the process better 😊 great job practicing awareness! Your story is amazing. I'm addicted to sugar. Without success, I've been trying various techniques to change my behavior. I'll give this a shot!

  • @didedoshka

    @didedoshka

    6 ай бұрын

    @@emjhendrickson8290 hi, how's it going?

  • @LuhRen

    @LuhRen

    6 ай бұрын

    "Being directionless can be it's own kind of discomfort" that really described alot of the reasons I still smoke weed. I grow bored or purposeless and just figure "hey I have nothing better to do" when in reality I have alot of things I could be doing but due to discomfort I just don't do it. Really related to your comment. Gave me the courage to give it a try. Hope nothing but the best for you.

  • @job8

    @job8

    5 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing your story! It was touching.

  • @Blackcrowcaw
    @Blackcrowcaw Жыл бұрын

    This video made me tear up a bit. I’ve been struggling with drinking since the pandemic began, and I also have a genetic predisposition for alcohol issues from my dad’s side. I’ve been drinking every single day, with 3 exceptions that last maybe a week or 2, for the last 3 years. I drink to cover up the loneliness. I do have friends, really good friends even, but there’s a gnawing hole in my heart where family and a partner should be. I currently only speak to one of my five siblings and my mother. I went on a date recently that was the best I’ve ever been on. We didn’t do anything fancy, we went for a walk and then played music together and had tea. It just felt like I was simply and easily connecting with another person. And guess what? I didn’t drink that night, and I didn’t even think about it. It just didn’t happen. We’ve now been on 3 dates and each time I see him I feel no desire to drink afterwards. What’s frustrating is feeling like a lonely sad loser for needing people. I feel like everyone around me is “doing their own thing” and simply don’t have much time for others.

  • @raymeester7883

    @raymeester7883

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow! That's a lot.

  • @sccello

    @sccello

    Жыл бұрын

    If you're want to break out of the pattern, maybe try being radically honest with a friend who might be up for it. Be honest that the habit you're trying to break only really happens when you're alone, so see if they'd be up for low-key, low-pressure hangouts several times a week, maybe sometimes on short notice. It's really great that you don't want to drink on date nights, but you also probably shouldn't depend on a romantic partner as the only linchpin for kicking the bottle. The friend won't fill the "family" hole, but this might help spread things out a little to take pressure off the relationship.

  • @Blackcrowcaw

    @Blackcrowcaw

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sccello thank you for taking some time to reply! I think one thing I should clarify more is that the friendships I have are really good friendships. I’ve never struggled much in terms of friends as an adult. I’m a very extroverted, agreeable, and open person. They’re good enough friendships that I have had conversations similar to the one you mentioned. The pain is still there and I feel like I’m just distracting myself for a moment or a few hours. I agree about the linchpin thing. And I would also say that I don’t consider this guy to be the linchpin here. The real linchpin is music, and there are a lot of people that I can share connection with in that way. I suppose the take away here is that I need more friends that I can share playing music with. I did also lose a group of friends that I used to sing with. After the pandemic started they were only meeting over zoom and it was just so different that I’ve had trouble going back. There are a lot of older folks in the group as well so they’re all especially concerned about covid

  • @vishthemarketer6691

    @vishthemarketer6691

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Blackcrowcaw wow this was a wake up call for me. I had decided I didn't want a partner because the time investment is too high, being with the person 24/7 and I have a ton of things I need to do with my life. I had planned I will just make amazing friends. But reading from your perspective it makes me reconsider things... the part that all your friends have things of their own to do. I need to wake up to reality. Thanks for sharing and I will you the best with fixing things

  • @a.person5571

    @a.person5571

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't feel like a loser for needing someone to socialize with, and different relationships satisfy different social needs so you'll need more than one "someone." Humans are communal animals. There's a reason solitary confinement is a punishment.

  • @rekon798
    @rekon798 Жыл бұрын

    Heard an extension of this that could also help others: If you find yourself tempted by a habit, try waiting 10 minutes before doing it. Helps build up resistance and willpower while also becoming more aware of the habit.

  • @micheller3251

    @micheller3251

    Жыл бұрын

    Ohhhh I'll try this, thank you!

  • @xxsayabetoxx

    @xxsayabetoxx

    Жыл бұрын

    Bump

  • @Heyu7her3

    @Heyu7her3

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh this doesn't stop me. Being mindful/ aware doesn't work for me.

  • @xavmarz755

    @xavmarz755

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Heyu7her3 change doesnt happen in a week man

  • @kt68866

    @kt68866

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Heyu7her3there are reasons that the advice given may not work for people. I feel like the video actually. Explains why. So. Ignore them.

  • @kenpoon2389
    @kenpoon2389 Жыл бұрын

    It’s been 3 weeks since I stopped vaping. My parents were happy to hear that I am making progress to quit my bad habit but they asked why do I still have the vape in front of me at all times on my desk. I told them in the past when I tried to quit I would usually throw it in the bin, but not long after I would give in to the temptation and drive out and buy one. However, what I did 3 weeks ago was I use a marker to write down the date I decided to quit and I kept the vape in front of me at all times and bring it everywhere I go. Every time I have the craving to take a hit I can make a conscious/intentional decision whether I want or not, but the date on the vape actually reminds me of my commitment, goal and perseverance. I just found this video and it really resonated with me when the monk was told to not to resist and eat with awareness and even keep it with at all times. I realise I am on the right path and I know I will break this bad habit of mine successfully.

  • @understanding.is.ecstasy

    @understanding.is.ecstasy

    2 ай бұрын

    Did you break your habit successfully or not ?

