Types of overthinking

Types of overthinking

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Like ice-cream, there are so many types of overthinking. 

Given the busyness of our minds and the unavoidable stream of thoughts we all have every moment we’re awake, it’s natural that each one of those thoughts could unfold into a thinking pattern.

You can have a thinking pattern about your morning routine, how to read a book, ask for a raise, and so on. Similarly, when facing an upsetting or anxiety provoking situation, of course, your mind is going to come up with a thinking pattern about how to manage, handle, and take care of what’s stressing you out.

The more that you rely on those thinking patterns, the more they get reinforced, get established, and get generalized to similar situations:

Here is the deal:

There are an alarming number of major life decisions we need to make: who we choose to marry, the school we go to, the house we want to buy, the next job you need to apply to, a relationship you need to get out from, the location where you want to retire, the amount of money you need to retire, and so on. Each one of those decisions requires careful thinking, for sure.

Simultaneously, there are day-to-day decisions, banal ones that we also get stuck on at times: the size of the TV you are going to buy, the coffee machine you need to get for your office, the model of the cell phone you’re going to get, how you spend your time, which task to focus on first given the laundry list of things you have to take care of,  the type of laptop you need for creating videos, the destination of your next vacation, the veterinarian for your pet, the book you’re going to read to your children. And so on.

Whether you’re making a major life decision or day-to-day one, all of them can be anxiety provoking. Naturally, as all humans do, you think of that particular situation as an attempt to solve it and with that, to solve your discomfort, struggle, uncertainty, and stress with it.

It’s all that thinking you do that evolves into overthinking patterns that, paradoxically, instead of moving you forward, it keeps you stuck in your head in the long run. It’s like overthinking is a safety move.

When completing my internship, with limited financial resources as a grad student, I decided to treat myself with a coffee machine. I love to drink a good cup of coffee! I looked at my budget and I could afford a coffee machine between $80 – 100.- max. The search began. Google recommend me to keep in mind these variables:

2021 11 18 17 10 32 1

My friend, a coffee snob like myself, encouraged me to consider “strength and flavor” as important qualities for this new acquisition.

In my relentless efforts to make the best decision for what a coffee machine represents to me, the amount of money, and all those variables that appear to be important, I spent 3 months dwelling on this decision. Until finally, fed up with this overthinking, I drove myself to a store and bought “a coffee machine.”

Overthinking is when thinking gets in your way of living your life.

Here are the types of overthinking patterns that you need to watch out for:

  1. Thinking about doing things right and perfectly
  2. Thinking about all the good reasons to postpone and delay stuff
  3. Thinking about how much certainty you need to move forward
  4. Thinking about the worst-case scenarios
  5. Thinking about past negative outcomes or past mistakes
  6. Thinking about not being good enough in some way
  7. Thinking about the different ways to get out of a stressful situation
  8. Thinking about how you’re the only responsible person for others’ wellbeing & important situations
  9. Thinking about how thinking is fundamentally important

While thinking carefully is an integral part of our lives, it also eject us from the present and rob us of fulfillment.

5 Easy Ways to Cultivate Self-Awareness

5 Easy Ways to Cultivate Self-Awareness

Life is a succession of present moments since we open our eyes to the moment we close them to fall asleep. There is so many fun, exciting, painful, joyful, pleasurable, and interesting moments we navigate throughout a given day, and there are also those unique and impactful moments that help us to grow, be better human beings and show up to those we love as we want to do so.

It’s in those moments that, if we pay close attention,  we become self-aware of what matters, what gets in our way of being who we want to be, what we could do differently, or what needs to change.

Self-awareness is not a drink, a pill, or a magical mushroom that you consume but a skill that can be fostered and nurtured.

And if you make it a habit, you can put it into action. Let’s dive into it!

What is self-awareness?

Self-awareness is the ability to:

  • Observe ourselves in a giving context: in which situations we get emotionally uncomfortable or struggle with worries, fears, anxieties, and rumination.
  • Acknowledge our personal history: how our past influences our behavior.
  • Notice our behavioral patterns, public and private ones: what are our go-to actions? 
  • Explore the impact of our actions in our day-to-day lives, relationships with others, and the relationship with ourselves: what happens when we do “x in a given context?”
  • Understand how our mind works and how we relate to our thoughts to make sense of the world within us and outside of us: how do we relate to thinking in general?

