Action is data for the brain.

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A Different Pattern

A senior leader once told me,

“I’m not stuck. I’m just waiting until it’s clear.”

He was intelligent.

Experienced.

Highly capable.

And he hadn’t moved in months.

That pattern is more common than most high performers realize.

People who feel stalled usually aren’t lacking insight or discipline.

They are waiting for certainty – confidence, clarity, the “right answer” – before acting.

From a neuroscience perspective, that wait works against the brain.

The nervous system doesn’t update through thinking alone.

It learns through a loop:

Action → Feedback → Neural update

This is dopamine-based prediction error learning.

 

If reality doesn’t challenge expectation, the brain has no reason to rewire.

No contradiction.

No update.

 

People who change their lives faster don’t judge better.

They move sooner.

They treat action as a hypothesis.

They test.

They observe.

They adjust.

 

Not because they’re reckless, but because action is data for the nervous system.

Waiting for clarity often delays learning.

Movement creates it.

 

For leaders, the question isn’t, “Do I have enough information?”

It’s, “What small experiment would teach my brain something new?”

If this way of thinking resonates, follow my work or start a conversation.

I focus on the neurological layer where sustainable change actually begins

before motivation, before strategy, before willpower.

— Dr. Yoshi

🎧 Continue the thread:
Rewire Lab with Dr. Yoshi
EP 004 | Why Life Is Not Changed By Talent
https://lnkd.in/gbUbwGPy

 

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