The Power of Habits: Why Routines Run the Show, and What to Do About It

People shape their days around habits, often without noticing. Habits make life easier but can trap people in cycles they’d rather not repeat. The science behind these patterns shows that old advice to just “try harder” is mostly noise. Building good habits and breaking bad ones takes patience, not willpower alone. Here’s why, what’s at stake, and what’s actually proven to work.

Habits Are How the Brain Saves Energy
A habit is any behaviour done automatically, usually triggered by a cue, an emotional state, a place, a time of day, or something else. The action is fast and feels effortless. Brushing teeth, checking a phone after hearing a buzz, or slouching after work are all habits. Scientists say habits exist because the brain is trying to save effort. By turning repeated actions into automatic routines, people stop wasting energy on small decisions. This automation lets people focus elsewhere.

If habits are just brain shortcuts, why do some get stuck with routines that harm? That’s the catch: Automation works for useful behaviours, like fastening seatbelts, but also locks in snacking, nail-biting, doom-scrolling, and arguments. The brain doesn’t judge which habit is good or bad. If something brings a sense of reward after a cue, the pattern forms. The design isn’t moral, it’s mechanical.

Some worry this means they have no control. But while habits are automatic, they’re not destiny. People can reshape them with the right approaches, though it rarely happens overnight.

The Three-Part Structure of Every Habit
Every habit follows the same core loop: cue, routine, reward. This loop explains both positive and negative routines.

  • Cue: A trigger, internal or external. For example, a feeling of boredom, the smell of coffee, or getting into a car.
  • Routine: The actual action; pouring coffee, checking emails, lighting a cigarette.
  • Reward: Some payoff for the brain, which could be relief, a surge of pleasure, or just a feeling of “job done.” Rewards cement the habit loop, making the brain more likely to repeat the process next time.

Most don’t notice this loop at work. Routines often start with intention, maybe to avoid stress or just relax. Repetition ties the loop more tightly, making the action slip into autopilot. Once that happens, people aren’t making choices; the sequence just fires.

Assuming anyone can “just snap out of it” ignores what makes habits tick. Conscious choice fades while automatic responses take over. That’s why change is tough.

Good Habits: The Upside (and Limits) of Routine
When habits reinforce healthy actions like exercising, saving money, and calling friends, life gets easier. People don’t have to use up willpower every day for small things; the brain handles routines behind the scenes. Good habits clear time and attention for bigger decisions.

But even so-called positive habits have drawbacks. Relying too much on automatic actions may lead to boredom or a sense of living on autopilot. Sometimes, “good” habits like going to the gym every day become excessive or compulsive. Also, what counts as a good habit is partly context-driven. Working late might look productive, but it destroys sleep, for example. This complicates the idea that more habits are always better.

Bad Habits: Trapdoors for the Mind
Bad habits feel like prisons because they happen so easily, and resisting them uses up mental resources. They often start as reasonable responses: a cookie after a long day, scrolling through social media to unwind, but the problem is persistence. When the routine no longer serves a real need or actively harms, it’s hard to stop because the habit loop keeps firing.

Research shows bad habits often draw strength from emotional cues: stress, fatigue, loneliness. These patterns can reinforce themselves, making it harder to break out as time goes on. This means that blaming a lack of willpower misses the real issue; habits keep running whether people mean them to or not.

And the consequences can be serious. Overeating, procrastinating, smoking, and even repeated negative thinking have been linked to worse physical and mental health. Relationships strain, opportunities are lost, and self-esteem drops. Bad habits don’t just waste time; they can shape entire lives for the worse.

Challenging Common Assumptions: Is It All About Choice?
It’s common to hear that people just need to “decide” to change. But this view overestimates control. Once a habit forms, decision-making drops out, and the pattern repeats. People can’t outthink habits all the time.

Others believe that one needs strong motivation every single day to build habits. Motivation matters, but it fades. Habits that require constant attention are weak. The way out is to create routines that get easier over time, not harder. Relying on willpower alone burns people out. Designing the environment or shifting cues is more powerful than relying on inner resolve.

