how to stop overthinking - podcast episode cover

how to stop overthinking

Jan 09, 202614 minSeason 2Ep. 9
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Episode description

why do we stay up at night ruminating on the past or future? why is overthinking so harmful and painful? how do we STOP overthinking? we'll discuss all of this in today's episode. let's talk about it!

MERCH ⁠⁠HERE⁠⁠!

Welcome back to Feel Your Feelings with Ethan Jewell! I'm not a psychologist, a doctor, or a mental health professional. Instead, I'm here to guide you through the world of mental health from a casual, relatable lens. I've been there, I've felt that, and I understand what you're feeling. Let's feel some feelings.

Transcript

Have you ever laid in bed replaying the same conversation or same situation over and over and over in your head because you feel like it just should have gone differently? Because you feel like you made a small mistake? And you just sit there thinking about it over and over, running through different scenarios, running through how the next conversation may go and you find yourself sleepless. You find yourself driving yourself crazy with your own thinking. If that sounds familiar, I'm

right there with you. I've spent years dealing with that exact same feeling, that exact same situation, and I've been trying to figure out how do we stop overthinking? My name is Ethan Jewell and welcome back to Feel Your Feelings. Now, before anything else, I want to remind you on this podcast, I'm not a doctor, I'm not a psychiatrist, I'm not a professional in the mental health industry whatsoever. And today I'm not going to preach the science of it all at you.

I'm not going to come at you from a clinical perspective. Instead, I'm going to talk to you as somebody who understands what you're going through, as somebody who's been through it. I've been struggling with my mental health for the better part of six years, and I have tried and tried and failed many different ways to get better. And I'm finally more on the healing side and I want to start the conversation about mental health. So thank you so much for being

here. Today we're going to talk about the topic of overthinking. This is an incredibly widespread problem and I don't think a lot of people think of it as that much of a problem. I think a lot of people actually identify themselves within overthinking. They identify themselves like I am an overthinker, I am an anxious person, and there is a level of identity or comfort that comes within finding something like overthinking that you struggle with and identifying yourself within

that. But The thing is, overthinking is not just something to identify with. In fact, it's dangerous and it messes with your mental health more than you may know. It messes with your sleep, it messes with your ability to function day-to-day, and it could be eating away at you without you even realizing. So today we're going to talk about what overthinking really is and why we do it. Then we're going to talk about

the harms of overthinking. And then finally, we're going to go through a list of like 7 solutions that I put together for you to try. Now, these are not guaranteed by the book, easy to do solutions. I'm not telling you that you're going to watch this episode and be able to 100% cure your overthinking, but instead I want to give you the tools to be able to move forward and figure out on your own what works for you. Because ultimately, the journey of healing is about learning.

It's about finding yourself. It's about learning what works for you. So the first step of learning what works for you is information. To start, overthinking is more than just thinking too much. In psychology, it's called rumination. It's when your mind keeps looping through thoughts about the past or the future without reaching a solution, grounding, or action. When we overthink, we analyze every single detail, we think about every single outcome.

Usually these thoughts trend negative and we just start focusing on what could go wrong, what is wrong with us, what we're doing wrong, and it becomes torturous. It doesn't help it, it hurts. Many people think that they're just preparing for the future, or maybe they're thinking through the past, but really ruminating it does more damage than good. Research shows that it can reduce decision making ability because you're stuck in analysis instead of action. It can increase anxiety and

emotional distress. It disrupts sleep because obviously if you're of thinking, you're not sleeping. It also uses mental energy without solving anything. It feels productive because you know you're thinking through things, you're thinking about the future, you're thinking about the past. But realistically, it doesn't lead to clarity, it just drains you. This isn't just a personality type, it's a cycle that keeps us trapped in fear of outcomes or in the pain of the past instead

of moving towards solutions. So if it's so painful, why do we do it? Let's look at actual psychological reasons of why we overthink the first one. Fear. OK, Fear of mistakes or uncertainty. We overthink because we're afraid of getting it wrong. When the outcome is important or it feels important, the brain tries to kind of cover all the angles. It tries to think of all the possible outcomes. It feels like a productive way of preparing, but there's no finish line in these thought

loops, only more worry. Another reason is maybe if you struggle with perfectionism, if perfect is the end goal, nothing is ever good enough. And that leads us to think and think and analyze and try to prepare for this unrealistic outcome of perfection. Next, it might be trying to regain control. When life feels unpredictable, our mind ruminates to feel like we do have control, but it's

just an illusion. We may be feeling like we don't have control, and that's OK. You're allowed to not have control of every aspect of your life. But our brain doesn't like that. It wants to be prepared, so it tries, it's very best to take control by thinking way too much. And although that feels like control, instead it's just worry. Overthinking it doesn't make you smarter. It doesn't prepare you. It keeps you stuck. It keeps you stuck in the same loop over and over and over

again. And the danger with that loop is when we get stuck thinking of the what ifs, all of the negative outcomes. It can become a self fulfilling prophecy. If you are thinking about healing your mental health, but you're worried about, oh but what if I'm not good enough? What if I don't actually heal? And you find yourself overthinking all of this instead

of taking action. The actions that you do take will be influenced by the negative thoughts that you have been repeating in your head over and over again. So now let's get to the part that all of us are here for. How do we actually stop overthinking? I want to remind you, none of these are guaranteed. You should try all of them in your own life. And if one works, stick to it. That is how healing progress is

made. So first, it sounds silly and cliche, but the first one is mindfulness and presence. These are two buzzwords that we hear often in the mental health community that you need to be mindful of your feelings, that you need to be mindful of what you're thinking. And it sounds a little quite ridiculous, but it isn't just a buzzword. Many studies show that mindfulness breaks rumination by bringing attention back to the present moment. And this is something that I

