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When our resolutions don't last more than three days, we usually blame our mental strength. But that's wrong. The problem isn't your character—it's your system. Neuroscience asserts that willpower is not an infinite resource. Put down the heavy burden of responsibility. Instead, I propose a scientific strategy for achieving goals through lightweight system design.
We believe persistence is a matter of individual capacity, but neuroscience sees it differently. Willpower is merely a depletable resource that consumes glucose and neurotransmitters.
Our brain's lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) expends enormous energy when making decisions. When cognitive overload occurs, glutamate accumulates in this region. At this point, the brain induces fatigue and shuts down to protect itself.
This is decision fatigue. An energy-depleted brain either makes impulsive choices that offer immediate sweet rewards or stays in a default state that changes nothing. The reason you open a delivery app instead of exercising after work isn't because you're lazy—it's because your prefrontal cortex has shut down.
James Clear structured the brain's learning mechanism into four stages. The key lies in designing systems that make your body move without requiring willpower.
70% of human brain sensory receptors are allocated to vision. Visual restructuring of your environment is the top priority.
Dopamine is released more when anticipating a reward than when actually receiving it.
The brain always follows the law of least effort. Reducing friction between actions is far more efficient than trying to boost motivation.
The human brain evolved to respond to immediate rewards.
The most powerful change begins with identity. It's not simply about exercising—it's the process of presenting evidence to yourself that I am someone who exercises. When this evidence accumulates and identity is established, the action becomes a natural part of daily life without needing to squeeze out willpower. Your actions are like votes showing who you want to become.
Performance comes from systematizing your lifestyle. Try these three things right now:
Success is not an event of reaching a specific finish line—it's the system that operates daily. Rather than blaming willpower, focus on designing systems.