  • @NoirMorter
    @NoirMorter Жыл бұрын

    I've used this approach without realizing to correct my diet. I allowed myself to eat what I wanted in full awareness that I shouldn't, forgiving myself for "failing" and allowing myself to enjoy it. It took months but soon I went from eating horribly soda's, pizza's, chips, candies and so on to replacing each little by little with healthy alternatives. This was several years ago now and have kept to my new habits. I occasionally consume some of the old stuff but I don't think about it as a negative and simply enjoy them since they don't cause me problems any longer.

  • @anginhvan2524
    @anginhvan2524 Жыл бұрын

    This came at a right time for me, I just slipped up and played video games for 4 hours everyday on the last two weeks, and it has been detrimental to my studies as a medical student. I became aware of the fact that playing games wouldn't bring me anything but guilt (not even pleasure), and I thought I definitely needed a way to prevent myself from becoming absorbed in bad habits the next time. Thank you.

  • @demigod8522
    @demigod8522 Жыл бұрын

    My biggest problem in breaking my addiction is that I can't find any new interests to replace it with, so I always fall back into the same loop eventually of turning my PC on just to escape my misery / boredom that eventually rises up

  • @pedroba76

    @pedroba76

    6 ай бұрын

    same for me.

  • @sybergen333

    @sybergen333

    6 ай бұрын

    I relate so much with this one

  • @WimFtw

    @WimFtw

    6 ай бұрын

    This is a late reply, but if you are falling into addictions or focused on your own unhappiness, one of the best ways to get distracted, become grateful and happier is to volunteer and help other people. There's a reason elderly people volunteer a lot. They knew them is wisdom. Be engaged with others, learn their problems and jiurneys. Help other people, putting thr focus of your attention outwards. This is easy for many people because we are biological social creatures. Even just volunteer at a second hand thrift shop to be the cashier for free. You will be helping the impoverished people and gaining comradery and a different social circle with the staff. Hope 2024 is great !

  • @whoisgliese
    @whoisgliese Жыл бұрын

    Habits are unconscious behaviour. Engage in habits mindfully to remove the distraction factor, and to reinforce the connection between the frontal lobe and the habit or cannabinoid circuitry. Also you'll raise awareness of your internal emotional state whenever you're indulging in the habits so you understand better why you do them and you can deal with those emotions instead of undulging in the habit.

  • @jennw6809
    @jennw6809 Жыл бұрын

    Perfect timing as always! I've been trying to do this but needed some more details. Dr. K, you always seem to include some detail or some angle on a practice that really unlocks a new dimension!! Thanks for everything you do.

  • @frankthepug283
    @frankthepug28311 ай бұрын

    I`ve been doing this with my pornography addiction for the last 2 weeks and I have to say, thank so much Dr. K. I'm 29 years old and for the first time in my life, since I consumed pornography, I feel in so much control with this addiction, at first I was skeptical about this practice and on the first days I saw not difference but I kept my full awareness while doing it, and after a week, I started to feel that the craving started to go away or at least they were way more manageable (slowly but surely) and now I had reached 5 days without pornography/masturbation, which is a huge milestone for me! I know that I'm just 2 weeks into this practice, but so far, the change is noticeable and for the fist time I have huge hopes for me in the future. Thank you so much Dr. K and I'll give you an update in about a month.

  • @saga7134

    @saga7134

    10 ай бұрын

    how is the progress?

  • @seantheansea5792

    @seantheansea5792

    10 ай бұрын

    Update please? What was your awareness like? Did you focus on how it made u feel? The behavior? The feeling?

  • @RasheedKhan-bm8fm

    @RasheedKhan-bm8fm

    2 ай бұрын

    Gib update pls

  • @keeshuunedited5678
    @keeshuunedited5678 Жыл бұрын

    Writing down stuff and how much time it takes does massive wonders for me when it comes to awareness. When I was growing up, everyone was workaholics, so no one really know how to deal with emotions or habits so I had to find my own way. Luckily I was just trying to make a schedule, and I needed to know how much time everything took. Starting writing everything down and made me realize just how horrible my sense of time had gotten. I've been slipping a bit with my habits lately since I haven't been doing that. Planning on grabbing a little booklet to write down in on monday so there is always something by my side. I mean I suppose you could do the same on your phone, but I find writing makes you more aware of the words you are saying than typing them. Especially since I never had a reason to really write anymore. Also planning on implementing how I feel before and after each activity, and also give a scale on 1 to 10 afterwards to see how well that works out for me.

  • @qwertyCandy
    @qwertyCandy Жыл бұрын

    This is extremely interesting - I struggle with lots of bad habits that ruin my life. I also noticed a while back that I live most of my life in some sort of a haze, doing things unconsciously. And recently, I was told by a psychologist that I have low awareness of my feelings. *Suddenly, it all makes sense* 🤯

  • @IIIISai

    @IIIISai

    Жыл бұрын

    that's deep, I relate but in a different way but same its weird, im hyper self aware yet I reject change and become autopilot almost while aware so it makes me have more regret, change is hard when you're hopeless, in my case its getting a job, i have 100s of applications but none of them get accepted, so mt habit and autopilot is just live your day without applying, but then at the night i always regret it because without effort even if hopeless, its guarantees no change, goodluck to your improvement and stuff, and again u can be aware of habits but theres always reasons u do it, habits help u feel something that u are missing, so u have to be aware of what it is that u do the habit for to begin with and that'll help u fix it or control it, gaming addiction often relates to lack of hobbies, thats one of many examples..

  • @akmhd

    @akmhd

    Жыл бұрын

    What a coincidence 😂 I just posted a comment similar to this. Yeah you're right, I've been dealing with this problem as well. The best solution is to live in the moment and improve your presence of mind.

