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Why Awareness and Noticing Are the First Steps to Change

Woman practicing self-awareness and reflection in mirror as first step to personal change and transformation
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Awareness and noticing are the first steps to change because you cannot transform what you haven’t recognized. Without observing your emotions, thought patterns, and behavioral triggers first, any attempt at change becomes guesswork that leads to self-blame when it fails. Noticing allows you to identify what needs to change and craft workable next steps based on real information rather than rigid plans. Jumping straight to action without awareness is like building a house without blueprints: you might get something standing, but it won’t be what you actually needed.

One of my favorite moments to witness in therapy is when people realize that life doesn’t entirely happen to them. They have agency. They can’t control everything, but that doesn’t mean they can’t do anything, either. It’s a transformative understanding. It’s powerful to see the light bulbs go on, the spark of hope and determination in their eyes. This is the kind of transformation our team of mental health professionals works to facilitate every day—helping people discover their capacity for meaningful change.

Often, this realization is followed by the question: “Okay, but what do I DO?”

The Problem With Jumping Straight to Action

My answer tends to underwhelm people. I get the sense that they expect an action plan that is regimented and rigorous, probably with multiple subsections. They want the five-step program, the detailed schedule, the complete transformation blueprint.
 

But my recommendation is one of those suggestions that is simultaneously simple and difficult: notice.

Here’s what most people miss. We live in a culture obsessed with action. When something isn’t working, we want to fix it immediately. We want to do something concrete. Planning feels productive. Structure feels responsible. Action feels like progress. But when you charge into action without first noticing, you’re setting yourself up for a specific kind of failure: one that feels personal and hopeless instead of workable and solvable.

Woman in therapy session experiencing awareness and self-reflection as the first step to change with professional support

What Happens When You Skip Awareness

Here’s the fundamental issue with premature action: if you charge into a change without first noticing, you’re effectively building a house without any blueprints and hoping for the best. And while spontaneity can be valuable, my experience shows that when people act without noticing first, that’s not spontaneity at its best. That’s setting yourself up to adopt a far more self-blaming, hopeless, and imprecise narrative.

In those moments, I hear things like:
“It didn’t work because I’m lazy and broken. It’s impossible. It’s never going to work.”

This is both painful to hear and not particularly helpful for moving forward.

Compare that to when people notice first:

“I planned to do my grounding exercise in the morning, so I could check it off my to-do list and get that sense of satisfaction, but then I had a really hard time getting out of bed 5 minutes earlier.”

Now we can have a productive conversation. We can discuss whether it makes sense to move the grounding exercise to a different part of the day. We can explore ways to get to bed earlier. We can even talk about whether to put this idea on the back burner for now.

Key insight: Noticing helps us develop the palette of tools that create a workable next step. Without it, we’re stuck in vague self-criticism instead of specific, solvable problems.

How Noticing Creates Lasting Change

Noticing means paying attention to your experience without immediately trying to fix or change it. It’s about gathering information first, then using that information to inform what comes next. This approach is consistent with evidence-based practices outlined by the National Institute of Mental Health for effective behavioral change. When people practice this, they gather usable information about what’s actually happening, not what they think should be happening. That information becomes the foundation for change that actually endures.

This noticing-first approach forms the foundation of effective therapeutic support, where understanding yourself deeply creates the pathway for lasting transformation.

What to notice:
  • How you’re feeling emotionally and what bodily sensations you’re experiencing
  • What thoughts arise spontaneously throughout your day
  • The anxious voice, the doubting voice, the self-critical voice
  • What depletes your energy and what doesn’t feel quite right
  • What energizes you and what brings you genuine joy
  • Where you feel authentic versus where you feel like you’re performing
  • What makes you feel connected to others and valued
  • What types of conflict resolution feel more or less comfortable

You don’t need to notice everything at once. Start with one area: perhaps just emotions today, perhaps just your energy patterns this week. The goal isn’t perfection, it’s information.

What to Notice Before Taking Action

Before you make your next change, take time to simply observe. Research published by the American Psychological Association has shown that self-awareness practices, even brief ones, significantly improve decision-making and behavioral outcomes. You don’t need a journal, an app, or a formal tracking system. Just pause two or three times a day and notice what’s actually happening inside you.

Five key areas to observe:
 
  • Energy levels: When do you feel most alert? When does your energy decline? Understanding your natural rhythms allows you to work with them rather than against them. If you notice that work consistently drains your energy or triggers stress responses, that’s valuable information that can guide you toward strategies to manage stress at work before it leads to burnout.
  • Emotional patterns: What triggers anxiety, contentment, frustration, or peace? Learning to identify these emotional triggers is the first step. Understanding how to deal with anxiety comes after you’ve gathered this information.
  • Physical sensations: Where do you hold tension? When does your body feel at ease? Your body often signals what your mind hasn’t yet processed.
  • Thought patterns: What narratives do you tell yourself repeatedly? These stories shape how you interpret your experiences and what actions feel possible.
  • Authentic moments: When do you feel most like yourself versus when you’re performing? This distinction reveals what actually aligns with your values.
  • The information you gather from noticing will inform what your next small step should be. Not a complete overhaul. Not a rigid ten-step plan. One small, workable next step based on what you’ve actually observed.
While self-observation provides valuable insights, sometimes psychological testing can reveal patterns and underlying factors that aren’t immediately visible through noticing alone, offering a more complete picture of what’s influencing your experiences.
 