personally learned in therapy. My therapist taught me how to sit with feelings or thoughts and bring attention to them. And by doing so, it can get rid of these thought patterns and loops that we become stuck in. So here's how to do it. You sit quietly for three to 5 minutes in a quiet room. You could put headphones on, noise cancelling, but no noise. Just sit and quiet and focus on your breath. And when your thoughts distract, you gently bring your focus back

to your breath. Just think in and out and focus on that breathing. It's not about stopping the thoughts, it's about not getting lost in them. So when a thought comes up, when we begin overthinking and we start thinking about something that has happened or something that could happen, you just bring your focus gently back to your breath. This teaches your brain that yes, those thoughts can exist, but we don't need to ruminate on them. We don't need to sit there over

and over thinking. And the amazing thing about this is you can do it almost anywhere. The moment you find yourself over thinking, you can have that awareness given by that knowledge of those thought loops, and you can stop yourself and you can sit down and bring your attention back to your breath instead of getting caught up in those thought loops. Next, you can set a dedicated

worry time. I know this sounds a little bit silly, but instead of letting worry flood your whole day, you can schedule a specific time for it. Research shows that compartmentalizing worry trains your brain that it has a designated space to think, so it stops invading all of your time. It's difficult to stop overthinking in its tracks, but it's much more manageable to allow yourself to overthink in smaller chunks.

So instead of overthinking throughout your entire day, maybe you set a 10 minute timer and you think through all of your concerns and your worries and your ruminations during that window, and then when the time's up, you tell yourself that's it, and you move on. This may take some time to train your brain to actually have an off switch, but once you do, it becomes a very powerful way to hold your overthinking within one smaller window instead of your entire day.

Another powerful tool you can use is you can challenge your thoughts. Overthinking often creates unrealistic or exaggerated thoughts, but cognitive techniques can help you question them. So instead of just accepting all of these thoughts, instead of just accepting the rumination and letting yourself get worried and anxious and not be able to sleep because of it, you can ask yourself, is this thought fact, or fear? Am I catastrophizing? What evidence supports this

thought? By doing this, you directly challenge your overthinking, and instead of letting it just completely run wild, you can potentially stop it in its tracks and really be able to narrow in on where that thought is coming from. Instead of just accepting that thought as truth, you can figure out whether it's just coming from a place of fear, if it's coming from a place of worry, if

it's coming from an anxiety. And by doing that, you take away the power of overthinking, you take away the power of those thoughts just running wild through your brain, and you take back control to yourself. Another method is to journal. I will always recommend journaling. I think it is incredibly powerful and incredibly underrated. Writing down your thoughts can help your brain externalize and organize them instead of just

tucking them down. Research shows that writing worries helps reduce stress and mental clutter, so you can set a short timer and just write everything on your mind without judgement. You know, don't reread it immediately. Just write it down and release it. This is very similar to the cognitive benefits of therapy. You are getting out your thoughts. You are getting out your feelings, and then you are letting them go.

You are letting them exist. There is so much power in being able to let go of your thoughts and let go of your feelings instead of holding on to them and thinking through them and ruminating on them over and over and over again. You don't need to overpower your feelings, you don't need to fight them, you don't need to overpower these thoughts and push them out of your life completely. You just need to learn to rein them in a little bit.

And journaling is an incredibly powerful way to accept those thoughts and the fact that you're having them and be able to put them onto something tangible like paper and then let them go. Finally, you should practice self compassion. And I know this sounds incredibly cliche, but people who overthink often judge themselves harshly. Research shows that self compassion reduces rumination and improves emotional resilience. So talk to yourself like you

would a friend. Understand that it's OK to feel this way and you are doing the best you can with what you know right now. That compassion can break up this cycle because often overthinking comes with guilt. You start thinking about a situation in the past and how you could have done things differently, and you feel guilty that you didn't handle it correctly. Or you start thinking about something in the future and you

start doubting yourself. If you practice self compassion, it breaks down that guilt and it breaks down that doubt. It breaks down the shame that you have related to your feelings, and it allows you to handle your overthinking from a much more neutral position, which is a powerful position to give yourself. It gives you an upper edge, it

gives you an advantage. Instead of being lost within your overthinking, you can become a little bit more neutral and come at it from a realistic standpoint. This compassion, this softness to yourself can completely break up the cycle. Overthinking isn't a flaw. It's often your brain trying to protect you from uncertainty, mistakes, or fear. But it's also not an identity. Thinking endlessly doesn't solve problems, it just kind of

repackages them. And what stops that loop isn't shutting your mind off, it's redirecting your mind with intention. So I strongly suggest that you try one of the methods that I recommended today, or maybe do a little more research and try something entirely different. But what matters is you take action against your overthinking. So try journaling, try self compassion, try to release those feelings and release those thoughts instead of pulling them closer and looping them over and

over and over again. What matters is you try healing. Your mental health is never going to be a perfect linear journey. You will fall back and slip up many times over and over again. But what matters is you keep trying because you are capable. You are capable of healing and you are capable of controlling your overthinking. This overthinking doesn't define you, it's just a pattern, and patterns can be changed with practice, grace, and awareness.

You're not alone in this, and you can train your mind to stop torturing you with overthinking and live your life with more clarity. That's going to wrap it up for today's episode. If you need help feeling your feelings, you should check out my music on all platforms under the name of Ethan Jewel. I almost guarantee it'll make you cry. Also, if you enjoy this podcast, a great way to support me is to get merch. I just dropped a merch line. This hoodie is one of them.

You can find it at ethanjewel.myshopify.com or at the link in the description. So thank you so much for being here. Thank you for understanding that you're overthinking does not define you. And as always, thank you for feeling your feelings. I'll see you next time.

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