unbrokenday/guides/finding triggers
Find your triggers: the pattern behind every relapse
Updated June 2026 · written by the anonymous guy doing it, not a clinic
Relapses feel random, but they almost never are. Pull up your last three slips and look: it's the same time of day, the same place, the same feeling — late night, in bed, phone in hand, bored or stressed or alone. You don't find triggers by introspecting harder; you find them by writing one honest sentence after every slip. Within three entries the pattern stops being a mystery, and a visible pattern is a fixable one.
How to tell this is you
- Every relapse "just kind of happened" — you can't really explain any of them
- You're white-knuckling all day when the actual risk is a two-hour window at night
- The same scenario keeps recurring and you keep being surprised by it
- You've never once written down what preceded a slip
What's actually happening
A relapse is the last link in a chain that started much earlier — the schedule gap, the doomscroll, the stress you didn't decompress, the bed-with-phone. Fighting at the last link is the hardest place to fight; the urge is at full strength and you're at your weakest. Trigger-mapping moves the fight upstream, where it's cheap. The reason writing beats remembering is simple: memory edits the story to protect your ego. The log doesn't.
The move
- Log every slip. Time, place, feeling — one sentence, ten seconds, written before the shame edits it.
- Read for repeats. After three entries, look for the common element. There's almost always exactly one or two.
- Break the chain early. Fix the upstream link: the phone in bed, the empty Friday, the feed. Not the final moment.
One line to remember: The relapse starts an hour before the relapse.
Do this in the next two minutes
You can map your pattern tonight from memory — it's rough data, but it's data:
- Write down your last three slips: time, place, feeling — best guess is fine
- Circle what repeats. That's your primary trigger, not a theory about one
- Make one upstream change today that breaks that specific chain
Track it privately
The free UnbrokenDay tracker keeps your streak, your urge timer, and your relapse notes on your phone — no account, no server, nothing to leak. The urge button alone is worth the bookmark.
What if I genuinely can't see a pattern?
Then you don't have enough entries yet — keep logging, because three to five honest ones almost always expose it. If the entries truly look random, the pattern is usually a state rather than a situation: tired, alone, and unstructured time. Fix those three and you've covered most of the map.