Hello and welcome to a weekend episode of Daily English — where we try to grow, in English and in life. Today’s idea is subtle — but powerful.

It’s called moral licensing. And it means this: After doing something good, we sometimes feel subconsciously allowed to do something less good.

Not because we are hypocritical. Because the brain protects our self-image.

Research in social psychology shows something interesting.

When people are reminded of their positive traits or good actions, they are more likely afterward to behave in ways that slightly contradict those values.

For example, People who express support for equality may later show more biased decisions.

People who recall healthy behavior may later indulge more. Why?

Because the mind keeps a moral balance sheet.

Once it feels “morally secure,” it relaxes its standards.

The brain doesn’t think in strict logic. It thinks in identity.

If I believe “I am a good person,” one good act confirms that identity.

And once confirmed, the pressure to behave consistently decreases. That’s the mechanism.

This happens in everyday life. You work out. You reward yourself excessively with an unhealthy snack

You are patient all day. You justify snapping at night.

You recycle. You feel less guilty about overconsumption. The good action becomes psychological credit.

But here’s the important part: Moral licensing is unconscious. We rarely notice the internal negotiation. That’s why awareness matters.

So this weekend, simply observe your internal negotiations. After doing something good,
 notice what your mind quietly suggests next. Not to judge yourself. Just to understand the pattern.

Because often, the most interesting part is not the action — but the justification that follows.

The brain negotiates with itself more than we realize.

And awareness doesn’t make you perfect — it just makes you less automatic.

Thank you for being here today. Have a beautiful week ahead of you and see you tomorrow.