Some even claim that breaking bad habits is about “fighting the urge” until it goes away. This approach can backfire. Focusing on suppressing the action (and feeling guilty about failure) often reinforces the very behaviours people want to avoid. Awareness, curiosity, and replacing the habit work better.

What Actually Works to Build Good Habits
Building habits needs consistency and a bit of patience. Studies show it can take anywhere from 18 days to eight months to lock in a new pattern, with the average being around 66 days. The key is repeating the behaviour enough times in the same context until it happens almost automatically.

Instead of big resolutions, small changes work best at first. Trying to become a marathon runner overnight leads to failure; walking five minutes a day is within reach and easier to repeat. Repetition, not intensity, is what matters.

Setting clear cues helps. If the plan is to read more, tie it to a fixed time or place, like reading before bed or during coffee breaks. Preparing beforehand, like putting a book on the pillow, makes the routine harder to miss.

Rewards also matter, even small ones. Feeling proud of sticking to a new practice helps lock it in. Sometimes, the reward is built into the activity (like feeling energised after a walk). But recognising and celebrating progress, no matter how minor, builds resilience.

And, don’t panic about missing a day or two. Habits don’t crumble instantly. It’s consistency over the long stretch that counts. Adjust when mistakes happen, don’t abandon the whole routine.

How to Break Bad Habits (Without Self-Torture)
Breaking bad habits takes more than willpower. The first step is to identify the cues that set off the unwanted pattern. It could be boredom, stress, a certain location or group, or something as simple as the time of day. Writing down when, where, and why the routine happens brings awareness to an automatic process.

Next, change the environment to make the old routine harder. Some call this “adding friction.” For example, if late-night snacking is the problem, move snacks out of easy reach or keep healthier options visible. If the habit is doom-scrolling, put the phone in another room after 9 p.m.

Trying to stop a behaviour outright rarely works. Instead, focus on replacing the old routine with a new one that brings a similar reward. For instance, go for a quick walk instead of lighting up a cigarette, or keep your hands busy with a stress ball if nail-biting is the problem.

Some find mindfulness helpful because it teaches people to notice urges without reacting to them. The point isn’t to judge but to observe what happens in the mind and body when the urge strikes. Over time, this makes the pattern weaker.

Social support can also help. Telling someone about the intention to change increases accountability. Some even find joining a group or buddy system effective.

Don’t expect to be perfect. Slip-ups are part of the process. When they happen, notice the pattern, adjust, and return to the plan. Shaming or harsh self-talk keeps the bad habit alive.

Are There Habits That Can’t Change?
Some believe certain habits are “hardwired” and can never change. For example, habitual anger outbursts or lifelong addictions. But science says the brain can create new routines when given the right support and enough time. Even deeply ingrained cycles can shift, though the process may take longer and require other forms of help, like therapy, medical support, or community structures. Nothing is fully fixed.

But it’s equally fair to point out that some habits never go away completely; they just lie dormant. Situations or feelings might bring them back. A big life event can spark the urge to return to old patterns years later. This isn’t proof of failure; it’s just how habit wiring works. Awareness and maintenance are lifelong jobs. There’s no single finish line.

Questioning the “All-or-Nothing” Trap
Many believe that one slip-up destroys the whole effort to change a habit. This “all-or-nothing” thinking wrecks progress and confidence. Research says the truth is less dramatic. Skipping exercise once or having a bad day doesn’t erase weeks of effort. Patterns stick over time, not in a single day.

In fact, seeing setbacks as learning experiences makes people more likely to succeed long term. The goal is steady improvement, not perfection.

When Good Habits Turn Bad
Some routines begin as helpful but turn harmful because of context or excess. For example, dieting can lead to disordered eating, or exercise can become an obsession. Habits aren’t just about the behaviours themselves, but about the relationships people have with those patterns. Too much focus on “maximum productivity” or “constant optimisation” can make habits a new source of stress rather than relief.

Not every routine is worth keeping. And reflecting, sometimes critically, on why any pattern continues is necessary.

Alternative Perspectives: Do Habits Matter As Much As We Think?
Pop culture often suggests that every outcome in life comes down to daily habits. This is comforting but might be too simplistic. Life circumstances, random events, and bigger social factors shape behaviours. Personal discipline does matter, but it isn’t the whole story. Blaming failure or success only on habits ignores the fact that people operate in specific contexts: jobs, communities, health, and economic systems.

