The brain doesn't show you the actual reward. It shows you a brochure.
Researchers studying how accurately people predict their own emotional reactions have a well-replicated finding: we systematically over-predict the intensity of anticipated pleasure. We also under-predict how quickly it fades.
Translation: when your brain is selling you on giving in, it's running a marketing campaign. The actual product is different.
A few specific lies the brain tells, in approximate order of how often they show up:
"This will be incredible." — Almost always rated as merely OK in retrospect.
"I'll feel relieved." — Briefly, then heavier than before.
"This will reset me." — It re-enters the cycle. The "reset" feeling is the urge ending, not the relapse helping.
"Just this once." — The brain is constructing the rationalization in real time. There is no "just this once" in a pattern.
The fix isn't fighting the imagined version. The fix is recalling the actual version, in detail, BEFORE the imagined one takes the floor.
Tonight when an urge arrives, ask: "What did the last one ACTUALLY feel like, 5 minutes after?" Not the buildup. The 5 minutes after.
You've seen the brochure now. The product is different.
Your brain markets the urge with a brochure. The actual product is shorter, smaller, and followed by a bill.
On a scale of 1 to 10, rate how good your brain predicted your last relapse would feel. Then rate how it actually felt 5 minutes later. The gap is what the brain hides from you in the moment.