• Think Thursday: When Progress is Invisible-The Psychology of Change You Can't See
    Jan 29 2026

    In this final Think Thursday of Mostly Dry January, Molly delivers an empowering message for anyone questioning whether their efforts this month "counted." If you’ve found yourself wondering why change feels so slow, or why your results don’t match your effort, this episode is for you.

    She explains why progress in behavior change is often invisible at first — especially when it comes to changing deeply ingrained habits like drinking. Backed by neuroscience, Molly reveals how your brain rewires itself through small wins, micro-pauses, and increased awareness, even if those changes aren’t yet reflected in your habits or outcomes.

    Key Topics Covered

    • Why behavior change often doesn’t look like progress at first
    • The role of neuroplasticity in rewiring your brain through repetition
    • What researchers call latent change — and why it matters
    • The difference between outcomes and indicators in habit change
    • Subtle but powerful signs of invisible progress
    • How identity and self-talk begin shifting before results show up

    Science Concepts Mentioned

    • Neuroplasticity: Your brain is shaped by repetition, attention, and intention
    • Amygdala down-regulation and dopamine recalibration during early behavior change
    • Latent change: Internal shifts that occur before external behaviors visibly improve

    Invisible Wins to Look For

    • Pausing more often before acting on a craving
    • Feeling curious instead of critical when things go off-plan
    • More compassionate self-talk
    • A stronger desire to re-engage, even after missteps
    • Growing awareness of what drives your decisions

    Weekly Reflection Prompt
    What kind of progress have you made this month that no one else can see — but you can feel?

    Wrap-Up Message

    You don’t need to be perfect.
    You don’t need to be done.
    You just need to keep noticing.

    Progress is often invisible — until it’s not.

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    7 mins
  • Redefining Commitment: How Off-Plan Drinking Helps Change Happen
    Jan 26 2026


    In this episode, Molly explores one of the most emotionally charged moments in any behavior change journey: going off plan. Whether you're trying to drink less, eat healthier, or shift any long-standing habit, that moment of “I said I wouldn’t, but I did” can feel like failure.

    But what if it’s not?

    Molly shares how deeply rooted perfectionist narratives — especially around alcohol — make us believe that if we slip, we must be broken, or incapable of moderation. Drawing from neuroscience and psychology, she explains how our brains create conditioned responses and how off-plan drinking isn't a diagnosis, it’s data.

    You'll learn why changing your relationship with alcohol (or any habit) doesn’t require perfection — it requires compassion, curiosity, and a willingness to keep going. And you'll be introduced to the Off-Plan Plan, which is a tool she teaches in her programs.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why culturally conditioned narratives frame abstinence as the “only” answer
    • How your lower brain creates automatic responses to stress and emotion
    • The science behind why intention alone doesn’t drive behavior
    • What perfectionism is really about — and why it shuts down progress
    • How compassion and curiosity fuel lasting change
    • A powerful mindset reframe: Off-plan moments aren’t failure — they’re feedback

    Key Quote from the Episode

    “Off-plan drinking is not a diagnosis. It’s not proof that you can’t do it. It’s information. It’s data. It’s your brain telling you that something about that moment overwhelmed the tools you had available.”

    Weekly Reflection

    When I drink off plan, what story do I immediately tell myself about who I am?And what would change if I treated that moment as information instead of evidence?

    Resources & Mentions

    • Sunnyside mindful drinking app
    • Previous episodes in the January arc:
      • Fresh Start Effect (Jan 1)
      • Mostly Dry is Enough (Jan 5)
      • Neuroscience of Follow-Through (Jan 8)
      • From Restraint to Reward (Jan 12)
      • Identity Lag (Jan 15)
      • Emotional Freedom (Jan 19)


    Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA:

    Healthy men under 65:

    No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week.

    Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:
    No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week.

    One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink.

    Abstinence from alcohol
    Abstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past.

    Benefits of “low-risk” drinking
    Following these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work.

