Think Thursday: Just Do the Thing-Why the Brain Respects Action
We all have something we keep saying we’ll do — take the trip, write the book, make the call, start the business.
In this episode, Molly explores why dreaming feels productive (dopamine loves anticipation), but behavior is what actually builds identity. She revisits cognitive dissonance, explains the Zeigarnik effect, and shares a personal story about choosing to prioritize travel in 2025 — and how taking action created momentum.
The message is simple: movement builds evidence. Evidence builds identity.
In This Episode
- Why anticipation activates dopamine
- How cognitive dissonance quietly reshapes identity
- Why behavior resolves tension more than belief does
- The Zeigarnik effect and “open loops” in the brain
- Why readiness often follows action
- A personal example of turning “someday” travel into real plans
Key Takeaways
- The brain builds identity from evidence, not intention
- Dreaming feels good, but action stabilizes the nervous system
- Open loops consume mental energy
- Confidence is built through movement
- You don’t need the whole plan — just the next visible step
Before Monday rolls around, choose one thing you’ve been postponing and take one deliberate step toward it.
Book it.
Open it.
Send it.
Schedule it.
Open it.
Send it.
Schedule it.
Let your behavior do the convincing.
★ Support this podcast ★
