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Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself: How to Lose Your Mind and Create a New One cover
❒ Book · 2012

Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself: How to Lose Your Mind and Create a New One

By Joe Dispenza · Hay House

360 pagesEnglishFirst ed. 2012Consciousness / Meditation
ConsciousnessMeditationNew Thought NeuroplasticityHabitSelf-MasteryWorkshops

Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself is Joe Dispenza’s 2012 Hay House book and the predecessor to Becoming Supernatural. It is his clearest single statement of how he frames meditation as the rewiring of habituated thought-feeling loops. The book pairs a neuroscience-flavoured exposition — chapters on the quantum self, the survival emotions, the wiring of the new self — with a multi-week meditation programme in which the reader is asked to step outside the predictable rhythm of their conditioned identity for long enough that a different one can be installed.

It was Dispenza’s commercial breakthrough: it sold over a million copies and built the audience that Becoming Supernatural (2017) later expanded into a workshop and retreat business. Practitioners frequently credit it with concrete results in a way they feel Becoming Supernatural dilutes. Mainstream science writers and clinical psychologists have been consistently critical of the neuroscience framing, arguing that the book overgeneralises from real findings — neuroplasticity, epigenetics, default-mode-network research — into claims those findings don’t support. The split between practitioner enthusiasm and scientific scepticism is the durable pattern in Dispenza reception.

Reception

Dispenza’s commercial breakthrough, sold over a million copies and built the audience that Becoming Supernatural later expanded. Followers credit it with practical results in a way the later book is sometimes felt to dilute. Mainstream science writers and clinical psychologists have been consistently critical of the neuroscience framing, arguing that the book overgeneralises from real findings (neuroplasticity, epigenetics) into claims those findings don’t actually support. The split between practitioner enthusiasm and scientific scepticism is the durable pattern in Dispenza reception.

Frequently asked

What is Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself about?

It is Joe Dispenza’s 2012 framing of meditation as the rewiring of habituated thought-feeling loops. The book pairs a neuroscience-flavoured exposition — chapters on the quantum self, the survival emotions, the wiring of the new self — with a multi-week meditation programme intended to dismantle the conditioned identity and install a different one.

How does it relate to Becoming Supernatural?

It is the predecessor. Becoming Supernatural (2017) takes the same framework and adds workshop case studies, brain-imaging, and an explicit “supernatural” register. Many readers prefer Breaking the Habit as the cleaner, more actionable statement of Dispenza’s method, before the workshop apparatus around it expanded.

Is the neuroscience in the book accurate?

It is contested. Mainstream science writers and clinical psychologists argue that Dispenza overgeneralises from real findings — neuroplasticity, epigenetics, default-mode-network research — into claims those findings do not support. Practitioners report that the meditation programme produces concrete results regardless of how the underlying neuroscience is framed.

More by Joe Dispenza

From the same voice.

All →
This theme across the index

Consciousness, in other forms.

The same current this book is working in, followed sideways through the catalogue — across formats, and the word itself.

All consciousness →

Keep following the thread.

One letter every Sunday — what we read this week, and one teaching worth your attention. No tracking.