Reintroduce slow, effortful rewards
Deliberately add back activities whose payoff is real but delayed.
Why it works
Cutting high-stimulation inputs only works if something replaces them; otherwise boredom drives relapse. Effortful, delayed-reward activities (reading, exercise, craft, deep conversation) build their own reinforcement over repetition and are what the reset is meant to make accessible again. You are not removing reward, you are shifting toward better-earning ones.
How to do it
- Pre-pick two or three slow rewards you genuinely value before you start the reset.
- Schedule them into the time the cheap inputs used to fill.
- Let the early dullness pass — the first few sessions feel flat precisely because the contrast has not reset yet.
Evidence
Engaging, intrinsically-motivated activity and behavioral activation are well-supported routes to improved mood and sustained motivation; the principle that replacement beats pure subtraction is standard in behavior change. (clinical)
The replacement principle is well-established clinically; its framing as part of a "dopamine detox" is informal. Call it what it is: building better habits.
Sources
- Behavioral activation literature in depression treatment (scheduling rewarding activity)
Common mistake
Subtracting the junk without adding anything, leaving a vacuum that boredom fills by pulling you straight back to the feed.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you choose replacement activities that fit your values and right-sizes them so they are easy to start while the contrast is still recalibrating.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).