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Why a new habit snaps back has nothing to do with willpower. A mechanical look at rewiring, and why a finish line helps.

If you've ever changed something for a few weeks and then watched it snap back to exactly how it was before, I want to explain why that happens, because the usual story about willpower and discipline gets it wrong.
You have two parts running. One is the conscious you. It has intentions, willpower, motivation. It's the part that decides things are going to be different now. The other runs on autopilot, built from years of repeating the same patterns until they stopped needing a decision at all. That second part doesn't reason. It just runs the shortest, most familiar path, over and over.
When you try to change a habit, you're using the first part to overrule the second. And here's the catch nobody tells you. The autopilot didn't develop in isolation. Everything around it grew to fit it. Your routines, your triggers, the way you wind down, the way you cope, all of it plugged into the old behavior over years. So when you swap out one piece and brace it with willpower, the rest of you is still shaped around the old version. The new piece has no support structure yet.
That's why the moment your attention drops, or you slip once or twice, it doesn't gently wobble. It snaps back. Everything around the habit is pulling it toward the version it knows. You didn't fail. The structure simply reverted to its older, stronger shape.
So what actually works? You keep the new behavior in place long enough that the rest of you starts rebuilding around it. Long enough to reach a point where letting go a little doesn't send you back to zero. It sends you back to a higher floor, and you keep building from there.
People usually call this an identity change. Become the kind of person who does this. That framing is fine, and it works for some. But it's also vague, and it doesn't land for everyone. I find it more useful to look at the mechanics. You're not becoming a new person. You're replacing one part of a structure that spent years wiring itself around the old part, and then giving it enough time to rewire. That's why it takes a while. That's why you can't flip it overnight and expect it to stay flipped.
Knowing this changes how you read the slips. A slip isn't a verdict on your character. It's the old wiring reasserting itself, which is exactly what you'd expect this early. Your one task is to outlast that pull long enough for the new version to become the path of least resistance.
This is why FastNow is built around a defined program with a real beginning and end rather than an open-ended good luck. A finish line makes the rewiring period easier to outlast, and tracking keeps the new behavior visible long enough for the rest of your life to rebuild around it.