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Hit reset: How dopamine fasting can refresh your brain

Mint Chennai

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March 18, 2025

As compulsive habits like binge watching leave us unfocused and bored, taking short dopamine detoxes can offer respite

- Divya Naik

Whether it's the endless scroll of social media, binge-watching shows, or compulsively checking emails, many of us are trapped in a cycle of digital overstimulation. This modern addiction to instant gratification rewires our brain's reward system, making everyday activities feel dull in comparison. It is probably for its ability to reset this cycle and help people find joy in slower, more meaningful experiences that dopamine fasting is gaining traction as a strategy.

But before we analyze its effectiveness and its impact on the brain, we need to understand how digital overstimulation affects the brain's reward system.

Over the ages, the brain's natural reward system evolved to reinforce essential behaviors like eating, socializing, and problem-solving. Cut to the present and we are living in environments that are saturated with high-reward stimuli, which disrupt the brain's natural reward system, observes Prof. Sairaj Patki, faculty of psychology, FLAME University, Pune. "The pleasurable effect of digital stimulation wears off as soon as more content becomes easily available. Over time, this leads to behavioral addictions, where individuals need higher levels of stimulation to feel the same level of pleasure," he says. This is why social media addiction, compulsive gaming, and binge-watching are becoming common problems.

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