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Self-sabotage is intimately tied to a lack of emotional intelligence, a crucial skill set that facilitates a healthy understanding, interpretation, and response to one’s emotional spectrum. The complex wiring of human neurology is at play in self-destructive tendencies, underscored by dopamine’s role in “giving you the pleasure of wanting more” (105). This neurochemical drives individuals to continually seek fresh goals after the satisfaction of initial desires. The impact of dopamine is a double-edged sword: While it fuels ambition, it can also undermine the achievement of genuine desires because the chase for more leaves no room for contentment, turning every victory into merely the gateway to the next challenge. This leads to emotional exhaustion and, sometimes, to the decision to sabotage one’s own success to avoid that cycle.
Subconscious associations further contribute to this issue, serving as silent barricades against the pursuit of true wants. Failure in one area of life, like dating, can subconsciously trigger a broader emotional response, such as a crippling belief that overcoming depression is impossible. Psychological phenomena like confirmation bias—when you seek out only information that confirms preexisting ideas and reject any facts that disprove them—and homeostatic impulse—the mind’s automatic regulation of things like body temperature and breathing— add layers of complexity.
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By Brianna Wiest