Self-awareness, in a nutshell, is observing before jumping to fix or solve anything

Now, we can be aware of our personal history and understand how our childhood, family experiences and socio-cultural environment have influenced us, that’s one form of self-awareness; and at a different level, there are all the painful, unbearable, and agonizing encounters that put us in contact with internal discomfort.

Like height, all of us have some of the self-awareness to start with, some people more than others, and yet, self-awareness is a skill that can be cultivated, we all can have it, and a skill that liberates us from living life as it happens to us and more like creating a life for us. 

For instance, I was talking to a friend recently about his playing-it-safe moves, we mapped the following:

When feeling lonely, my friend plays it safe by booking his schedule with different events and making sure there are no empty spots; going along with what his friends prefer to do, even though he doesn’t like those activities; makes an extra effort to be funny, goofy, even though he’s feeling tired and a bid down; texts multiple potential romantic partners in a dating app so he has always available options for dates. The bottom line is that, when feeling lonely, my friend plays-it-safe by minimizing his needs and avoiding feeling lonely.

The truth is that every time you experience some form of uncomfortable thoughts, feelings, sensations – you do something: you either try to solve that discomfort in your head – thinking and overthinking at times – or doing something; taking action. You play-it-safe.

Without self-awareness, we’ll be living in a random vacuum of things happening to us and we’ll be reactively responding to them with playing-it-safe moves. But it doesn’t have to be that way.

5 ways to cultivate self-awareness:

I’m almost sure you don’t want to live your life in pilot mode but in a meaningful way and make the best use of your time, energy, and passions. You can cultivate self-awareness anytime, and the more you try it, the more that it becomes second nature.

1. Notice when you’re in pain

This probably sounds pretty obvious, but all those moments in which you find yourself struggling with emotional distress, even when you cannot pinpoint exactly the source of it or the particular emotion you’re feeling, that’s a time to notice how those feelings are demanding you take action, are asking you to do something or to say something.

In those moments, you need to pay attention to how you’re attempting to handle that emotion: are you making room for it, or are you trying to get rid of it?

Question to ask yourself:

  • What is the emotion I’m running away from and need to make room for, learn from, and befriend?

2. Pay attention to your thinking patterns

Have you ever noticed when you spend hours and hours in your head to the point that instead of feeling clear-headed with your thinking process, you end up with a headache?

To cultivate awareness you need to pay attention to those moments in which you’re stuck in your head and check what your mind is doing and pushing you to think about. In those moments, take a deep breathe and check which one of these specific thinking patterns – playing-it-safe moves – your mind is engaging in:

  • Analyzing a situation because you’re searching for reassurance
  • Thinking quickly about gloom and doom scenarios 
  • Ruminating about past situations over and over
  • Telling yourself that your needs are not important
  • Exploring every what-if thought that comes into your mind
  • Assuming quick responsibility for others’ well-being as if you’re the only person responsible for those matters
  • Criticizing and negatively judging yourself for past situations or things you have said or done
  • Assuming that every thought your mind comes up with is important and you need to respond to it.

Question to ask yourself:

  • What is my mind trying to protect me from so hard using this [name of the playing-it-safe strategy]?

You can take the Playing-it-safe questionnaire to figure out those thinking patterns and actions that keep you stuck in your head.

3. Check your values and how you have been living them

When was the last time that you paused and asked yourself: Am I doing what matters? Am I living my values in my relationships, career, friendships, and spiritual life?

The reality is that most of us live life letting life happen to us and if we’re lucky, we figure out what’s truly important to us and what we want to stand for. So, another way to foster self-awareness is by pausing and making it a habit to check if what are your values, and whether your actions are congruent with them or not. 

You can set a monthly time in your schedule to check how you’re living your values.

Questions to ask yourself:

  • Am I living the life I want to live?
  • Then select four areas of your life (e.g. friendships, parenting, romantic relationships, spirituality, career, community) and ask yourself: Am I being the person I want to be in this [area]

If you want to do your own values-based mid-year review, here is a 21-page template you can use; it includes a description of 9 areas, a values thesaurus, a values dashboard, and reflective prompts for each area in your life.

[ Click here to download a 21-page template of a values-based annual review]

4. Check how you handle interpersonal conflict

Who doesn’t encounter conflict with others? Whether that’s in a friendship, romantic relationship, parenting, or work relationship, it’s quite likely that we’re going to experience some form of disagreement, misunderstanding, confusion, and disappointment. That’s just how relationships are; no relationship is exempt from it.  And yet, conflict doesn’t have to be a deal-breaker but an opportunity to grow, learn and foster emotional intimacy in some relationships.

