Why You Keep Repeating the Same Patterns: A New Model of the Mind
Why do certain behaviors keep repeating—despite insight, treatment, and real effort to change?
In this episode of The Psychology of It All, Dr. Raymond Zakhari breaks down a deeper model of human behavior that goes beyond traditional psychiatric diagnosis. You’ll learn how the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework shifts our understanding of mental health from rigid labels to underlying brain and nervous system processes.
From there, Dr. Zakhari introduces Imprinted Arousal Patterns (IAP)—a clinical framework that explains why patterns like anxiety, overworking, compulsive habits, and substance use persist and return under stress. Rather than viewing these behaviors as failures of willpower, IAP reframes them as learned nervous system loops designed to regulate internal states like stress, boredom, and emotional discomfort.
Through clear, real-world examples, this episode explores:
Why insight alone doesn’t stop repetitive behaviors
How stress triggers relapse across different conditions
The role of the nervous system in anxiety, addiction, and compulsive patterns
Why some people feel uncomfortable with stillness or calm
What effective treatment should actually target
This episode is essential listening for anyone interested in mental health, behavioral patterns, addiction, anxiety, trauma, and high-functioning burnout—especially those who feel “stuck” despite doing the right things.
If you’ve ever wondered why you keep returning to the same habits—or why traditional approaches only partially work—this episode offers a more precise and clinically grounded explanation.
For those interested in the full theoretical framework, see the original publication:
Zakhari R. Imprinted Arousal Pattern (IAP): A Transdiagnostic Clinical Reasoning for Compulsive Behaviors. Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association. Published online April 30, 2026.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/10783903261443980