  • @qwertyCandy

    @qwertyCandy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@IIIISai Oh I know the jobless struggle - this was me 2 years ago. Eventually, I started believing that it would never get better, no place would want me etc. My biggest problem was not applying enough because I kind of self-discarded. But it does get better - my mom made me apply for a position that I was a bit underqualified for but looked interesting, I had some serious doubts but did that and to my great surprise, I got the job :) And it hasn't been all sunshine and roses, but having a job again helped me a lot with the day-to-day. So I can guarantee that you'll find a job as well, it just takes some time, luck and not losing hope. So thanks for your kind words and wishing the best of luck to you too, you can do that :)

  • @qwertyCandy

    @qwertyCandy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@akmhd It's really good to know that at least I'm not the only one trying to solve this problem :)

  • @IIIISai

    @IIIISai

    Жыл бұрын

    @@qwertyCandy Firstly congratulations on getting the job, awesome mom, and I appreciate your kind words too sir 🙏🏼🔥

  • @jacobparkinson8938
    @jacobparkinson8938 Жыл бұрын

    Dr K is always making videos about stuff like this at the EXACT time in my life when I am needing it- once or twice is a coincidence… time after time?? The man’s a genius and very in touch with his community. Thank you, Dr. K.

  • @4xzx4

    @4xzx4

    Жыл бұрын

    He's spying on you

  • @galacticpotato607

    @galacticpotato607

    Жыл бұрын

    @@4xzx4 He reads our brains with his mind powers👁👄👁

  • @IIIISai

    @IIIISai

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hyperadapted not really fitting to this comment, K posts random different topics and its just luck that it suits us, your comment would only be true to this thread if the videos he got recommended on our homepage were off the similar topics but they are always different

  • @fostxswire1600

    @fostxswire1600

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a common comment on Dr. K's post. I am starting to think that this is more-so evidence in how prevalent these seemingly minute ideas are within our lives. Rather than being a huge iceberg that landed within the crosshairs.

  • @RavingKoala

    @RavingKoala

    Жыл бұрын

    And the algorithm also just knows what im dealing with at all times 🤣

  • @kylespevak6781
    @kylespevak6781 Жыл бұрын

    5:31 This makes sense because I've heard that being hyper aware was one of the most effective ways to quit something like smoking. The more you understand and focus on the parts you're just like about that hobby than the less likely you are to romanticize it and continue it. If you focus on the fact that you get no pleasure from playing video games anymore and are wasting all day playing video games instead of working out or doing something to make yourself better in life than it'll start to bother you every time you play video games because that's all you'll be able to think about which will help you kick the habit

  • @arithmechick
    @arithmechick Жыл бұрын

    I just realized how many bad habits I used to have that I would always do while binging KZread. A few months back, I decided I needed a dopamine detox which evolved into a new rule of mine: NO DOUBLE DOPAMINE! Snacking while gaming. Snacking while watching KZread. Multiple tabs of livestreams. Shit like that obliterates your boredom tolerance. After watching this video, I'm starting to wonder if isolating those dopaminergic behaviors had the hidden benefit of forcing me to do each one more mindfully! That would explain a lot...

  • @lui__v
    @lui__vАй бұрын

    This was refreshing for me in my journey with alcohol. I used to drink A LOT years ago while being depressed, then I went sober for 2-3 years. Then I got into wine and met a girl and we both enjoyed wine together. Long story short, we got pregnant and she didn’t want to go through with it and then broke up with me over text. This destroyed me. I forced myself to drink bourbon and whiskey for months. I eventually sought therapy to help recover, but I actually started growing an appreciation for the liquid and it’s became something of a hobby to me. These days I try to stay self aware of my intentions. As an enthusiast, I want to appreciate all the smells, flavors, and details when I drink. When I notice myself wanting to just pour a glass and not care, I recognize I need to walk away or take a break. I then go on a week long detox. This way of thinking also pushed me to find a healthier vice. Walking and biking has become a big part of my life, especially when I just want to pour a glass. Changing these habits has grown my appreciation of the hobby and has helped me become more physically and mentally healthy!

  • @rachelnanshija251
    @rachelnanshija251 Жыл бұрын

    Dang ive been using this strategy for a while without really knowing why, other than that it worked. Engaging in habits with awareness has been a great way to get myself to keep a schedule, exercise, put in hours at work, read, etc. I just try to be conscious of when I'm making a choice to engage in a good or bad habit, then feel how that feels. Like if i decide to skip the gym i allow myself to do that without feeling bad but i tune in to how my body feels about that choice that day and the next. And sometimes my body feels fine and maybe I actually needed a rest, or maybe i feel physically worse for being sedentary and that knowledge motivates me to go to the gym next time.

  • @classyjohn1923
    @classyjohn1923 Жыл бұрын

    Dr. K, Please do more content on trauma and c-ptsd. One thing about bad habits is that they could stem from maladaptive coping mechanisms. So, people watching this cannot simply just realize the existing bad habit and stop it because its likely that they will swap out the bad habit for another bad habit. They need to learn to process the trauma.

  • @moltenguava9418

    @moltenguava9418

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the point is not to stop bad habits but rather to study them. In that case by studying bad habits which are trauma responses you are actually developing insight into the nature of those responses and the nature of the trauma itself.

  • @somerandomrando3076
    @somerandomrando307611 ай бұрын

    I can recall this state of awareness while attempting to change my diet. I allowed myself to cave without guilt sometimes. I noticed the waxy, cardboard taste and texture of the unhealthy food I craved. The sickening sweetness or the empty feeling after it was gone. I started eating them less and less because of this, until skipping over them completely in favor of better choices. I will keep it up knowing it's actually a solid technique. Thank you for this video!

  • @owtoom
    @owtoom Жыл бұрын

    I would also highlight loving awareness. To give yourself compassion for the habits. You can develop a witness in your thoughts who just observes how it is objectively "ah, eating chips" then maybe "ah, self shaming". Watch it all unfold with kindness. Compassion broken down from Latin means to suffer with/together. Awareness can begin to develop self compassion because you become aware of your suffering (addiction/habit) rather than doing it non consciously. The kindness comes from realising that we are all together in our human condition. That everyone deserves love and kindness, starting with us. Eventually habits fall off as they lose their momentum and with awareness you can stay quiet enough for the moment you're doing 'the thing' and it just doesn't have the spark it used to.

