How to Get Motivated: #1 Dopamine Expert’s Protocol to Build Willpower & Get Things Done
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Top Comments (10)
What do I do if I'm addicted to Mel's podcast? 😅
Motivation is harder to access when your brain is flooded with easier, faster dopamine options. That’s not weakness, it’s conditioning. This conversation clearly explains why willpower keeps failing in a dopamine-saturated world. When pleasure is always on tap, effort starts to feel unbearable. What I appreciated most is the reframe: boredom and discomfort aren’t problems to fix, they’re signals that your brain is recalibrating. That’s how motivation slowly comes back online.
Finally!! Anna Lembke changed my life. It is the best book I’ve ever read. This should be a must read in the school system!
The trick is learning not to follow every quick pleasure. The more balance you create between pleasure and pain, the easier it becomes to feel calm and motivated without needing constant rewards.The more balance you build, the stronger your control becomes. For example, when you crave junk food but skip it, your brain learns patience. That’s how dopamine becomes your ally, not your master. Thank you, Mel, for such an interesting video. Please keep going—we really need your content. 🥰
I’m just 6 min into this podcast & I already understand I have a dopamine hit. I woke up this morning w/ a cold, got my hot coffee, turned on the fireplace, & received a dopamine hit doubled by tuning into your new podcast. Thank you Mel & Guest! 🥰🏆
This eye-opening - the idea that we're unconsciously organizing our entire lives around dopamine hits, constantly seeking that next little reward from our phones, coffee, music, notifications, explains why we feel so restless and unable to focus when we actually need to be present. Dr. Lembke's point that real happiness might require doing the counterintuitive thing of stepping back from easy pleasures rather than chasing more of them challenges everything our culture tells us, but it makes complete sense when you realize how overstimulated and perpetually unsatisfied we've become.
Hi Mel. My mom died 4 years ago at 57. I found you last year and you being at the same age as she was the last time I saw her, I feel like I was adopted by you. You talk to my heart and soul. Thank you for speaking directly to me, a person listening all the way in Poland. ❤
So let me ask this. Are we actually creating a society of ADHD and anxiety by giving these small children devices to entertain themselves? They never learn to use their creative minds and entertain themselves, causing them to be anxious, bored and restless. Then labeled a "difficult child."
"Boredom is Necessary." That is so enlightening, and encouraging. I'm bored a lot lately. Maybe that's my genius getting ready to perform.
I am from Lesotho in Africa and your podcasts have made a difference in my life. I came out of a dark place of divorce and lost it all and you gave me hope and now am at MIT. I would really to meet you to show my gratitude. Thank you, Mel.
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Top Comments (10)
What do I do if I'm addicted to Mel's podcast? 😅
Motivation is harder to access when your brain is flooded with easier, faster dopamine options. That’s not weakness, it’s conditioning. This conversation clearly explains why willpower keeps failing in a dopamine-saturated world. When pleasure is always on tap, effort starts to feel unbearable. What I appreciated most is the reframe: boredom and discomfort aren’t problems to fix, they’re signals that your brain is recalibrating. That’s how motivation slowly comes back online.
Finally!! Anna Lembke changed my life. It is the best book I’ve ever read. This should be a must read in the school system!
The trick is learning not to follow every quick pleasure. The more balance you create between pleasure and pain, the easier it becomes to feel calm and motivated without needing constant rewards.The more balance you build, the stronger your control becomes. For example, when you crave junk food but skip it, your brain learns patience. That’s how dopamine becomes your ally, not your master. Thank you, Mel, for such an interesting video. Please keep going—we really need your content. 🥰
I’m just 6 min into this podcast & I already understand I have a dopamine hit. I woke up this morning w/ a cold, got my hot coffee, turned on the fireplace, & received a dopamine hit doubled by tuning into your new podcast. Thank you Mel & Guest! 🥰🏆
This eye-opening - the idea that we're unconsciously organizing our entire lives around dopamine hits, constantly seeking that next little reward from our phones, coffee, music, notifications, explains why we feel so restless and unable to focus when we actually need to be present. Dr. Lembke's point that real happiness might require doing the counterintuitive thing of stepping back from easy pleasures rather than chasing more of them challenges everything our culture tells us, but it makes complete sense when you realize how overstimulated and perpetually unsatisfied we've become.
Hi Mel. My mom died 4 years ago at 57. I found you last year and you being at the same age as she was the last time I saw her, I feel like I was adopted by you. You talk to my heart and soul. Thank you for speaking directly to me, a person listening all the way in Poland. ❤
So let me ask this. Are we actually creating a society of ADHD and anxiety by giving these small children devices to entertain themselves? They never learn to use their creative minds and entertain themselves, causing them to be anxious, bored and restless. Then labeled a "difficult child."
"Boredom is Necessary." That is so enlightening, and encouraging. I'm bored a lot lately. Maybe that's my genius getting ready to perform.
I am from Lesotho in Africa and your podcasts have made a difference in my life. I came out of a dark place of divorce and lost it all and you gave me hope and now am at MIT. I would really to meet you to show my gratitude. Thank you, Mel.