The "Why Did I Do That?" Journal: Decoding Your Own Impulsive Actions
Why did you do that? No, really—why? Why did you buy that glow-in-the-dark yoga mat when you don’t even do yoga? Why did you text your ex at 2 a.m. with a message that could be summed up as “help me, I’m lonely and reckless”? Why did you order dessert after publicly declaring you were “cutting down on sugar”? Welcome to the land of human impulse—the split-second kingdom where logic takes a holiday and desire drives the car. We like to think we’re rational beings, but truthfully, we’re just overgrown toddlers with credit cards, smartphones, and enough self-awareness to regret things five minutes after doing them. And yet, here’s the kicker: these blunders aren’t random. Every “what was I thinking?” moment has a trigger, and decoding it can be more enlightening than a TED Talk. Stress, boredom, hunger, FOMO, or the universal curse of scrolling social media at midnight—each plays puppeteer with our behaviour. This is why you need a “Why Did I Do That?” journal. Not a glossy, Instagrammabl...