Why do people resist change?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Uncertainty triggers threat
Uncertainty triggers threat ✓ — Correct! The brain evolved to minimize energy and uncertainty. Change means unpredictability, which the amygdala interprets as potential threat. This triggers loss aversion (losses feel 2x worse than equivalent gains) and status quo bias. Change requires mental effort and risks failure. The brain's default: stick with familiar = safe. Resistance is survival instinct!
Laziness prevents effort — Wrong. Resistance isn't laziness—it's the brain's threat-detection system perceiving uncertainty as danger. It's an evolutionary safety mechanism.
Habits can't be broken — Wrong. Habits can change (neuroplasticity), but the brain resists because change creates uncertainty, which triggers threat responses.
More Psychology & Behavior questions
- Why does wearing dark clothing sometimes make people look thinner?
- Two horizontal-striped dresses use different gaps. Why can their width illusion differ?
- Why do horizontal stripes sometimes make people look thinner?
- A glossy black jacket can still reveal curves. What cue gives them away?
- Against a dark or shadowed background, black fabric loses which size cue?
- Why does a black outfit sometimes make a person look slimmer than a white one, even when the clothing cut is identical?
