About the Course

We are all vulnerable to craving. Whether it’s a compulsion to constantly check social media, overeat, smoke, excessively drink, or any other behavior, we may find ourselves uncontrollably repeating. Why are bad habits so hard to overcome? Is willpower more myth than muscle? Can we learn how our minds work, and even tap into this very process to find a key to conquer the cravings we know are unhealthy for us and foster our natural capacities for awareness and kindness?


Hidden in plain sight, Buddhist psychological theories may have suggested the most direct and effective ways to work with our minds. These are now being “discovered” in neuroscience labs and applied in clinical settings.


Drawing from Buddhist psychology, his clinical work, research studies and development of next-generation therapeutics for habit change, Dr. Brewer will discuss the underlying behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms of why habits are formed and how mindfulness can paradoxically tap into these very processes to uproot them. He will also discuss how we can apply these insights to our own lives.


In this experiential seminar, Dr. Brewer will describe how we can tap into the actual processes that encourage habitual behaviors in order to step out of them. In very accessible ways, he will explain the mechanisms of habit and addiction formation, and then teach participants ways to help them experience and learn how the practice of mindfulness can interrupt these habits in their own lives. He will also show participants how to build their own capacities of awareness, kindness, and curiosity leading to greater resilience.

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Course curriculum

    1. Buddhist Wisdom Meets Neuroscience to Unlock the Psychology of Habit Change with Jud Brewer

About this course

  • $10.00
  • 1 lesson
  • 2.5 hours of video content

Instructor(s)

Jud Brewer

the New York Times best-selling author of the "Hunger Habit", "Unwinding Anxiety", and the "Craving Mind", as well as a thought leader in the field of habit change.