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    Isn’t developing a witness who objectively observes kind of like dissociation?

  • @owtoom

    @owtoom

    Жыл бұрын

    @@punkroxgirl It's different in that with disassociation you become detached from your mindstate, emotions and lack control with what's happening, which increases risks. In developing a witness you still have your primary mode of thinking, you're still grounded but there's another element of your thought you develop which just notes things in a different framing. Source of knowledge; I have disorders which line up with disassociation, some amongst them involving seizures. Therapy, Loving awareness and developing a witness helped keep me in my body and conscious of reality. I've not long got on the Buddhist Path but what Dr K says in this video resonates with me as someone who's found growth and healing from Eastern Philosophy.

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@owtoom that makes sense. I have ptsd with some dissociation, but I did hypnosis therapy once and I was fully aware of everything the whole time and also watching in what was kind of like a guided imagery exercise

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@owtoom in that guided imagery I saw myself and still felt, but created these “bubbles” of safety for stressful things

  • @karna6634

    @karna6634

    3 ай бұрын

    how can i apply this specifically to porn ? in not that good in english and i dont really understand how to translate that into mine

  • @amin_dhou
    @amin_dhou Жыл бұрын

    Incredibly hard to remove bad habits. But eliminating them is incredibly rewarding 💪

  • @iluxa-4000
    @iluxa-4000 Жыл бұрын

    It's a very helpful advice for a lot of mental problems - cultivate more awareness. Observe instead of judging, and often times you will see the solution will come up by itself or you will start to feel better over time

  • @azmc4940
    @azmc49408 ай бұрын

    Engage with the potato chip with FULL awareness

  • @travisharrisphotography
    @travisharrisphotography Жыл бұрын

    I love this guy so much. hands down one of my favorites (and most intelligent) educators on KZread. Truly, grateful for finding this channel.

  • @swedishZ0mBi3

    @swedishZ0mBi3

    Жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @MKULTRA_Victim_

    @MKULTRA_Victim_

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. Praise the KZread algorithm.

  • @kevinlehr4705
    @kevinlehr4705 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I’m getting addicted to watching your videos b/c they’re so informative, interesting, & inspiring… but the addiction is with full awareness

  • @shredjward
    @shredjward Жыл бұрын

    This is something ive been practicing, and trying to tell the people i know about for like 15 years, but this video makes the point so concisive that this is going to be my reference going forward. Ive gotten more capable with my language and speaking since i was in middleschool but i still just sometimes fail to get the point heard. Thanks Dr. K. I'm certain that this is going to have a positive effect, at least in my little corner of the world

  • @rene95014
    @rene95014 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the videos Dr. K and the team! ☺️

  • @Madsovic999
    @Madsovic9994 күн бұрын

    It’s a bit roundabout, but I took this to heart today. I have a depression that sometimes rears it’s head, it comes as a train of thoughts mostly of how useless I am and how much better everyone would be off without me, normally it’s an opressive feeling of not being able to break the train of thought, being stuck for hours or days in this spiral. Today, I tried to just be extremely present with the thoughts. Turns out when I stopped resisting and just remained present, the thoughts went unanswered and the depressive episode ended. I have struggled for years and this is the first time I’m able to just let go like that. I guess my bad habit is engaging the depressive thoughts. I am super grateful for this lesson. Thank you dr. K

  • @Bigbean2999
    @Bigbean2999 Жыл бұрын

    I fixed my friends smoking addiction by making fun of him every time and he told me that he would think about me making fun of him every time he went for a smoke and how he felt about that and eventually quit

  • @justsomeguy1671

    @justsomeguy1671

    3 ай бұрын

    You're the hero he needed

  • @freddiesimmons1394

    @freddiesimmons1394

    2 ай бұрын

    @PhilGrayrock sometimes being negative is correct

  • @jøy_what_riley_loves_the_most

    @jøy_what_riley_loves_the_most

    2 ай бұрын

    @PhilGrayrock The end justifies the means. This was definitely a valid thing to do

  • @germanestrada825

    @germanestrada825

    22 күн бұрын

    I do this to myself and now I feel like shit hahaha

  • @ShareReachCommunity
    @ShareReachCommunity Жыл бұрын

    I love you bro. You’ve helped me understand some things that didn’t register because I never had great guidance growing up. Namaste 🙏🏾

  • @suchapolivka8707
    @suchapolivka870715 күн бұрын

    What you resist, persist. Surrender to the experience and be present with every fascet. Genius

  • @chessandmusicwithoskiez6241
    @chessandmusicwithoskiez6241 Жыл бұрын

    Hey, Dr. K! I want to thank you for all the great videos you make, but I also agree you shouldn’t just watch stuff without taking action (or not, I watched that video too), which is exactly why I love this video! It’s not that hard to do this, and you don’t even have to change your habit right away or yourself either. Definitely gonna try this one out! (I kinda wrote that for myself lol)

  • @scriptorpaulina
    @scriptorpaulina Жыл бұрын

    Ah, the same weird brain rewiring I did with my psychotic depression (with a therapist’s supervision). It’s also helpful if you monitor your thoughts and not just your emotions and actions.

  • @TurningTesting

    @TurningTesting

    Жыл бұрын

    Please tell more. How did this brain rewiring process look like if applied to PD? Is It like... Dunno, observing thoughts when episode happens?

  • @Thecastofthelast
    @Thecastofthelast3 ай бұрын

    Im addicted to Dr. K's video. How do I stop watching!? Please help!

  • @milomakesstuff2019
    @milomakesstuff2019 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot!! Definitely will try to apply this to my current issues: - Concentration and building more discipline

  • @Otoriyodesu
    @OtoriyodesuАй бұрын

    I tried this right away with something I was struggling with and not only did it work, but I feel like I already understand more about myself. Incredible piece of advice doc.

