Clint Jarvis Profile picture
Aug 18 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Addiction isn’t what you think it is.

Andrew Huberman just hosted Ryan Soave, the world’s top behavioral addiction expert.

What he said will flip your understanding of addiction (and recovery) on its head:

5 brutal truths about addiction and how to recover from any kind: Image
1. Addiction is actually the solution, not the problem.

It is a coping mechanism: A "solution" your brain found for a deeper pain, stress, or trauma.

A clumsy, destructive one, but a solution nonetheless.

Before you fix the behavior, ask: “What pain is this solving?”
2. The test for addiction is devastatingly simple.

"Does it have you, or do you have it?"

Can you take 30 days off? If you spend those 30 days obsessing about day 31, it has you.

Most people never even try this test because they already know the answer.
3. The easier the reward, the harder the prison.

Instant gratification = most addictive thing on earth

High-dopamine, zero-effort activities (gambling, porn, mindless scrolling) create a vicious cycle of craving.

Your brain is wired to chase those easy wins forever.
4. To feel better, you first have to learn to feel worse.

Recovery isn’t about chasing constant highs.

It’s about building distress tolerance: being able to sit with boredom, anxiety, or discomfort without needing to escape.

That’s the first step.
5. You must build capacity for discomfort

A life without challenge creates the need for addiction.

Our nervous system is built to overcome obstacles.

Soave argues that when we don't give it healthy struggles (exercise, learning, building), it creates unhealthy ones.
And the most destructive outlet for comfort in today's world?

Our phones.

The easiest source of:

• Novelty (scroll)
• Validation (likes)
• Arousal (apps)
• Gambling (notifications)

They hijack each reward pathway at once.

And not just that...
The average person taps their phone 2,617 times per day.

That’s not distraction, it’s compulsion.

A drug you reach for every few minutes, without thinking.

So, how do you escape this loop?
As Soave says:

The way out isn't through more comfort. It's through controlled discomfort.

You need to change your environment and set better boundaries.

Here's how you can do that:
Start with a screen time app like Roots.

(an app to stay off apps is ironic, but hear me out...)

Here's why this is key:

getroots.link/7rPUkiz
Apps like Roots keep you accountable.

You can't just ignore your rules, or delete the app.

This extra friction is key.

Here's how to use it effectively in 5 steps: Image
1. Set hard limits

I limit social media to 30 minutes a day on my phone.

Once I reach that limit, I can't unblock.

No uninstalling, no logging out, no workarounds.

(this is where Roots is especially helpful)
2. Add friction to addicting apps

Force yourself to use these apps intentionally.

Before you scroll, ask yourself if it's worth it.

Create just enough pause to break the loop.
3. Schedule downtime

Go full "Monk Mode" with certain apps completely blocked.

• Mornings: no social media or work apps
• Evenings: everything blocked

This downtime helps rewire your brain. Image
4. Pick scroll replacements

Simple things to redirect yourself away from scrolling.

Go for a walk, pick up a book, play with your dog, or grab a guitar.

Roots nudges me toward these when apps are blocked. Image
With small changes, my phone usage has dropped from 4 hours to ~1 daily.

Pickups from 150 to 50 daily.

My mind feels more calm, clear, and creative. Image
Ready to break free from phone addiction?

Start with Roots and set clear boundaries.

Your future self will thank you.

Download Roots: getroots.link/7rPUkiz
Media Used:
Tools for Overcoming Substance & Behavioral Addictions | Ryan Soave

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Clint Jarvis

Clint Jarvis Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @clinjar

Aug 12
Your stress isn't just from work, money, or relationships.

It's from abandoning "the present moment."

As philosopher Alan Watts said: "The future is an illusion."

Here's how to live in "the present" (and enjoy the little things): Image
Alan Watts saw the core problem decades ago.

We postpone living like it's something that happens later.

After the promotion. After retirement. After we "make it."

But when you finally arrive, you feel cheated.

Because you never learned to actually be "here":
Watts used a brutal metaphor:

We’re donkeys chasing carrots on sticks.

The carrot is the “next thing” we believe will complete us:

The next promotion, the next purchase, the next milestone, always just out of reach...
Read 13 tweets
Aug 6
Social media broke Gen Z’s brains.

Jonathan Haidt sat down with Andrew Huberman to explain exactly how it happened—and what we can do before it's too late.

Here’s his 4-step plan to save the next generation (and yourself): 🧵 Image
A mental health crisis quietly exploded around 2012.

Teen anxiety, depression, and self-harm spiked—especially for girls.

Dr. Haidt, psychologist and author of "The Anxious Generation" explains:
Dr. Haidt calls it the Three-Act Tragedy of Childhood:

• Act I: Kids in community (pre-1990s)
• Act II: Kids locked inside (1990s–2000s)
• Act III: Kids rewired by phones (2010–2015)

10 years later, and we're seeing the impact:
Read 17 tweets
Aug 2
You are addicted to your phone.

It's not your fault—tech companies spent billions to get you hooked.

But it is your responsibility to break free.

Here’s how to flip the script (and reclaim your brain): Image
The average person spends 5 hours scrolling each day.

That's 20 years of your life (and most of your free time).

Plus, 80% of us are unhappy with our phone habits.

But it doesn't have to be that way. Image
Without clear boundaries, you don't stand a chance.

And built-in iOS screen time won't save you:

→ You can bypass limits with one tap
→ You can edit limits at any time Image
Read 10 tweets
Jul 31
Your child’s brain is shrinking from screen time.

Dr. Nicholas Kardaras, one of the world’s top addiction experts, calls it "digital heroin."

Brain scans reveal the same damage seen in cocaine addicts.

Here’s how it happens (and how to protect your kids): Image
1. Screen addiction shrinks your brain—just like heroin.

Brain scans show 2 changes:

1️⃣ Gray matter shrinks (prefrontal cortex):

• This controls decision-making and impulse control.
• It's the same damage as chronic heroin users.
2️⃣ White matter breaks down (myelin sheath):

• This is your brain’s communication network.
• The same degeneration seen in Alzheimer’s patients.

This isn’t just behavioral. It’s structural brain damage.
Read 19 tweets
Jul 28
This Stanford psychiatrist cracked the code on addiction.

Dr. Anna Lembke just dropped a masterclass on dopamine and how addiction really works.

Here are 7 harsh truths you need to know (& how to reset your brain): Image
1. You can be addicted to anything:

Your brain has a “drug of choice.”

Whatever gives you the biggest dopamine spike is what you’re most vulnerable to.

For some it’s alcohol.

For others: porn, food, sex, work, social media...
2. You always pay for the "high":

Your brain keeps pleasure and pain in balance.

Every time you chase an easy high, it pushes back with an equal and opposite amount of pain.

Doing it too often makes you enter a dopamine deficit, where anxiety and numbness become your default.
Read 20 tweets
Jul 26
Your phone is destroying your child’s brain.

Experts call it "secondhand screen time."

And studies say it's as harmful as secondhand smoke.

Here's the disturbing reality (and how to protect your kids): Image
The average adult checks their phone 96 times a day.

Each glance, each swipe, each “hang on” moment? Kids absorb it all.

And research shows this reshapes how their brain works.

Starting as early as 18 months...
A Boston University study scanned over 400 kids using EEG.

Babies with phone-distracted parents showed:

• Altered brain waves
• Reduced alertness
• Early signs of attention disorders

The neurological impact is measurable. But that’s not all…
Read 16 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(