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E274: High Dopamine, Low Effort Behaviors and Making Sobriety Feel Less Hard
Episode 274

E274: High Dopamine, Low Effort Behaviors and Making Sobriety Feel Less Hard

Sober Powered: The Neuroscience of Being Sober

April 4, 202527m 28s

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Show Notes

Your brain is wired for quick hits of dopamine, or high-reward, low-effort habits that feel good in the moment but sabotage your long-term goals. Over time, this conditions your brain to expect rewards without effort, making real change feel harder than it actually is. In this episode, I’ll explain how these patterns destroy motivation, fuel inconsistent effort, and keep you stuck in the cycle of short bursts of change followed by slinking back to your old ways. You’ll learn how high dopamine, low effort behaviors impact the brain, how this makes us resistant to putting in effort, and 3 ways you may be making being sober feel more difficult for yourself than it needs to be- and how to shift that.


What to listen to next:

E265: Rewiring Your Reward System After Getting Sober

E263: Sugar Cravings After Quitting Drinking

E145: ADHD and Alcohol


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Disclaimer: all of the information described in this podcast is my interpretation of the research combined with my opinion. This is not medical advice.



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