And just to make it crystal clear, when thinking about conflict, I’m not thinking of people screaming at each other; I’m thinking of conflict as every time two or more people have a clash of opinions, wants, desires, and wishes.

Here are the most common conflict tactics people use and you need to watch for when dealing with interpersonal disagreements:

  • Demanding or making threats
    Going into hammer mode comes with making blunt threats, demands, or requests. Sometimes you may yell; other times, you may make a threat with a soft tone of voice.
  • Blaming or externalizing
    With this go-to tactic, you make others responsible for your stressful feelings, sensations, and even behaviors. I’m not saying the things others do aren’t wrong or inconsiderate, but blaming them distracts you from noticing your own hurt.
  • Reason-giving
    Using this go-to tactic is listing all the reasons, explanations, or justifications that your inner voice comes up with within the middle of a fight. What’s the outcome? You don’t hear the other person and your behavior may be unhelpful for achieving the relationship you want to have.I’m not saying you don’t have valid reasons to do what you do, say what you say, or feel what you feel; I’m just inviting you to notice whether holding on with white knuckles to those narratives is effective.
  • Character attacks
    At times your mind has a hard time separating a person from their behavior, and therefore the whole person’s character comes under attack rather than specific behavior. Have you ever been on the receiving end of someone attacking you with criticisms? Do you remember how it felt? A client said: “The last time I was in a situation in which a person I deeply love criticized me, I felt as if I were being psychologically stabbed; it didn’t make sense to me that because of a mistake I made, my whole person was being attacked.”
  • Placating
    Solving a conflict – using this go-to tactic – is focusing 100 percent on the other person’s needs, putting your needs, wants, and desires under the rug.
  • Disconnecting
    Going into ice-cube mode is going into an emotional and physical disconnection; it’s like you’re there, and you hear the other person, but you have shut down emotionally and nothing breaks your emotional walls. Like an ice cube, you come across as a cold person in those moments.

Questions to ask yourself:

  • What’s the cost of using those go-to conflict tactics in your relationship?
  • What do you need to do to remember that when dealing with interpersonal struggles, you’re hurting and the person in front of you is hurting too?

5. Do an inventory of painful experiences and what you learn from them

Life is not only flowers and butterflies, sweetness and delightfulness; our lives also come with hard moments, losses, disconnection, and tough things to go through. It’s like being alive comes with all those experiences, without exception. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing, but a reflection of the complexity of being alive.

Grab a piece of paper and jot down the different moments of struggle, pain, and hurt you have encountered over the years. Next, ask yourself the question below:

Question to ask yourself:

  • What did I learn about myself in each one of those experiences?
  • What do you need to do to remember that when dealing with interpersonal struggles, you’re hurting and the person in front of you is hurting too?

Summary

That’s it. Cultivating self-awareness will help you to be who you want to be, make the best of your decisions and pursue a purposeful and joyful life.

Last question for you

Here is my last question for you: What are the self-awareness moments you had this year?

As we finish 2021, I would like to take this opportunity to share with you those key moments of self-awareness that came my way.

Here are my ten moments of self-awareness in 2021:

  1. Humbleness has taken me very far in living my values.
  2. Learning to love and be loved comes with other uncomfortable feelings, all together
  3. Being honest with myself is liberating.
  4. There is no need for me to play-it-safe if it’s not working in my life.
  5. Walking with my eyes, mind, and heart open heart has made a difference in who I’m.
  6. Saying no, even to things that matter, has been crucial to living with purpose.
  7. Avoiding conflict is a recipe for disaster: I don’t know how to avoid conflict. I do look at conflict as an opportunity to grow and not as a deal-breaker.
  8. Openness to others and the truth about others is fundamental to my growth. 
  9. Radically accepting that I don’t have control of the outcome of situations and people’s experiences of me is hard, necessary, and important to be myself.
  10. When life sucks, being kind and gentle with myself is much more courageous than being tough.

I leave you with this quote:

“A more fruitful approach to the challenge of living more fully in the moment starts from noticing that you are, in fact, always already living in the moment anyway, whether you like it or not.”

– Burkeman, 2021

Dr. Z. on negative predictions

Dr. Z. on negative predictions

When I ask people how often they get lost in their thoughts, most of them say “a lot.” There wasn’t a single person I’ve talked to who said “never.” That’s not a surprise. Our minds are a powerful content-generating machine that is constantly generating all types of thoughts. If you pay attention, your mind is coming up with all types of soundtracks about the past, the future, and a lot of negative predictions, negative outcomes or negative scenarios. Does that sound familiar?