Some critics say the focus on habits shifts responsibility away from fixing social problems to the individual. If someone can’t exercise because the streets aren’t safe, “motivation” won’t solve anything.

That said, changing habits is still worth doing. But human lives are more than self-control marathons.

Final Thoughts
Habits run a lot of daily life, free up mental effort, and can be shaped one small step at a time. Good habits make things easier, but bad ones stick too because that’s what the brain is wired to do. Changing routines isn’t about sudden motivation, endless struggle, or shame. It’s about experimenting, making small shifts, and giving routines time to settle.

Don’t expect changing habits to be easy. Don’t assume failure means defeat. And always question whether a habit, once formed, still fits the life wanted.

2026 Week 13 Update

If March has been about action, this week’s verse from the Bhagavad Gita is about what happens after action. We move. We try. We commit. And then comes the waiting, the outcome. This is where most of our unrest lives. Krishna’s instruction is deceptively simple: act, but remain steady in success and failure. Not indifferent. Not careless. Steady. Because the moment your emotional balance depends entirely on results, your courage becomes fragile. You work harder not out of purpose, but out of fear. You celebrate too loudly or collapse too quickly. Equanimity is not numbness. It is perspective. You give your full effort. You refine your skill. You align with the principle. But you refuse to let outcomes dictate your worth. A reminder that effort is mine; outcomes are not.

This was a very hectic week, with back-to-back meetings, both physical and online and being rostered for an event. But even with all this back-and-forth, I managed to check all the boxes in my weekly to-do list, and I am really satisfied with how productive I was this week. I wish this were the case each week! One can only hope and wish for that to happen each week!

World-renowned primatologist, anthropologist, and environmental activist best known for her groundbreaking research on chimpanzees in Tanzania, Jane Goodall is the author of this week’s quote. Through her work, Goodall transformed our understanding of animal behaviour and the connection between humans and the natural world. Beyond science, Goodall is a global advocate for conservation, sustainability, and compassion, inspiring individuals to believe that their actions, however small, can create meaningful change.

This quote is both empowering and quietly demanding. It reminds us that our actions, no matter how small they may seem, are never insignificant. Every choice we make, how we treat others, what we prioritise, and what we ignore shapes the world around us in some way. The first part of the quote is reassuring; it challenges the common belief that individual actions don’t matter in the face of large, complex problems. Whether it’s kindness in a conversation, responsibility in our work, or awareness in how we live, our actions ripple outward. Influence doesn’t always look dramatic; often, it’s subtle and cumulative.

The second part is where the responsibility comes in. This shifts the focus from passive existence to conscious living. It asks us to be intentional. Are we contributing positively? Are we creating value, compassion, and understanding? Or are we adding to noise, negativity, or indifference? There’s also an underlying call to ownership. We don’t get to opt out of impact. Even inaction is a form of action. So the real question is not whether we matter, but how we choose to matter. This awareness can be grounding. It simplifies life in a way: you don’t have to change everything, just be thoughtful about what you are shaping.

In today’s motivation, the love you give always comes back to you. The efforts you make always bring results, often in ways you could never have imagined. Life doesn’t just take from you; it also gives. When something leaves, something else arrives. And what comes next is often far greater than anything you’ve experienced before. There is always more unfolding beyond what we can see in this moment. In the silence, in the uncertainty, there is an opportunity to practice patience, to surrender, and to show up in a way that aligns more deeply with your higher self. Do not give in to fear, even when the path ahead isn’t clear. Trust the rhythm of life. What you’ve sown is already taking root.

And that’s all I have for you this week. Keep smiling and stay happy!

In My Hands Today…

Revolutionaries: The Other Story of How India Won Its Freedom – Sanjeev Sanyal

The official narrative of India’s freedom struggle has almost entirely been about the non-violent political movement led by Mahatma Gandhi and the Indian National Congress. However, it is Sanjeev Sanyal’s contention that there was a continuous parallel armed struggle against British colonial rulers that can be traced to the very beginning of colonial occupation. It abated for a while after the First War of Indian Independence in 1857, but re-emerged from the beginning of the twentieth century.

