People want a clean answer — three days, twenty-one, sixty-six — but breaking a habit is not a timer that runs out. A habit is a loop: a cue triggers a routine that delivers a reward. You cannot simply delete the routine, because the cue and the craving remain and keep firing. That is why willpower-only quitting so often fails within days.
The durable approach is replacement, not removal. Keep the same cue and reward, but swap the routine. If stress (cue) drives you to a cigarette (routine) for relief (reward), the relief still needs a source — a short walk, breathwork, a piece of gum. The brain accepts a substitute far more easily than a vacuum.
How long that takes depends on several things: how many years the habit has been rehearsed, how often the cue appears, how strong the craving is, and whether the environment still invites the old behavior. Removing the trigger from your surroundings — leaving the snacks out of the house, deleting the app — shortens the process more than sheer effort does.
So instead of counting down to a finish line, track the streak of days you responded to the cue with the new routine. In Zinciri Kırma, an avoid-type task treats each clean day as a forged link, and the chain becomes the honest record of how the replacement is taking hold. Some habits loosen in a couple of weeks; deeply grooved ones take months. What reliably works is not a magic number of days but consistent repetition of the better response until it, and not the old habit, becomes the automatic one.