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    15 mins
  • Think Thursday- Micro-Yeses: How Change Really Happens
    Jan 22 2026

    In this Think Thursday episode, Molly breaks down a powerful concept at the heart of sustainable habit change: micro-yeses. These are the small, often overlooked decisions that align with your long-term goals—even if they feel too minor to matter.

    Whether you're working on behavior change related to exercise, diet, spending, screen time, or any other habit, micro-yeses are the building blocks of momentum. This episode explores how these tiny choices affect the brain, create identity shifts, and lead to real progress over time.


    Key Topics Covered

    • What a "micro-yes" is and why it matters
    • How small decisions activate the prefrontal cortex and build new neural pathways
    • Why repetition, not perfection, drives real behavior change
    • The role of self-recognition in maintaining motivation
    • What behavior scientists like BJ Fogg say about starting small

    Science and Insights

    • Micro-yeses interrupt automatic behavior loops by engaging intentional brain regions like the prefrontal cortex
    • Through consistent action, these moments create synaptic plasticity, helping rewire the brain for new habits
    • As Stanford researcher BJ Fogg notes:
    • “Tiny actions, repeated consistently, change identity.”

    Reflection Prompt:

    Where have you said yes to yourself this week, even in a small or imperfect way?

    Recognize it. Count it. It matters.


    Related Episodes to Explore

    • The Fresh Start Effect (January 1)
    • Neuroscience of Follow-Through (January 8)
    • Identity Lag: Why Your Brain Hasn’t Caught Up Yet (January 15)
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    8 mins
  • Emotional Freedom: What it Really Means
    Jan 19 2026

    In this reflective episode, Molly explores the concept of emotional freedom—what it is, what it isn't, and how it's connected to both her personal story and the Alcohol Minimalist approach.

    Recorded on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and the day after what would have been her father’s 98th birthday, Molly connects the legacies of two powerful men who shaped her understanding of what true strength looks like: calm, steady, and intentional.

    You’ll learn how emotional regulation plays a critical role in creating lasting change with alcohol habits, and why your ability to pause between feeling and acting is key to sustainable freedom. Drawing from neuroscience, psychology, and her own lived experience, Molly unpacks the subtle but powerful shift from automatic drinking to intentional living.

    Topics Discussed

    • Why emotional freedom isn’t about never feeling uncomfortable
    • The Viktor Frankl quote that changed Molly’s approach to habit change
    • How emotional avoidance and low distress tolerance fuel drinking patterns
    • The role of the basal ganglia in automatic habits and how to rewire it
    • Her father’s example of strength without reactivity
    • How to use the PB&J tool (Pause, Breathe, Just Ten Minutes) to interrupt urges
    • A deeper look into the “Figuring Out Your Feelings” chapter from Breaking the Bottle Legacy

    Key Quotes

    “Between stimulus and response, there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”
    — Viktor Frankl

    “You can tell the size of a man by the size of the thing that makes him mad.”
    — Adlai Stevenson, as taught to Molly by her father

    Resources Mentioned

    • Breaking the Bottle Legacy by Molly Watts – especially the chapter “Figuring Out Your Feelings”
    • Drink-Less Success: A 30-day self-paced program based in neuroscience and habit psychology
      Includes the audiobook version of Breaking the Bottle Legacy
      Learn more at: mollywatts.com/drink-less-success

    Weekly Reflection Prompt

    What does emotional freedom mean to me right now?
    Not in theory. Not for the future. But right now.

    Ask yourself:

    • Where am I reactive?
    • Where could I create more space?
    • What would it look like to respond instead of escape?

    Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA:

    Healthy men under 65:

    No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week.

    Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:
    No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week.

    One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink.

    Abstinence from alcohol
    Abstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past.

    Benefits of “low-risk” drinking
    Following these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work.

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    16 mins
  • Think Thursday-Identity Lag: Why Your Brain Hasn't Caught Up Yet
    Jan 15 2026

    By mid-January, many people are still taking action toward change but feel increasingly unsure of themselves. In this Think Thursday episode, Molly introduces the concept of identity lag to explain why behavior often changes before belief does and why that gap can feel uncomfortable.