Two women having meaningful conversation about awareness and personal growth as the beginning of transformative change
 

The Brain Science Behind Awareness and Change

Part of why I’m not a strong advocate for highly detailed plans when people are ready to change is because I understand what change looks like in the brain, and I want to set people up for success.

Our brains work to be efficient. Whatever we typically do becomes the default response, even on a neurological level. This process has been extensively documented by research from the National Institutes of Health in studies on neuroplasticity and behavioral change. When we try a new approach, whether that’s adding a self-compassion practice, improving sleep habits, or initiating difficult conversations, we’re making a change. We’re deviating from the default response.

Our brains are highly protective, so change, even positive and desired change, can be perceived as a threat. This means that enduring change requires our brain to receive cues of safety while doing something new. This is often why we’re able to follow ambitious New Year’s resolutions for a few days, and then they fall to the wayside.

Part of helping our brains adapt (experiencing something new and different as safe rather than threatening) is by titrating the amount of change. Noticing is the optimal dose of change.

Why noticing works at the neurological level

When we practice noticing, we accomplish two things simultaneously. First, we execute change at a more optimal rate for our brain’s capacity to adapt. Second, we gain usable information as we continue to craft our next steps. Noticing is different enough from your default pattern to count as change, but safe enough that your brain doesn’t trigger a threat response. At the same time, every observation provides information about what your actual next step should be, making each subsequent change more likely to succeed.
 
This is why noticing before acting leads to sustainable change, while jumping straight to action often leads to frustration and self-blame.
 

How to Practice Noticing in Your Daily Life

Ready to begin? Here’s how to start practicing awareness today without overwhelming yourself.
 
  1. Start with one focus area: Pick one thing to notice, not everything, just one. Perhaps it’s your energy levels throughout the day. Perhaps it’s what thoughts arise when you’re stressed. Trying to notice everything at once defeats the purpose of starting small.
  2. Pause 2-3 times daily: Take 30 seconds to observe what you’re experiencing. Morning, midday, evening. No judgment, no fixing, just observing. This brief check-in is enough to start gathering meaningful data about your patterns.
  3. Observe without immediately problem-solving: This is often the most challenging part because your brain will want to immediately address what you notice. Resist that urge initially. First, simply collect the data. Notice the pattern over several days before deciding what it means or what to do about it.
  4. Use your observations to craft one small next step: After you’ve spent some time observing (perhaps a week, perhaps longer), use what you’ve learned to make one small, specific change. Not a complete transformation. One adjustment based on what you’ve actually noticed.

Example of noticing in practice

Week 1: You notice you’re consistently exhausted by 3pm each day.
Week 2: You continue observing and realize the pattern remains consistent regardless of your morning routine.
Week 3: You use this information to schedule cognitively demanding tasks before 3pm instead of fighting your natural rhythm.
 
Result: You accomplish more with less effort, experience less frustration, and create change that works with your natural patterns rather than against them.
 

You’re not trying to become a different person overnight. You’re trying to understand the person you are right now, so you can make choices that actually work for your specific circumstances and tendencies.

Moving Forward

The next time you realize your own agency and are ready to make a change, remember these principles:
  • Notice your experience: pay attention to what’s actually happening, not what you think should be happening
  • Use your observations to inform your pacing and next steps: let what you notice guide what comes next, rather than forcing a predetermined plan
  • You’re doing meaningful work: respect yourself and the process, because change is challenging and requires your brain to adapt
The connection between noticing and change isn’t just therapeutic theory. It’s how transformation actually occurs in the brain, in people’s lives, and in psychiatric care. Awareness is the foundation. Everything else follows from that first step.
 
If you find that noticing reveals patterns that feel overwhelming or difficult to navigate alone, professional support can make all the difference. Reach out to our team to explore how therapy can help you move from awareness to meaningful change.

FAQs About Awareness and Change

Who said the first step toward change is awareness?

Psychologist Nathaniel Branden is credited with the quote, “The first step toward change is awareness. The second step is acceptance.” This principle has become foundational in therapeutic practice and behavioral change psychology, emphasizing that recognizing patterns precedes the ability to transform them.

The five key points of awareness for creating change are:
  1. Emotional awareness: Recognizing your feelings and emotional responses
  2. Physical awareness: Noticing bodily sensations and where you hold tension
  3. Mental awareness: Observing thought patterns and internal narratives
  4. Behavioral awareness: Identifying actions and habits that shape your daily life
  5. Relational awareness: Understanding how you connect with others and what makes you feel authentic

Developing self-awareness is an ongoing process rather than a destination. Most people begin noticing meaningful patterns within 1-2 weeks of consistent daily observation. However, deeper self-awareness develops over months and years as you continue to practice noticing across different contexts and life situations.

Mindfulness is a practice of present-moment attention without judgment, often used for stress reduction and mental clarity. Awareness for change is more action-oriented—it focuses specifically on gathering information about your patterns, triggers, and behaviors to inform specific next steps. While mindfulness can support awareness, awareness for change has a deliberate goal of transformation.

Self-awareness is crucial for mental health because it allows you to identify triggers, understand your emotional patterns, recognize when you need support, and make informed decisions about your wellbeing. It’s the difference between reacting automatically to situations and responding thoughtfully based on understanding yourself deeply.

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All health-related information contained within this Blog/Web site is intended to be general in nature and should not be considered as a substitute for the advice of a personal healthcare provider. The information provided is for educational purposes only, designed to help patients and their families wellbeing. 

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