

Why your willpower disappears + what to do when it does
What feels like running out of willpower is often your brain just switching modes.
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Why this mattersâŠ
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If you don't adjust with that shift, everything starts to feel like youâre pushing uphill.
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Youâll start telling yourself:
- âWhy canât I just focus?â
- âWhatâs wrong with me?â
Or worse yet...
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"I'm a failure because I don't have 100% self-control all the time."
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đ„Ž
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Hereâs whatâs actually going onâŠ
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Your brain has two modes; tunnel and open mode.
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In tunnel mode, it:
- Grabs one thing and shuts the rest of the world outÂ
- Is more goal driven, resistant to distractions and able to power through difficult tasksÂ
In open mode, it:
- Opens the door and lets new ideas wander inÂ
- Sees links between new informationÂ
- Is more flexibleÂ
Tunnel mode is for finishing.Â
Open mode is for exploring.Â
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Neither mode is âbetterâ.Â
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Theyâre just strategies your brain uses depending on what context it's in and what itâs trying to achieve.
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This also explains why you give in to temptation.
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Itâs not always that your willpower ran outâŠ
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Itâs that your brain shifted into open mode â and the door got left open.
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What to do nextâŠ
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The next time you're in tunnel mode but feel your willpower start weakeningâŠ
- Your attention slips and starts scanning for an exitÂ
- Your body starts fatiguing with your workoutÂ
- You feel your mind tire the more you focusÂ
⊠reframe the signal not as a sign you need to push harder but as a signal that your brain is changing mode.
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Then instead of gripping tighter, take your foot off the gas for a moment:
- Step away from your desk when writing feels heavy and take a short walkÂ
- When the push during a workout fades, donât quit - change the intensityÂ
- Instead of reading more, clean your roomÂ
Or: donât abandon the task, just adjust how youâre doing it.Â
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if you want to resist temptation, donât rely on willpower alone.
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Rely on being in the right mode when temptation shows up.
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In tunnel mode, distractions get filtered out.
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In open mode, they get explored.
(pause)
So protect your tunnel mode early:
- remove obvious triggers
- move rooms
- keep distractions out of reach
Because once youâve shifted into open modeâŠ
resisting gets a lot harder.
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But now you might be thinkingâŠ
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âOk, so letâs say Iâm sitting down trying to focus on something (tunnel mode) but I notice some resistance pulling me towards scrolling on my phone instead. Is that my brain wanting to shift gears or is it just a distraction?â
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AnswerâŠ
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There are two types of resistance.Â
- Doorway resistanceÂ
- Exit resistanceÂ
Doorway resistance is the urge for distraction you feel early on.Â
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The reason why it's called âdoorway resistanceâ is because if you surf the resistance for 5-10 minutes, itâll disappear and youâll get into or back into flow.
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Rule 1: If it gets easier, stay.
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Exit resistance is the unease you feel even after persisting - and this is your brain genuinely wanting to shift modes.Â
- Your focus is dropping despite effortÂ
- Youâre re-reading the same line
- Your energy feels flat, not sharp
- The urge isnât âthis is hardâ itâs âthis isnât working anymoreâ
Rule 2: If it gets worse, switch.
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Again:
- Step away from your desk, take a walk, call a friend, clean your room
- Let your brain shift into open mode.
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A cool question to ask...
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âAm I at the doorway⊠or am I actually done?â
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Stay for 10 more minutes.
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If resistance decreases: keep going.
If it gets worse: switch modes.
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...
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Thatâs the main takeaway I want you to have from this.
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So if that all makes sense, feel free to bounce.
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But if youâd like to go a few more minutes deeper, hereâs what follows:
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- The old idea of how willpower works
- The origins of the "tunnel vs open mode" idea Â
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Go DeeperâŠ
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1.) The old idea of how willpower works
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The idea that willpower is like some internal energy, worn out the more you use it, started in the mid to late 1990s.
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Psychologists call it; ego depletion.Â
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On the surface, it makes sense.
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After a long day of resisting temptation youâre more likely to crash on the sofa and binge the night away watching netflix and eating ice cream.
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Right?
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But the more psychologists tried to pin down ego depletion, the more it slipped through their fingers.
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It felt true, but it didnât hold up once the studies started investigating it.
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The bottom lineâŠ
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The old idea that willpower works like a muscle is being questioned.
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So if that idea doesnât hold up, we need a new way of thinking about itâŠ
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2.) The origins of the tunnel vs open mode idea
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This idea comes from the psychologist Bernhard Hommel.
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He termed it; metacontrol theory.
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Neither tunnel nor open mode is âbetterâ.
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Theyâre just modes your brain shifts into depending on the context, your goals and how you feel.
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Tunnel mode:
- Pushing through a workout or final hour of studyingÂ
Open mode:
- Chatting with friends or going on a stroll around the blockÂ
Evolutionarily, being able to shift into different modes made sense for our ancestors because hyper-focusing on one thing until exhaustion wouldâve been costly (a caveman needed to be aware of his surroundings in case... you know: đ ).
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Metacontrol theory also aligns with modern neurobiology; different dopamine patterns in your brain are linked to either focused or flexible thinking.
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In summaryâŠ
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You donât have a willpower problem.
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You have a mode mismatch.
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So my challenge to you this weekâŠ
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When you feel yourself slipping, ask:
- âAm I forcing tunnel mode⊠when my brain wants open mode?â
Then adjust the task - not your effort.
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tHURSDAY'S THERAPY
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