The entire world is entering a mental health crisis. The next generation of Gen Z will receive more mental health support than previous generations. We’re human and naturally crave pleasure and comfort over pain and discomfort. You may have noticed finding less satisfaction in activities that previously made you happy. Instead, you pursue activities you think will make you happy but lead to more misery than before.
Kendra Cherry from Verywellmind wrote, “Delaying gratification means prioritizing a long-term goal over an immediately achievable one. Resisting the temptation of instant gratification can yield significant benefits that outweigh the challenges.”
When you were a kid, you had fun playing tag with your friends, being outside, and chasing each other, but why do you no longer experience the same level of excitement you felt before? Why is it so hard for you today to go outside and run a mile? In this article, you’ll learn the benefits of delaying gratification and how it contributes to the person you want to be.
What’s the difference?
Instant gratification is the indulgence in pleasurable activities to receive immediate joy, typically leading to more stress and anxiety afterward, while delayed gratification is the complete opposite. Instead of acquiring immediate satisfaction, delayed gratification involves engaging in activities requiring willpower and discipline, postponing pleasure until the end of the process.
While engaging in instant gratification activities, you focus on chasing the reward without recognizing the consequences of that activity. You enter a rabbit hole toward the pursuit of pleasure rather than success. Sometimes, the pleasurable activity you believe will bring satisfaction will backfire, causing you to feel worse than you did before.
Delayed gratification ignores short-term pleasure and prioritizes long-term rewards from taking on challenges and indulging in work geared towards success amid discomfort. Here are a few examples of activities that deliver instant gratification versus delayed gratification:
Instant Gratification | Delayed Gratification |
Eating fast food | Eating fruits and vegetables |
Scrolling through social media | Studying for an exam |
Spending money on luxuries | Saving and investing money in an index fund |
Here, you can see how activities delivering instant gratification differ from activities promoting delayed gratification. On the left, those activities lead to an instant dopamine rush, resulting in pleasure at first but can be a disaster in the end—while on the right, these activities are a huge hassle at first, but will result in greater long-term rewards.
Why should I delay gratification?
All successful individuals receive admiration for their ability to delay gratification. They engage in activities such as exercise and reading to serve significant long-term purposes instead of engaging in activities that reap short-term rewards. They’ve successfully mastered the game of life: prioritizing decisions that lead to extraordinary benefits over decisions that lead to regrets and misery.
By rejecting instant gratification, you can rewire your brain to seek pleasure from indulging in strenuous and back-breaking activities, further promoting the growth of discipline and accountability. With notifications going off every second and the desire to check your phone becoming even more irresistible, it’s nearly impossible to reject these high dopamine-generating activities, but this is what delivers the ultimate value of delayed gratification.
“If you get a peak in dopamine from a reward, it’s going to lower your baseline, and the cognitive interpretation is that you didn’t do the activity because you enjoyed it: you did it for the reward.”
-Andrew Huberman (Stanford Neuroscientist)