You cannot choose what picture, image, or thought your mind may come up with, but you can choose what to do next. In this episode, I share with you 3 tips to handle future-oriented soundtracks that your mind may come up with!

Show notes with time-stamps

00:39 Exploring the Mind: Tips and Skills
01:35 The Importance of Subscribing
01:54 Newsletter vs. Podcast: Exclusive Content
02:51 Invitation to Subscribe to the Newsletter
03:39 Diving Into the Episode: Negative Predictions
Dr. Z. on uncertainty

Dr. Z. on uncertainty

Imagine for a moment that all knowledge is represented in the shape of a pie that adds up to 100%; there is maybe 5% of things we know, another 15% of what we don’t know, and 80% of things we don’t know we don’t know.

The reality is that as much as we want, wish, and hope for, we don’t know the answer to many things: Am I making the right decision? Am I going to be accepted? Is this the right way to spend my time? Is this a good partner for me? Would I like this job?

Though it is not comfortable, all those thoughts demand that you to act and solve the unbearable “not-knowing” problem.

In this episode, I share with you a single question to check how you relate to uncertainty.

Show notes with time-stamps

01:43 Big Announcement: Act Beyond OCD Online Class
04:16 Friendly Reminders and Resources
05:05 Diving Into Uncertainty: Everyday Examples
07:23 Understanding and Tackling Uncertainty
08:38 The Importance of Handling Uncertainty
08:49 The Impact of Uncertainty in Social Interactions
10:01 Dealing with Uncertainty in Daily Life
13:01 Navigating Uncertainty in New Situations
How to handle worries using a growth-mindset with Jill Stoddard, Ph.D.

How to handle worries using a growth-mindset with Jill Stoddard, Ph.D.

In this conversation you will hear how Dr. Jill Stoddard, a TEDx speaker, author, ACT clinician, and mother of two children practices self-compassion, develops a growth- mindset, and faces her fears of not been an expert on a given topic.

About Jill Stoddard, Ph.D.

In 2001, Jill was introduced to ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy), and she has been building a bold and meaningful life ever since. She has the skills to create a life worth living even when things gets hard. It is her mission to share those skills with others who want to “live big—full size, not fun size!”

Resources

Show notes with time-stamps

01:00 A Conversation on Fear, Anxiety, and Self-Compassion
02:45 Jill’s Personal Journey with Anxiety During the Pandemic
05:47 Adaptive Anxieties and the Power of Self-Compassion
09:09 Jill’s Evolution: From Suppressing Emotions to Embracing Them
11:36 The Role of Exposures in Facing Fears
14:15 Finding Support Through Common Humanity
15:13 The Power of Support Systems in Overcoming Fears
15:34 Switching Gears: From Personal Experiences to Writing
15:34 Navigating Fears and Anxieties as a Writer
20:46 The Journey of Writing ‘Be Mighty’
24:04 Adapting Writing Habits and Overcoming Challenges
25:43 Dealing with Worries and Anxieties: Practical Advice
28:57 Dream Coffee Date: A Conversation with Oprah
 

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On Love, Overthinking, and Behavioral Science

On Love, Overthinking, and Behavioral Science

Reading Time: 8 minutes

D espite what most people think, behavioral science is not an abstract concept or a theoretical model reserved for academicians or the bookshelves of a library.

Behavioral science, to me, is a world’s philosophy for understanding our day-to-day interactions. 

Every conversation, every thought, every struggle, every moment of joy, and, basically, every experience we have, can be appreciated, seen, and understood through the lens of behavioral science. The reality is that behavioral science – and Acceptance and Commitment skills as a direct application of behavioral science – are part of our lives, from the moment we wake up to the moment we fall asleep.

Inspired by the series Modern Love, I’m sharing with you a contemporary love story and with it, I’m also sharing how skills derived from behavioral science can help you to navigate romantic encounters.

Think about it, as our lives unfold, our quest for purpose and meaning also unfold—and also our quest for love. Who doesn’t want to love and be loved?

We do experience love in so many ways in our lives, and if we’re fortunate, we experience a special type of love: romantic.

Part I: The Dating Story

He and she met after the click of a mouse and the swipe of a screen on their cell phones and in the midst of online dating companies creating a paradox of choice that keeps us chasing the illusion of what love is and perpetuates questions like, Why should I settle for someone who falls short of my expectations when there are other options [just a click away]? Why should I settle for less when there are many more people to meet [just a click away]?

