@azimov.m: #fyp #rek #horse

azimov.mladshiy
azimov.mladshiy
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Saturday 09 May 2026 14:43:45 GMT
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nuriddin.sobirov_
⚜️thesobirovmma⚜️ :
ебе гондоретон е 😂
2026-05-13 21:02:44
0
s76swa
𝗮.𝗺.𝗮.𝟎𝟐 :
🧐
2026-05-10 10:35:29
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m.ilhomovaa
موزا :
@𝒜𝓏𝒾𝓏𝒶 ?
2026-05-11 15:10:55
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77.abdusalomov
77.abdusalomov :
🔥🔥🔥
2026-05-09 18:03:16
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What looks like self-sabotage right before success is usually not a lack of discipline or intelligence, but a threat response rooted in identity. Your brain does not primarily optimize for growth or happiness, it optimizes for predictability and safety. Anything that pushes you beyond what feels familiar triggers the same neural circuits that once protected you from danger. This mechanism is often described as an internal “set point.” Your past experiences shaped an unconscious expectation of how much success, attention, love, or stability feels normal for you. When reality starts to exceed that expectation, your amygdala interprets it as a violation of identity, not as a reward. The discomfort you feel is not intuition, it is cognitive dissonance: the clash between who you have always been and who you are becoming. To resolve this dissonance, the brain chooses the fastest solution available. It restores the old identity by creating avoidance, conflict, procrastination, or impulsive mistakes. Not because success is bad, but because unfamiliar success feels unsafe. The brain would rather keep you small and consistent than expanded and unknown. The way out is not forcing confidence or repeating affirmations, but gradually updating your self-concept through evidence. Each time you allow yourself to handle slightly more responsibility, visibility, or success without retreating, you recalibrate the threshold. Over time, what once felt threatening becomes normal. That is how the ceiling rises. If you want to learn how to consciously rewire identity and stop your brain from pulling you back the moment things start working, check the link in my bio 🔗🧠 #SelfImprovement #personaldevelopment #psychology #motivation #levelingupyourbrain
What looks like self-sabotage right before success is usually not a lack of discipline or intelligence, but a threat response rooted in identity. Your brain does not primarily optimize for growth or happiness, it optimizes for predictability and safety. Anything that pushes you beyond what feels familiar triggers the same neural circuits that once protected you from danger. This mechanism is often described as an internal “set point.” Your past experiences shaped an unconscious expectation of how much success, attention, love, or stability feels normal for you. When reality starts to exceed that expectation, your amygdala interprets it as a violation of identity, not as a reward. The discomfort you feel is not intuition, it is cognitive dissonance: the clash between who you have always been and who you are becoming. To resolve this dissonance, the brain chooses the fastest solution available. It restores the old identity by creating avoidance, conflict, procrastination, or impulsive mistakes. Not because success is bad, but because unfamiliar success feels unsafe. The brain would rather keep you small and consistent than expanded and unknown. The way out is not forcing confidence or repeating affirmations, but gradually updating your self-concept through evidence. Each time you allow yourself to handle slightly more responsibility, visibility, or success without retreating, you recalibrate the threshold. Over time, what once felt threatening becomes normal. That is how the ceiling rises. If you want to learn how to consciously rewire identity and stop your brain from pulling you back the moment things start working, check the link in my bio 🔗🧠 #SelfImprovement #personaldevelopment #psychology #motivation #levelingupyourbrain

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