What Makes Deep Patterns So Hard to Shift?
- Katherine Mackenzie

- Mar 11
- 2 min read
Updated: 5 hours ago
You may understand exactly why you react the way you do and still find yourself repeating the same behaviours, emotional reactions, or relationship dynamics.
This is one of the most frustrating parts of therapy and self-work: insight does not automatically interrupt deeply conditioned patterns. Habits, coping strategies, and emotional responses are often reinforced over years through repetition, nervous system conditioning, and attempts to stay emotionally safe.
Change tends to happen slowly because these patterns are learned ways of responding to stress, discomfort, vulnerability, and uncertainty that take practice to change.
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The Key Concepts
1. Nervous System Conditioning
Many patterns become automatic because the nervous system learns them through repetition and survival. Under stress, the brain tends to default to familiar emotional and behavioural responses, even when they are no longer helpful.
2. Emotional Avoidance
A large number of coping patterns are attempts to avoid difficult internal experiences like shame, fear, rejection, grief, or vulnerability. Avoidance may create temporary relief, but it often reinforces the cycle over time.
3. Cognitive Fusion
The stories we tell ourselves about what things mean can feel completely true and inseparable from reality. Instead of noticing a feeling as an experience, people often interpret it as evidence about who they are or what will happen.
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Practical Steps to Change Your Relationship with Your Habits and Feelings
1. Normalize Them: Stop labeling certain emotions as “bad,” irrational, weak, or wrong. Emotions are nervous system and psychological responses, not moral failures. The more you fight or suppress feelings, the more threatening they often become internally.
2. Befriend Them: Instead of immediately trying to get rid of discomfort, try tuning into what the feeling is communicating. Ask yourself what it may need, what it is reacting to, or what it is attempting to protect. This shifts the relationship from control into connection.
3. Get curious: Notice both the feeling itself and the story attached to it. Many people react not only to the emotion, but to what they believe the emotion means: that they are failing, unsafe, rejected, too much, or not enough. Curiosity helps loosen these automatic interpretations.
4. Break the Myth: The idea that healing means never feeling hard things is unrealistic and sets you up for burnout. The goal of healing is not perfection or constant regulation. The goal is building the capacity to experience difficult emotions without becoming overwhelmed, consumed, or defined by them.
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The Takeaway
Deep patterns are difficult to shift because they are often rooted in emotional learning, nervous system conditioning, and long-standing attempts to stay psychologically safe. Real change usually begins not through controlling feelings, but through changing your relationship to them.
Your One Action Step: Today, notice one urge that comes up or think back to the last time you did the habit you're trying to break, and spend a few moments getting curious about what the feelings might be trying to communicate and what story you attach to it.

