Why Do I Keep Doing This? The Real Reason Habits Stick—and How to Finally Change Them, with Kati Morton

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Why Do I Keep Doing This? The Real Reason Habits Stick—and How to Finally Change Them, with Kati Morton

So much of the work we do through coaching and counseling at Growing Self begins with a moment of self-recognition. You notice a pattern that no longer feels aligned with who you want to be, yet it keeps resurfacing anyway.

There is a particular kind of frustration that comes with understanding yourself well enough to see what you are doing, while still feeling unable to stop. You may know the habit is not helping. You may even know where it came from. And still, it shows up. Again.

In this episode of Love, Happiness and Success, I sat down with licensed marriage and family therapist and mental health educator Kati Morton to talk about why this happens, and what actually helps people change. Not at the level of willpower or self-discipline, but at the level where habits are formed and reinforced.

What emerged was a compassionate and psychologically grounded explanation of why breaking habits that keep you stuck is rarely about trying harder, and much more about understanding what those habits have been doing for you.

Self-Sabotaging Behaviors Make Sense in Context

Many of the behaviors people struggle with most are not random or irrational. They are learned responses to stress, uncertainty, or unmet emotional needs. When we talk about self-sabotaging behaviors explained through a clinical lens, they often turn out to be survival strategies that once served a real purpose.

As children, we learn how to manage discomfort, seek connection, and stay emotionally safe long before we have the language to describe what we are doing. Over time, those early strategies solidify into emotional coping habits. Perfectionism. People pleasing. Avoidance. Overworking. Numbing out. Control.

Research on habit formation and change, including Charles Duhigg’s work in The Power of Habit (2012), shows that habits follow predictable loops of cue, behavior, and reward. Later studies on habitual versus goal-directed behavior further clarify why patterns persist even when we want to change them (Gillan et al., 2011).

What matters is not just stopping the behavior, but understanding the reward it provides.

The Nervous System’s Role in Habit Loops

A major theme of this conversation is nervous system regulation. When the body perceives threat, emotional or physical, it shifts into survival mode. Fight. Flight. Freeze. Fawn.

In these states, the brain prioritizes immediate relief over long-term goals. This is why habits that soothe in the short term can feel compelling even when they create problems later. From a nervous system perspective, they are doing their job. This perspective is also supported by social baseline theory, which suggests that human nervous systems are wired to expect connection and shared support, not constant self-regulation. When people feel emotionally alone, stressed, or unsupported, the brain expends more effort to cope, making rigid habits and survival-based patterns more likely (Coan & Sbarra, 2015).

This understanding aligns with research on emotion regulation and nervous system functioning, including emotion regulation theory (Gross & John, 2003) and polyvagal theory (Porges, 2011), which explain how safety, connection, and regulation shape behavior.

It also helps explain why shame backfires.

Why Shame Keeps Habits in Place

When people respond to unwanted habits with harsh self-criticism, the nervous system reads that as threat. Shame activates the same survival responses that created the habit in the first place.

Research consistently shows that shame is associated with poorer psychological outcomes and greater behavioral rigidity (Tangney et al., 2007). In contrast, self-compassion is linked to greater motivation, resilience, and sustainable change (Neff, 2003; Breines & Chen, 2012).

This is where compassionate habit change becomes essential. Curiosity creates safety. Safety creates flexibility. And flexibility makes new choices possible.

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Perfectionism and Control Patterns

Many habits are rooted in early experiences where love, approval, or stability felt conditional. Over time, this can evolve into perfectionism and control patterns that feel necessary for connection or self-worth.

Clinical research has identified perfectionism as a transdiagnostic process that underlies anxiety, depression, and burnout (Egan et al., 2011). When perfectionism becomes a primary coping strategy, it often brings chronic stress and self-doubt rather than relief.

If this resonates, you may find it helpful to explore resources on overcoming perfectionism and the link between perfectionism and anxiety.

Understanding Habit Loops and Mental Patterns

Some habits are behavioral. Others live almost entirely in the mind. Rumination. Overthinking. Mental replay.

Approaches like cognitive behavioral therapy help people recognize habit loops in both thoughts and actions. Learning how to stop overthinking and interrupt repetitive mental loops is often a key step in lasting change.

When people feel stuck, it is rarely because they are incapable. It is more often because the system they are operating in has not changed yet.

For many, that stuckness shows up as a sense of being unable to move forward, even when they want to. Resources on how to get unstuck and understanding stuck patterns can be helpful, especially when combined with insight into survival-based coping.

In more intense moments, people describe feeling trapped or shut down. This often reflects nervous system overload rather than lack of effort. If that feels familiar, you may resonate with writing on feeling trapped and living in survival mode.

When to Seek Support (and What Kind)

One of the most common questions people ask is what kind of support they actually need. Therapy. Coaching. Both.

Understanding the difference between coaching and counseling can help clarify this, especially if you are wondering “what kind of support do I need?”

If you prefer a more interactive approach, you might explore the therapy or coaching quiz to help figure out the right kind of help.

You may also find yourself asking more directly, Do I need therapy? Understanding when therapy helps can make the decision feel less overwhelming.

If you already know you want professional support, you can explore how to find a therapist and what it looks like to get support from a therapist who understands habit change in context.

For those weighing options, comparing a life coach vs therapist can also bring clarity.

About Kati Morton

Kati Morton is a leading mental health advocate and licensed marriage and family therapist known for translating complex psychological concepts into practical, compassionate guidance.

The title of her upcoming book says it all: WHY DO I KEEP DOING THIS?: Unlearn the Habits Keeping You Stuck and Unhappy (Balance Publishing, on sale December 9). In her work, Kati explores the tension between control and healing, and the ways people can begin to change behaviors that once helped them cope but now hold them back.

Her approach offers insight without shame and clarity without oversimplifying the emotional complexity of real change.

A Thoughtful Next Step

If this conversation helped you see your habits differently, and you would like support as you work toward change that feels sustainable and kind, I want to offer you a next step.

You can schedule a free consultation with me or a member of my team at Growing Self. This is a private, secure space where you will answer three quick questions so we can help match you with the right counselor or coach for what you are navigating right now.

Let’s find the right support for you.

xoxo,
Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby
Growing Self

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Resources:

Duhigg, C. (2012). The Power of Habit. Random House. 

Gillan, C. M., et al. (2011). Disruption in the balance between goal-directed behavior and habit learning in obsessive-compulsive disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.10071062 

Tangney, J. P., et al. (2007). Shame, guilt, and psychopathology. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-843X.101.3.469

Egan, S. J., et al. (2011). Perfectionism as a transdiagnostic process. Clinical Psychology Review. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2010.04.009

Gross, J. J., & John, O. P. (2003). Individual differences in two emotion regulation processes: Implications for affect, relationships, and well-being. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85(2), 348–362. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.85.2.348 

Neff, K. D. (2003). Self-compassion. Self and Identity. https://doi.org/10.1080/15298860309032 

Breines, J. G., & Chen, S. (2012). Self-compassion and motivation. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167212445599

Coan, J. A., & Sbarra, D. A. (2015). Social baseline theory. Current Opinion in Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2014.12.021 

Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W. W. Norton & Company. https://wwnorton.com/books/The-Polyvagal-Theory

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