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Жыл бұрын

    I've got plenty of bad habits. Believe me, I'm forcing myself to make drastic changes/improvements, but I feel as though the gates of the hell keep opening up just to let me in. Dark, but that's just how I feel explaining it.

  • @rebornrovnost

    @rebornrovnost

    Жыл бұрын

    My sister, you are not alone in this struggle. Keep fighting, there are many who are beside you, silently, searching for a better way to live. I hope your efforts and your hopes are protected by the light of Jesus Christ, name which the gates of hell and the darkness won’t ever overcome.

  • @cccsss123

    @cccsss123

    Жыл бұрын

    Good job. Proud of you. Hope you are proud of yourself for wanting to be better and taking the effort and perseverance and discipline and time and patience to be better, to get rid of bad habits, to get positive habits, for you, for people around you, and for your future. Good job.

  • @krox477

    @krox477

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't resist it it'll come back

  • @jshsjsjsjsjsjaja9642

    @jshsjsjsjsjsjaja9642

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too

  • @kazzok7035
    @kazzok7035 Жыл бұрын

    This is the mental example of learning from your enemy. Knowing your enemy allows you to win.

  • @sircrashtonii9718
    @sircrashtonii97189 ай бұрын

    Literally this stuff with addictions has been one of my biggest problems in life. Thank you so much Dr. K!!!

  • @tacticalrockette4206
    @tacticalrockette42062 ай бұрын

    I did this unknowingly! I overcame an addiction to ice cream this way and didnt realize I was even doing it. I just started with having full awareness of my addiction and inability to stop eating it every time I ate some. I had no idea how I was ever going to give it up or have the self control to stop, but I didnt focus on that. I just kept eating it but not without doing some serious thinking while doing so! Id sit and think about it first for a few minutes before making a bowl of it, and Id think about how bad I wanted it, and how Id feel if I ate it, and how Id feel afterwards. I totally immersed myself in analyzing every thought and emotion. Then Id make a bowl and focus intently on how it tastes and how I just want it all the time for breakfast kunch and dinner! I didnt try to stop myself from eating it, I just gave it my full attention every time I ate it. I didnt realize I was actually taking a habit and making it fully conscious. After doing this several times I started to notice feling like I could choose to not eat it if I wanted to. Sometimes I still ate it, and sometimes I didnt. Eventually I quit even thinking about eating it and just chose other foods instead. That was over a year ago! I didnt even try to stop! It just happened. It wasnt until seeing this video that I realized what I actually did and how I did it. I thought it was just a coincicence.

  • @geraltofnivea1434
    @geraltofnivea1434 Жыл бұрын

    I get the thinking before doing the behaviour. But if we look at video game addiction: the whole point of the video game is to be distracted from your thoughts and emotions in the first place. The moment you engage with the game, the awareness disappears. But yes, I've had moments where my underlying emotion is so intense that it slips through the emersion of the game and your enjoyment of the game is completely gone. A great example is in older games where the loading screen was pitch black and you could see your own reflection in the screen, and you get reminded how shitty your life is. Than the bright pixels reappear and your problems are gone again :).

  • @russellwilliams5065
    @russellwilliams5065 Жыл бұрын

    I’m a martial arts instructor for kids and I have been trying to talk a lot about habit forming. And hearing you talk about how bad habits are formed is spot on. Is there a way to rewire it to develop “good habits”? A lot if my students are exhausted from schoolwork and give into that exhaustion and just go through the motions. I don’t want to use the word lazy because it’s not intentional. Would love to get you 2 cents on how to use this to help them.

  • @dobelEXP

    @dobelEXP

    Жыл бұрын

    I would talk about energy as a energy bar from a video game. School can drain all of it if you let it. The more you let somthing excite you or annoy you the more you give in to it and let it drain you. It's not about resistance but more of being effective with your emotions and dealing with problems as they arise, tomarrows problems are for tomarrows stresses but 8f you deel with it day by day it won't take you down all at once. As a professional procrastinator this is my suggestion.

  • @timoacker7538
    @timoacker7538 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I do want to add something through a personal story: I used to have an addiction and I really wanted to break free. I raised my awareness a lot, to the point that I got a panic attack while engaging in the addicting behavior. I was so aware of what I was doing that it really freaked me out that I was still engaging in the behavior. That panic attack has given me some trauma and my anxiety spikes every time I am somehow confronted with the topic of my addiction. In the end, I broke free from the addiction, but it came at a cost to my mental health in other ways. Through therapy, I have been able to work through that trauma, but I still get queezy when confronted with the addiction, even if someone else is engaging in the behavior.

  • @gg-de6zi
    @gg-de6zi Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this Dr K!

  • @ModestNarcissus
    @ModestNarcissus Жыл бұрын

    Great video Dr. K! I'm getting my finances in order and I've been writing down ever single purchase I make. It's made me very aware of how I spend my money and I've managed to reduce a lot of my impulse spending that I otherwise struggled with in the past. It was almost effortless!!

  • @jdcaintic9526
    @jdcaintic9526 Жыл бұрын

    I use my frontal lobe to watch this.

  • @tfs_futures
    @tfs_futures8 күн бұрын

    Nice explanation. I was told years ago to practice mindfulness but no one broke it down like this so I never started.

  • @rafaels3477
    @rafaels34775 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I am dealing with addictions for many years and have read and heard a lot of ways to cope with that but your methodology is actually new and promissing!

  • @myschka9178
    @myschka9178 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting stuff, this reminds me of how i started eating better. I noticed that processed food was making me feel gross and associating it with that feeling made me not want it as much.

