107,99 zł
Real motivation has become hard to find—not because people are lazy, but because the brain's reward system has been quietly overwhelmed. Every scroll, notification, and instant gratification has been making a withdrawal from an account most people didn't know had a limit. This book explores what happens when that account runs dry, and what it genuinely takes to replenish it. It examines the modern overstimulation pattern honestly—not as a moral failing or a technology problem, but as a deeply human response to an environment designed to exploit the brain's natural hunger for reward. It looks at how constant dopamine flooding gradually raises the threshold for satisfaction, leaving a person restless in stillness, bored by depth, and unable to sustain effort toward anything that doesn't deliver immediate feedback. This book offers psychologically grounded insight into what a genuine dopamine reset actually involves—the discomfort of the early days, the flatness that arrives before clarity, and the slow, unannounced return of motivation that feels different from the artificial urgency of overstimulation. It explores what real drive feels like when it's no longer competing with a hundred cheaper substitutes. Written without digital-detox performance culture or productivity hype, this book reframes the reset not as deprivation but as restoration—a return to the kind of motivation that comes from genuine interest, meaningful effort, and the quiet satisfaction of doing something that actually matters to you.
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Liczba stron: 243
Rok wydania: 2026
