The Real Reason You Can’t Stick to Healthy Habits (It’s Not Willpower)
Authored by: Paola Mendez
You already know what you should be doing.
You know you should eat more vegetables, move your body, get enough sleep, and stop stress-eating at 10pm. The information isn’t the problem. So why does change feel so hard?
After years of working with clients as a certified RTT hypnotherapist, I can tell you: the missing piece almost never has anything to do with knowledge, discipline, or motivation. It has to do with the subconscious mind; and most habit-change advice never touches it.
Your Conscious Mind Is Not Running the Show
Neuroscientists estimate that roughly 95% of our daily behavior is driven by the subconscious mind. The conscious mind (the part that sets goals, reads articles, and downloads wellness apps) accounts for only about 5% of what we actually do.
This means you can have every intention to change and still find yourself reverting to old patterns. Not because you’re weak, but because your subconscious is running a different program. One that was likely written in childhood, long before you had any say in it.
Those programs sound like: I eat when I’m stressed because that’s how I was comforted as a child. I self-sabotage when things are going well because deep down I don’t believe I deserve to feel good. I can’t stop at one because food is the one thing that’s always been there for me.
No amount of meal planning overrides a belief like that.
What I See in My Practice
One of my clients came to me after years of cycling through every diet imaginable: Noom, Weight Watchers, Jenny Craig, calorie tracking apps. She was disciplined. She was informed. And she kept ending up in the same place.
In our RTT work together, we traced her emotional eating back to a single belief she had carried since she was eight years old: that she was only lovable when she made other people comfortable. Food had become the way she managed emotions she never felt safe expressing. Once that belief changed at the subconscious level, her relationship with food changed; not through willpower, but because the underlying need driving the behavior was no longer there.
She didn’t need a better meal plan. She needed the belief to change.
Three Things That Actually Help
If you’ve tried every habit-change strategy and keep hitting the same wall, here’s where to look:
1. Identify the job the habit is doing. Every behavior meets a need. Before you try to eliminate a habit, get curious about what it’s doing for you. Stress eating is often self-soothing. Procrastination is often fear protecting us from failing because we can’t fail if we don’t even try. Understand the need first.
2. Work with repetition, not restriction. The subconscious mind learns through repetition and emotion. This is why affirmations done half-heartedly don’t work; but a deeply felt, repeated message can genuinely begin to rewire a pattern over time. Guided hypnotherapy audio works on this same principle.
3. Stop measuring success by willpower. If you have to white-knuckle your way through a habit, the subconscious hasn’t caught up yet. Sustainable change feels easier than you expect, not harder. If it’s a constant fight, you’re working against yourself at a level that needs more than conscious effort to reach.
The goal isn’t more discipline. The goal is alignment; getting your subconscious and your conscious intentions pointing in the same direction. When that happens, change doesn’t feel like forcing. It feels less like change and more like remembering who you actually are.
About the Author Paola Mendez is a certified RTT hypnotherapist trained by world-renowned therapist Marisa Peer, and the founder of Mochi Zen, a weight loss app combining RTT-based hypnotherapy with AI nutrition tracking. She works with clients in Miami and remotely to address the subconscious patterns behind emotional eating, chronic stress, and burnout. Learn more at paohypnosis.com or mochi-zen.com.