    Building on recent conversations about the Fresh Start Effect and the neuroscience of follow-through, this episode explores what happens in the brain when new behaviors challenge long-held self-stories. Molly explains how identity is shaped through evidence over time, why self-doubt often peaks after consistency begins, and how cognitive dissonance plays a central role in this phase of change.

    Rather than seeing discomfort as a sign that something is wrong, listeners are invited to understand identity lag as a normal and necessary transition in sustainable behavior change.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why behavior change often feels awkward before it feels aligned
    • What identity lag is and why it shows up in mid-January
    • How the brain prioritizes stability and safety
    • Why confidence does not come first in lasting change
    • How cognitive dissonance creates tension during growth
    • Why self-doubt often increases after consistency begins
    • How identity actually updates through repetition and evidence

    Key Concepts Explained

    • Identity lag as the gap between behavior and belief
    • Default mode network and self-referential processing
    • Cognitive dissonance and the brain’s drive for consistency
    • Evidence accumulation in identity-based behavior change
    • Neuroplasticity and learning across time and context
    • Impostor syndrome as a byproduct of uncertainty during growth

    Core Takeaways from the Episode

    • Behavior leads and identity follows
    • Feeling unfamiliar does not mean being misaligned
    • Self-doubt is information, not instruction
    • Confidence grows from repetition, not declarations
    • Consistent behavior resolves cognitive dissonance over time
    Over time, research shows that behavior is often what resolves cognitive dissonance, not beliefs.
    When behavior stays consistent, identity eventually follows.
    That’s why you don’t have to convince yourself. You just have to keep showing up.

    Practical Anchors Shared

    • Separate behavior from belief
    • Look for evidence rather than feelings
    • Avoid premature identity labels
    • Normalize discomfort during transition
    • Use language like “I am learning to become someone who…”

    Related Think Thursday Episodes

    • The Myth of the Fresh Start Brain
    • The Neuroscience of Follow-Through
    • Belief Echoes and Why Change Feels Hard
    • Unbreakable Habits and the Voice That Keeps Them Alive

    What’s Coming Next

    Next week’s Think Thursday explores what happens when progress starts to feel quieter, calmer, and even boring, and why that phase is actually a sign that change is taking hold.


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    13 mins
  • From Restraint to Reward: What to Add When You Drink Less
    Jan 12 2026

    If you’ve ever said, “I deserve a drink,” that thought may feel small, but it reflects something deeper — a powerful belief that alcohol is your reward.

    In this episode, Molly explores Alcohol Core Belief #4: Alcohol is my reward, and how this unconscious narrative can quietly fuel your desire to drink. The episode offers a new way forward — not through willpower or restriction, but by intentionally creating new, satisfying reward rituals.

    You’ll learn:

    • Why the brain links alcohol with reward — and what to do about it
    • How removing alcohol without adding new sources of pleasure leads to resistance
    • The importance of building emotional reward systems that reinforce the habit of drinking less
    • Why this work isn’t about deprivation, but about creating lasting satisfaction and peace

    Topics and Takeaways

    • How “reward thinking” fuels the desire to drink
    • The role of dopamine and learned associations
    • How to create alcohol-free rewards that actually feel good
    • What to do instead of white-knuckling your way through dry days
    • The mindset shift from “restriction” to “reinforcement”

    Resources Mentioned


    Alcohol Core Beliefs Episodes:

    • Episode 158: https://pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/media.transistor.fm/12f5397f/5d182193.mp3
    • Episode 159:https://pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/media.transistor.fm/eda56e8a/ac4e075a.mp3
    • Episode 160: https://pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/media.transistor.fm/0bc07446/a0266a75.mp3
    • Episode 161: https://pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/media.transistor.fm/e62c3a01/cdd8df70.mp3
    • Episode 163: https://pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/media.transistor.fm/bb7c0709/5c68cc4e.mp3

    Rewards Rewired Worksheet

    Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA:

    Healthy men under 65:

    No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week.

    Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:
    No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week.