It is not that people are unaware of Rashbehari Bose, Chandrashekhar Azad, Bhagat Singh, Sachindra Nath Sanyal and Subhas Chandra Bose, but the impression one gets from reading historical accounts is that theirs were individual acts of courage that did not have an impact on the larger Independence movement. However, this is not the entire picture, as the revolutionary struggle operated through a conscious network that sustained armed resistance against the British for over half a century. They had well-developed institutions, thinkers and wide popular support. Indeed, as Subhas Bose demonstrated, they were capable of defeating popular candidates in the Congress’s internal elections.

In Revolutionaries, Sanyal examines India’s freedom struggle from the revolutionary perspective, how the baton was passed from one generation to the next, and, ultimately, why the British were forced to leave India. The book presents an exciting story that interweaves intrigue, high drama, assassination, global espionage and treachery with the courage and heroism of the revolutionaries.

Sacred Stones, Spaces, and Stories: Jyotirlingas Part 12 – Rameshwaram Temple

Situated on Pamban Island near the southern tip of Tamil Nadu, the Rameshwaram Temple, also known as Ramanathaswamy Temple, is one of the twelve sacred Jyotirlingas dedicated to Lord Shiva. Surrounded by the blue waters of the Indian Ocean and linked to the mainland by the historic Pamban Bridge, this temple is not only a magnificent example of Dravidian architecture but also a pivotal spiritual landmark. As the site where Lord Rama installed the Shiva lingam to seek absolution before his battle against Ravana, Rameshwaram holds profound significance in the Hindu worldview for purification, liberation, and divine grace. Pilgrims believe that worshipping at this temple grants moksha, or spiritual salvation, making it an essential stop on sacred journeys like the Char Dham circuit.

Rameshwaram’s spiritual essence is steeped in poignant legends, connecting Ramayana’s epic narrative to cosmic faith. According to the Ramayana and Shiva Purana, on his way to Lanka to rescue Sita and defeat Ravana, Lord Rama realised that he must first seek Lord Shiva’s blessings to offset the sin of killing a Brahmin (Ravana being a Brahmin by birth). He instructed his devoted servant Hanuman to bring a Shiva lingam from Kailash (Shiva’s abode in the Himalayas). As Hanuman took longer to return, Sita, Rama’s wife, crafted a lingam out of sand from the seashore, which Rama worshipped with deep devotion. This sand lingam, believed to be the first Shiva lingam at the site, remains enshrined within the temple’s sanctum. Eventually, Hanuman returned with the Vishwalingam, which was installed as a secondary and equally sacred lingam. Devotees honour both, acknowledging the depth of faith and urgency in Rama’s worship. The legend narrates that Shiva appeared before Rama, granted victory over Ravana, and agreed to reside eternally at Rameshwaram to offer salvation and forgiveness to all who came seeking refuge. This divine promise makes Rameshwaram a spiritual gateway, connecting earthly endeavours to cosmic liberation.

Another vital legend is the construction of the Ramsetu, the floating bridge built by Rama’s army of vanaras (monkeys) to cross the sea to Lanka. The site of Rameshwaram marks one end of this mythic bridge; geological and archaeological explorations have sought to locate remnants, further enriching the temple’s connection to divine intervention and epic history.

Rameshwaram’s history blends legendary origins with centuries of recorded devotion. The earliest textual references appear in the Tevaram hymns by Tamil Shaiva saints Appar, Sambandar, and Sundarar during the 7th–8th centuries, testifying to the temple’s antiquity and sacred standing. The present temple’s grandeur largely stems from the Chola dynasty, particularly during the 12th and 13th centuries, when the temple was expanded with monumental corridors, vast halls, and shrines. Subsequent rulers, from the Pandyas to the Vijayanagara Empire, further patronised the site, enriching its architecture and rituals.

Despite threats from natural calamities and political challenges, including the devastating 1964 cyclone that destroyed parts of the nearby town of Dhanushkodi, the temple has remained a vibrant centre of worship and culture, undergoing restorations and expansions into the modern era.