  • @Spades20XX
    @Spades20XX Жыл бұрын

    I notice a lot of mental problems we have can mostly be *solved* by literally being aware / noticing it, and being fully present with ourselves in those dark moments and searching for clarity and understanding. As we understand things, they make more sense. As they make sense, it occurs less or we sidestep em, or they don't matter anymore because we know it inside out. Definitely isn't a catch all and there is definitely nuance that needs to be understood-- but my god you can get so far with just being more present in areas of your life you weren't earlier.

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    What if your problem is adhd and being too aware and noticing everything to the point of sensory overload?

  • @Spades20XX

    @Spades20XX

    Жыл бұрын

    @@punkroxgirl BRO STOP 😳

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Spades20XX I don’t know how. I’ve been searching for clarity and understanding for a long time. Ever since I could talk, I asked “why?” but now I’m 49 and and I still don’t know shit. I only realized that’s there’s even more that I don’t understand. I thought I would have the answers by now, but I really don’t have any. Just more questions. I’m starting to think Camus was right and it’s all just absurd. . I agree with you on one level, because awareness is a first step, but I don’t think it can solve anything by itself. I understand trauma and ptsd, and what happens in the body and mind, and the fight or flight response, but I still can’t make it stop. It makes sense why I’m hyper-vigilant, but it doesn’t fix it.

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Spades20XX separate question…has bro now become like the new gender neutral expression kinda like “dude” was in the 90’s? 😂🤣

  • @Joe-hp1yb
    @Joe-hp1yb Жыл бұрын

    Dude I love you. Your videos are always perfectly timed. Thanks to Dr. K and everyone else who helps with this content.

  • @hosseinnasiri232
    @hosseinnasiri23210 ай бұрын

    Great stuff as always! thanks you dr. K

  • @thelegendofme7520
    @thelegendofme7520 Жыл бұрын

    This actually backfired on me hard, while it works on bad habits it also works on good habits. It would now take active effort to do things like wash my hands after I go to the bathroom or fasten my seatbelt when I got into a car.. wtf do I do?

  • @thelegendofme7520

    @thelegendofme7520

    Жыл бұрын

    Also, what about the habit of hitting snooze when you wake up? Since you’re literally unconscious when sleeping how do you.. consciously indulge in that habit??

  • @ataarono

    @ataarono

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thelegendofme7520 I put my phone in a hard to reach place that forces me to focus just to turn it off. also there is some apps that ask you simple quiz to turn the alarm off

  • @jenny_jaguar
    @jenny_jaguar Жыл бұрын

    This was great! Thank you so much! Would you be able to make a video about developing new good habits too? I've wanted to begin a strong exercise habit, along with things like cold showers, and meal prep, but it's such a willpower struggle.

  • @thatsagoodquestion5889

    @thatsagoodquestion5889

    Жыл бұрын

    My personal advice would be to start light with the exercise routine. It can be just 5 minutes or even 1 minute, just 5 squats per day and that's all (before you slowly increase their difficulty, variety and size). Also maybe note on a piece of paper or on your phone at which time you start your exercise sessions, cause if you simply say "I'll do it today" it'll be too easy to simply put back to tomorrow, but if you say "I'll do it at X p.m/a.m, and put an alarm, then you'll be more inclined to do it. As for cold showers, I used something along the lines of what dr K. said, simply be hyper aware of it. For example what I did was, before showering, I asked to myself if I wanted to take a cold shower, and then I either said yes or no (even though most of the time I said yes) and then took a cold shower (gradually more cold after each shower, not directly frozen, had to get used to it). I also (most of the time) took them after exercise sessions, so that it was easier to enjoy (especially in summer). Now I don't take cold showers everytime but very often, and I don't have to prep myself before doing it (even though i like to do it from time to time) and it has become enjoyable. Hope it helps :)

  • @fawazahmed4978

    @fawazahmed4978

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thatsagoodquestion5889hey, using this method i managed to meditate everyday for 2 months in a row, started out at 2 mins and slowly went up now doing 15. yet after 2 months of daily practice ive suddenly broke routine and have gaps - any suggestions or tips? if anyone has general advice on long term sustainability of habits thatd be great, thanks!

  • @thatsagoodquestion5889

    @thatsagoodquestion5889

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fawazahmed4978 well i've never done meditation but i'd say if you already were able to do it two months in a row, then it's okay if you stopped a little (be there a reason to it or not). It also happened to me (like 3-4 times) to stop doing my daily exercises (not for just a day bur weeks, sometimes even more than one month). I always had a reason, good or bad (either too much work and couldn't focus on that or simply a change of schedule [like beginning of vacations] and suddenly i did not want to do that. Know that you already ingrained the routine in your mind, it's a part of your routine (even though you've temporarily stopped). I'd say simply restart like in the beginning (when you wake up someday tell yourself today's the day you meditate, and do it only 2 minutes) and then gradually come back to your level from before (or stop below if that was the reason you stopped). Just don't forget the first times to really force yourself and tell yourself that today, x hour, you do it. Until that becomes once again part of your routine. You didn't give up, you simply stumbled. It's okay to stumble, you can just get back on your feet :)

  • @fawazahmed4978

    @fawazahmed4978

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thatsagoodquestion5889 hey i appreciate that man, have a great day!

  • @thatsagoodquestion5889

    @thatsagoodquestion5889

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fawazahmed4978 thanks, you too ! And I hope you can start meditation again !

  • @Foggeer-von-Dreitveld
    @Foggeer-von-Dreitveld Жыл бұрын

    Nice video. Very insightful. I will try this awareness thing.

  • @Kero7th
    @Kero7th Жыл бұрын

    Soooo glad I found this channel. Thank you!

