Doomscrolling rarely feels like a choice. It feels like falling-a pull toward one more headline, one more update, one more confirmation that the world is exactly as unsettling as you suspected. And somewhere in the middle of it, the scrolling stops being about staying informed and becomes something harder to name: a compulsive search for certainty in a feed that only ever delivers more uncertainty. This book explores what actually drives the habit of consuming relentless negative content. It examines the emotional patterns beneath doomscrolling the anxiety that masquerades as vigilance, the hypervigilance that mistakes bad news consumption for control, and the quiet emotional numbness that settles in when the nervous system has absorbed more distress than it can meaningfully process. Quit Doomscrolling Rewire Your Brain offers a compassionate look at the neurological and psychological dynamics behind compulsive news consumption. It explores how the brain's threat-detection systems interact with algorithmically curated fear, how that interaction gradually reshapes what feels normal, and how understanding these patterns with honesty and self-compassion can begin to loosen their hold more effectively than willpower alone ever could. This is not a news avoidance manual or a digital wellness prescription. It is a thoughtful exploration of the inner life behind the habit for anyone who has closed a news app feeling worse than before they opened it, and opened it again anyway.