    One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink.

    Abstinence from alcohol
    Abstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past.

    Benefits of “low-risk” drinking
    Following these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work.

    ★ Support this podcast ★
    Show More Show Less
    16 mins
  • Think Thursday: The Neuroscience of Follow-Through
    Jan 8 2026

    In this Think Thursday episode, Molly picks up where last week’s conversation on the Fresh Start Effect left off and explores what happens in the brain after motivation fades. Using neuroscience and behavior change research, she explains why January 8 is often the point where people assume they have failed, even though this is actually the phase where real change begins.

    Molly breaks down why most New Year’s intentions are abandoned by mid-January and reframes this not as a lack of discipline, but as a misunderstanding of how the brain works. She explains the difference between motivation and follow-through, the role of dopamine, and why the brain naturally resists energy-intensive new behaviors. The episode focuses on how to create conditions that support consistency without relying on willpower.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why most New Year’s resolutions are abandoned by mid-January
    • How the Fresh Start Effect creates motivation but not sustainability
    • The difference between motivation and follow-through in the brain
    • The role of dopamine in anticipation versus long-term change
    • Why habits live in different brain circuits than goals
    • How the brain prioritizes energy conservation
    • Why resistance and friction are expected during behavior change
    • How follow-through builds self-trust over time

    Key Concepts Explained

    • Fresh Start Effect as a motivational spark
    • Dopamine and why motivation naturally fades
    • Prefrontal cortex as the center of planning and intention
    • Basal ganglia and its role in habit automation
    • Energy conservation as a primary function of the lower brain
    • Follow-through as infrastructure, not enthusiasm

    Practical Principles Shared in the Episode

    • Reduce decisions to conserve cognitive energy
    • Anchor new behaviors to existing routines through habit stacking
    • Shrink behaviors to reduce resistance and threat
    • Expect friction as part of learning, not failure
    • Build evidence through repetition rather than relying on excitement

    Key Takeaways

    • Motivation fading does not mean you are behind
    • Follow-through begins when excitement ends
    • Consistency during low motivation is what rewires the brain
    • Small steps repeated over time create sustainable change
    • Self-trust is built through evidence, not intention

    Related Think Thursday Episodes

    • The Myth of the Fresh Start Brain
    • Consistency: The Brain’s Super Power
    • The Iterative Mindset and Behavior Change
    • Belief Echoes and Why Change Feels Hard
    • Unbreakable Habits and the Voice That Keeps Them Alive


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    10 mins
  • Why "Mostly Dry January" is Enough
    Jan 5 2026

    It’s the first full week of the new year — and if Dry January is on your mind, than this episode is for you.

    In this solo episode, Molly shares insights from her current Mostly Dry January program and explains why your month doesn’t have to be perfect to be powerful. You’ll learn what the science says about cutting back (even partially), how to rewire your drinking habits using positive reinforcement, and why “mostly dry” is more than enough.

    If you're ready to ditch the all-or-nothing mindset and start building real momentum with your relationship with alcohol, this episode will help you do it — one small decision at a time.

    In This Episode:

    • Why “failing” Dry January doesn’t mean starting over
    • What research says about partial reductions in alcohol
    • The real reason willpower isn’t working — and what to try instead
    • How to use temptation bundling to feel good about change
    • Why moderation isn’t an excuse — it’s a skill

    Resources & Links:

    • Download the Temptation Bundling Worksheet
      Create alcohol-free routines that feel good — not forced.
      Download the PDF
    • Explore Drink-Less Success
      A 30-day neuroscience-based support system for peaceful drinking habits.
      Start Drink-Less Success
    • Try the Sunnyside App (15-day free trial)
      Molly’s top recommendation for mindful drink tracking.
      Join Sunnyside

    Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA:

    Healthy men under 65:

    No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week.

    Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:
    No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week.

    One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink.

    Abstinence from alcohol
    Abstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past.

    Benefits of “low-risk” drinking
    Following these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work.


    ★ Support this podcast ★
    Show More Show Less
    16 mins