  • @Zackarius
    @Zackarius Жыл бұрын

    I love you dude. Respect

  • @upsidedownbagofflour697
    @upsidedownbagofflour697 Жыл бұрын

    The crux of this alternative approach is to rather than resist the habitual act, cultivate awareness while doing it. Much of the appeal is that this should be much easier initially than resisting, but what if a big part of the habitual act is for it to command your thoughts and awareness? Even the video games and social media examples he gave are things that suck you in until all you're thinking about is the content you're engaged in. In these cases, I think this approach will still involve a difficult wrestle for control, but hopefully a more manageable and effective one than outright resisting then giving in and giving up.

  • @alexislapuz687
    @alexislapuz68711 ай бұрын

    I realize this awareness method is how children are taught to break bad habits too. I remember my dad reminding me when I to keep my room organized. More than discipline, he was helping me be more conscientious of what was going on around me ,so I can personally develop to implement organization habits in life without his guide. The same principle is the reason we utilize sticky notes in areas we can see them & ask people to keep us accountable. Sometimes its mentally about "out of sight out of mind" like we have a blind spot on our shortcomings and need tools to move towards the goal of becoming better. Whether that's doing some preliminary stuff, like using a planner, weekly pill box, meal prepping, kitchen timer or a weekly checking w/ your buddy to see if you did that thing you said you would. Awareness has the connotation to feel scary, overwhelming, confusing associated with meditation. But Dr. K really simplifies it to a daily practice of just questioning to yourself before taking that behavior thats not helpful or healthy or unwanted. (It's similar to being proactive but that's the next step: preparing and planning , like once youre aware and recognize what your bad habit is you can change it) Then it becomes being mindful to: do I want to do this? Is doing this important? We use consciousness or carefulness: doing a job that requires attention to detail, journaling, drawing, having a difficult conversation for the purpose of informing or expressing the right message to someone. Cultivating awareness is hard work but it's worth it to get to accomplish better habits and complete our goals

  • @scramblebluejay1559
    @scramblebluejay1559 Жыл бұрын

    This is one of the best videos I've ever seen on the internet. Fascinating, informative and instantly applicable! Thanks Dr. K

  • @Godnando00
    @Godnando00 Жыл бұрын

    AYO MR K, I think I said it before but you really helped me getting out of a hole I've dug myself. I think it's over three months since and my results are showing. I broke lots of bad habits (and while I still fall short at times I do it less often), made new ones, and all in all started living. I believe there's so much room for improvement but I know I'll get there given time. so I just wanted to thank you once more

  • @omri9982
    @omri9982 Жыл бұрын

    Great video Dr. K, we appreciate you and your advice!

  • @carlvictor
    @carlvictor Жыл бұрын

    Dr. K, your background is perfect for what you're currently doing. Keep it up and thank you!

  • @thinthle
    @thinthle Жыл бұрын

    What if you're too aware ? (aka neuro divergent) nothing can be automatic every extra action costs a lot of mental energy cause I'm already sensory overloaded/overwhelmed by the simplest things as they stack onto each other. So hyper ware of/ sensitive to light, sound, pain, temperature, surroundings, movement every waking moment then couple that with overthinking.

  • @callistopa920

    @callistopa920

    Жыл бұрын

    I have the same question. I’ve been severely anxious for several months and I feel a “dead hyper awareness” of everything.

  • @punkroxgirl

    @punkroxgirl

    Жыл бұрын

    I have adhd and the same issue. I’ve seen a few comments now ask this question better than I did. I really hope we get a response

  • @matt2fit
    @matt2fit Жыл бұрын

    So what happens when someone with binge eating issues follows your advice and buys 3 bags of potato chips and awarely eats all 3? Also, are monks in an environment where they CAN play video games for 8 hours a day, is a door dash order away from McDonalds, exposed to ads designed to make people crave the food they're seeing, etc. being mindful is important, but it's only part of the equation

  • @ilona3630

    @ilona3630

    11 ай бұрын

    But have you actually tried that? I have a problem with binge eating and to me it would be incredibly hard to consume 3 bags of potato chips (or any other food I'm addicted to) with real full awareness. I would either give up and turn into my usual mindless auto-mode until I finish all of the bags plus everything edible in my house, or get sick and bored of eating them mindfully after like 1/3 of a bag. The problem is that most of the time I give up after a few seconds or even forget to be mindful at all, but I do see some progress and it helps me a lot (when I actually try and put some effort). It's definitely not something that would fix you overnight but I can't imagine still craving chips after eating them with full mindfulness day after day, at some point the cycle of habit has to break

  • @rasmusturkka480

    @rasmusturkka480

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ilona3630I'm a man of science with a PhD in Professoring for over 25 years. I do not believe any of this nonsense before it has been backed up by scientific evidence with N >> 10^6 and a 1000-page textbook detailing the analysis how this "awareness" will kill all bad habits for 100% of people in any circumstances. I'm only interested in arguments and debates, not change or results.

  • @karna6634

    @karna6634

    3 ай бұрын

    problem is i cant eat that many with full awareness . i just autopilot it ,to me binge eating is a relief not a hard time being aware of my problems thats comes with it . sure if im aware i might have less appetite cuz its not doing its job anymore ...

  • @headlessfool7050
    @headlessfool7050 Жыл бұрын

    SO very thankfull for this ! 🙏

  • @romanbauerr
    @romanbauerr4 ай бұрын

    It's actually make sense, this is exactly how i quit playing video games, i stopped fighting it, and started to observe behavior, and after some time i quited with ease. Good advice.

  • @BadPaddy
    @BadPaddy Жыл бұрын

    I don't have that many bad habits but I'll definitely try this out!

  • @dannychen6739
    @dannychen6739 Жыл бұрын

    I didn’t realize it until i watched this video, but I have been applying the philosophy of breaking bad habits for a while now and I have completely quit nicotine and gaming. Thanks for putting it into a coherent idea.

