Habits change the brain through myelination — repeated thoughts and behaviors cause the brain to lay down myelin over neural pathways, making them stronger and more automatic

Every time you repeat a thought or behavior, your brain lays down myelin — a substance that acts like pavement over a neural pathway — making that route faster and more automatic. This is the biological mechanism behind why habits become difficult to change once formed.

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Every time you repeat a thought or behavior, your brain lays down myelin — a substance that acts like pavement over a neural pathway — making that route faster and more automatic. This is the biological mechanism behind why habits become difficult to change once formed.

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    Myelination: How Habits Rewire the Brain

    Habits change your brain through a process called myelination, where repeated thoughts and behaviors cause the brain to lay down myelin like pavement over neural pathways, making those connections stronger and more automatic.