Rameshwaram Temple is famed for its architectural magnificence, particularly its long corridors and ornate detailing. The temple occupies over 15 acres, featuring the longest temple corridors in India, approximately 1,212 meters in length, supported by over 1,200 intricately carved pillars. The main sanctum houses the Shiva lingam with ornate silver and gold adornments. Massive gopurams, or tower gateways, rise prominently, decorated with carvings of deities, mythic scenes, and floral patterns. The use of granite with precise masonry reflects advanced engineering and devotion to durability. The temple complex encompasses 22 sacred water bodies, or theerthams, believed to possess purifying properties, allowing devotees to cleanse their sins before worshipping. Sculpted reliefs narrate stories from the Ramayana and the Shiva legends. The temple houses separate shrines for Vishnu, Parvati, and other deities, contributing to a rich theological tapestry.

Rameshwaram’s ritual calendar combines intense daily worship with grand festival celebrations. These include multiple abhishekams, or ritual baths, for the lingam with groundwater and holy water; devotional music; chants; lamp rituals throughout the day; and the offering of bilva leaves, coconuts, and camphor during prayers. Devotees often partake in ritual bathing in temple theerthams for purification. During Mahashivaratri, the temple hosts grand night-long prayers, vigils, cultural performances, and fasting, drawing thousands. Navaratri and Deepavali are celebrated with temple illuminations and special worship, and various local festivals incorporate folk music, dance, and community feasts. Local priests, artisans, and community groups actively participate in festival preparations and daily worship, preserving the temple’s sacred traditions.

Visiting Rameshwaram involves spiritual preparation, vibrant local culture, and natural beauty. The temple is well connected by road, rail, and nearby air links via Madurai Airport. Pilgrims often combine visits to Rameshwaram with nearby coastal attractions and Sri Lankan pilgrimage circuits. Numerous dharmshalas, hotels, and eateries provide services for pilgrims while local cuisine offers traditional South Indian vegetarian fare. The temple’s location on a small island surrounded by the ocean and river creates an atmosphere of transcendence and purification, while spiritual chants and ritual sounds echo through the corridors.

The temple has been a vital cultural force in Tamil Nadu and across India. It has been immortalised in Tamil Shaiva literature and folklore glorifying Rama and Shiva. Devotional compositions, classical music, and dance performances celebrate the temple and associated legends. Sculptural motifs from Rameshwaram influence temple art across South India and local crafts and religious iconography draw inspiration from the temple’s mythic themes. Rameshwaram is an iconic pilgrimage and cultural landmark, representing Tamil Nadu’s ancient spiritual heritage and India’s pan-Hindu ethos.

The temple is managed by state religious trusts, maintaining rituals, pilgrim facilities, and temple infrastructure. Tourism is vibrant, especially during festivals, with a wide range of comprehensive amenities for visitors. Ongoing conservation efforts maintain the structural and artistic integrity of the centuries-old temple, while environmentally sensitive initiatives protect the surrounding island ecosystem.

Rameshwaram Temple is more than a monument; it is a living tradition where myth, architecture, devotion, and culture fuse. From the sands of a humble lingam to the grandeur of a sprawling complex, it marks a transcendental journey toward divine grace and liberation. Within the sacred corridors, whispered prayers and ancient chants carry the hope of generations, underscoring the temple’s eternal role in India’s spiritual and cultural landscape.

In My Hands Today…

Ocean: Earth’s Last Wilderness – David Attenborough, Colin Butfield

Through personal stories, history and cutting-edge science, Ocean uncovers the mystery, the wonder and the frailty of the most unexplored habitat on our planet – and the one which shapes the land we live on, regulates our climate and creates the air we breathe. The book showcase the oceans’ remarkable resilience: they are the part of our world that can, and in some cases has, recovered the fastest, if we only give them the chance.

Drawing a course across David Attenborough’s own lifetime, Ocean takes readers on an adventure-laden voyage through eight unique ocean habitats, through countless intriguing species, and through the most astounding discoveries of the last 100 years, to a future vision of a fully restored marine world, even richer and more spectacular than we could possibly hope. Ocean reveals the past, present and potential future of our blue planet. It is a book almost a century in the making, but one that has never been more urgently needed.