Dopamine Anticipation
#neuroscience #brain #dopamine #motivation
Stanford professor Brian Knutson's fMRI studies revealed a counterintuitive truth about Dopamine: our brain's pleasure centers activate most strongly not when we receive rewards, but when we anticipate them. It's the craving, not the satisfaction, that drives us forward.
This explains why entrepreneurs persist despite what Sean Parker calls "eating glass" in startups. Great innovators develop neural pathways that reward their personal evolution, finding dopamine hits in anticipating achieving the vision, while proving they can accomplish the seemingly impossible. They're not addicted to product launches or valuations, but to competing against yesterday's version of themselves. The world sees the exit; they savor the growth. For them, the journey has become the reward.