  • @xselenatorxx
    @xselenatorxx Жыл бұрын

    I've been consuming a lot of content like this lately through youtube and tik tok. And I've started feeling a bit more content with myself and life. I feel like what helps most is rebuilding your brain to be more forgiving and confident in your abilities. Even if I don't do a great job, most times it works out in the end. And I don't fail. I fail to do the work up to my standards but people still think it's enough. What I haven't figured out yet is what I want in life and what my passion is. I've been putting off your exercise for finding this out and I'm planning to do it in 2 weeks. I truly hope it would work because I've never known what I want or I just don't remember. And I believe that if I knew, I would be way more content with my life despite the challenges.

  • @ChrisMartinez-wr7cy
    @ChrisMartinez-wr7cyАй бұрын

    This was fantastic, thank you!

  • @SimGunther
    @SimGunther Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for bringing awareness to hyper awareness ❤

  • @malfurio
    @malfurio Жыл бұрын

    Mann i hope Dr.K won't get kidnapped by the monks after he revealed their most secret trick to us.

  • @AadhilRizwan

    @AadhilRizwan

    Жыл бұрын

    Then we send Hitman to save him from their monastery

  • @mashedtomatoes1180
    @mashedtomatoes11806 ай бұрын

    I love that this guys videos are almost structured like a paid course on how to improve your life except its all free. These videos have improved my life so much

  • @KeshArt
    @KeshArt Жыл бұрын

    This was brilliant. So to summarise for myself. Go further in with awareness to get out. Doesn’t mean indulge. But act with awareness. Be aware. Got it. Thanks doc

  • @endo4137
    @endo4137 Жыл бұрын

    Dr.K made me so aware of my bad habits that I stopped watching the video 😂 Jokes aside, this really helps. Thx dr. K

  • @Rude_i_Wredne
    @Rude_i_Wredne Жыл бұрын

    Okay, so monks increase the size of their straw. Got it.

  • @nikolanedeljkovic5916
    @nikolanedeljkovic5916 Жыл бұрын

    Never would have thought about it like that! Excellent video

  • @hugoruix_yt995
    @hugoruix_yt995 Жыл бұрын

    This was really eye opening ngl. Ty again!

  • @limetime1085
    @limetime1085 Жыл бұрын

    He was a monk?! That's quite 😎

  • @endo4137

    @endo4137

    Жыл бұрын

    He wasn't a monk, he was training to become one

  • @alexiakawa5040
    @alexiakawa5040 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Doctor K! I'm addicted to social media, I hate it it's so boring but I need something to rest my brain with so I keep going back. What can I do?

  • @dallecavernedirabat.
    @dallecavernedirabat.20 күн бұрын

    It seems like the reverse process of stuttering to me. Stuttering usually happens because there is interference between our "conscious" and unconscious processes, we try to control the movements of the tongue and mouth to speak better, but what happens is that we interfere with that part of us that it makes the sounds "speak" and articulate automatically, in fact almost no one pays attention to it while he speaks, because we have been speaking our whole lives, so it comes naturally to us. But when you pay too much attention, you start to jam that mechanism. In fact you never stop talking, you simply polluted it with too much awareness. The mechanism mr k talks about seems identical to me, but used for good purposes. You don't stop to do an habit, you just "pollut" it with awareness. Amazing.

  • @2ndpartycrasher954
    @2ndpartycrasher9543 ай бұрын

    Wait a min. I have been doing this already unknowingly! So I've been taking your advice of maximizing my joy, and using it to make the most out of every junk food i eat. I figured since I'm on a diet and i want this food and can't have much of it, I'll eat a controlled amount but with lots of joy and presence to maximize the joy. What i have found is that lately i don't find it difficult to resist the junk food and i think that's because of awareness! As i enjoy and savour the junk food, i have also been aware of it and unintentionally strengthened my connection and thus that's why it's so easy now! I'm consistently losing weight now and it's much easier to not overeat.

  • @darkcreatureinadarkroom1617
    @darkcreatureinadarkroom1617 Жыл бұрын

    Interestingly I've been in some way already doing this with my habit of snoozing my morning alarms, by putting the alarm clock (well my tablet actually) a little far from my bed so I can't just hit the buttons sleepily, but I'll be sure to add extra awareness to that. But what do you do about a habit that has a very low activation cost, like chewing your nails? Because alcohol, or your phone, you need to fetch it or grab it, it gives you a few moments in which you can realize what you are doing; but your hands are right there! The moment you notice the chewing is pretty much when it's already over! Do I have to wear gloves at all times? (might help curb my phone addiction though, and it's a good opportunity to apply some hand cream 😂)

  • @jasondeng7677
    @jasondeng7677 Жыл бұрын

    Can you also build good habits by being mindful of a good action? Would it increase your capability to use willpower to do that action?

  • @ccloudleaf
    @ccloudleaf Жыл бұрын

    Great video Dr. I'm gonna do this for July!

  • @lucancristian8589
    @lucancristian8589 Жыл бұрын

    Does this work for pmo as well?I m kinda scared to try because i heard that quiting cold turkey is the best solution and i m 9 days in,but urges still kinda annoying.

  • @JustaRainbows

    @JustaRainbows

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m 17 days in pmo free and I would say don’t do it stay busy something like that doesn’t work for severe addictions. Especially you definitely don’t want to be in a position of being powerless till you cave in stay strong you can do this.

  • @lucancristian8589

    @lucancristian8589

    Жыл бұрын

    Ok thank you

  • @pencilcheck
    @pencilcheck Жыл бұрын

    A hot take: monks develop meditation habits to develop and remove other habits. We see a lot of monks used pain and a supervisor and isolation themselves from all temptations (high up in mountains) to stop habits. I think using monk as an example isn’t that convincing to me

  • @luciazahrte
    @luciazahrte2 ай бұрын

    Great video, thank you for your work!

  • @29mathclass
    @29mathclass Жыл бұрын

    I needed this video. Thanks

  • @tomagee420
    @tomagee420 Жыл бұрын

    It’s great to see videos like this