The popular concept of a "dopamine detox" rests on a fundamental misunderstanding: dopamine isn't the villain of compulsive behavior, but the engine of all goal-directed action, from scrolling to meditation. Neuroscientist Kent Berridge's research reveals something more useful: there is a crucial difference between wanting (the drive toward something, powered by dopamine) and liking (the actual pleasure of having it, governed by different molecules entirely). Dr. Richie Davidson and Dr. Cortland Dahl point out that the problem isn't wanting itself, but what happens when wanting decouples from liking -- when we scroll endlessly not because we're enjoying it, but because we're trapped in "hollow seeking," chasing the next thing that might finally satisfy. Rather than renunciation, what actually helps is what contemplatives call savoring: the learnable skill of lingering in what's already nourishing, whether that's a deep breath or a real conversation, until "you can let go of seeking completely and tune right into the delicious nectar that is always there." You aren't trying to want less -- you're learning to like more.