They liked each other’s profiles, and for ten days exchanged texts daily. They agreed to meet on a Sunday morning.

On their first date, they wandered around by the bay; they shared parts of their lives, their backgrounds, and family jokes. They laughed, enjoyed the nice weather, and, after six hours, ended their date by sharing an octopus dish, a salad, and a glass of wine.

On their second date, they went for a hike: They walked through the trees and felt the contrast of the temperature in the shadows and under the sun. They laughed about their weeks, shared their relationship pasts with one another, laughed about being lost, and finished their hike eating octopus and a small salad. They started their date at 10:00 a.m., and by the time they said goodbye, it was 6:00 p.m.

On their third date, a week later, he was sick and had been coughing the whole week, but didn’t want to cancel their date. Their date was in the middle of the week, so he made sure to take a nap before seeing her. They went to dinner, and while sharing a soup, ceviche, a glass of white wine, and a cup of chamomile tea, he discovered her passion for research and she discovered his curious mind. They were the last people to leave the restaurant and finished the night by sharing a good laugh.

After their third date, she didn’t contact him.

He didn’t know what happened.

He felt sad and confused and didn’t know what to do. All he remembered was having fun conversations, sharing laughs, enjoying one another’s company, wandering the streets together, and always looking forward to the next gathering. He didn’t want to bother her or come across as “needy.” After ten days, he decided to call her:

  • Him: Hi, is this a good time? Can we chat?
  • Her: Yes, of course. So great to hear from you.
  • Him: How have you been?
  • Her: I’ve been doing well, thank you. Busy with work.
  • Him: I know you were dealing with a stressful situation. Did you guys solve it?
  • Her: Yes, that got solved, and it’s all good now.
  • Him: Glad to hear that. Can I ask a question?
  • Her: Yes, of course.
  • Him: I was surprised I didn’t hear from you; I was surprised you didn’t reach out these last ten days. I thought we were having fun.
  • Her: I thought you didn’t like me.
  • Him: . . . I’m confused. . . . Of course I like you. Every date has been fun, and I didn’t notice the time flying by. I was surprised not to hear from you.
  • Her: I really thought you didn’t like me. I don’t know how I arrived at that conclusion. At our last dinner, I thought that maybe you were just being nice to me.
  • Him: No, I was excited to see you. I made sure to take a nap so I could hang out with you.
  • Her: I’m so glad you reached out and that we’re talking because I do want to see you again. I enjoyed your company a lot.

On their fourth date, they went for a bike ride, took a break in a park, laid down on the grass, held hands, and then spent the rest of the afternoon wandering the streets of a metropolitan city, grabbing a cocktail at a marroqui bar close to 10:00 p.m. When they said goodbye to each other, they kissed for the first time.

On their fifth date, he said, “I like you and would like to date you exclusively.”

She replied, “I like you a lot too, and it has been so exciting and refreshing to meet you. But I don’t know how things will go between us. I need to know more. I need to know that things will be fine.”

Part II: The Overthinking Problem

We all have been taught to understand things with our minds, to make sense of everything and everyone around us with our thoughts, and to think through things and situations carefully. We have also learned to think of our minds as these omnipotent organs that know what is true at all times.

She responded in a way that felt natural to her brain.

It’s so tricky.

She deeply wanted to develop romantic intimacy in her life. She deeply wanted to be seen and to see another person through caring and passionate eyes. She deeply wanted to develop a romantic relationship and grow together with another person.

Yet, despite being clear on how romantic relationships are important to her and making the commitment to go on dates, her mind was overthinking.

Overthinking patterns have many variations, colors, and shapes, and everyone overthinks. But interestingly, we don’t tend to overthink good outcomes, compliments, or positive scenarios. We overthinking about negative outcomes, things we don’t have control of, what-if scenarios, embarrassing moments and much more.

You may go on a date and, for a long time after, replay in your mind what the other person said, how you responded, how the other person responded. If you’re running late to a gathering, you may have thoughts like, I’m the worst friend ever; they’re going to be disappointed in me. I cannot do anything right.

Does that sound familiar?

Going back to one of the main characters in this dating story, her mind was overthinking in two particular ways:

  • Searching for certainty about the future of the relationship.
  • Wanting to “know more” – meaning she wanted to learn more about the possibilities of that relationship by thinking about it.

Let’s take a look at each one of these thinking patterns:

(a) Searching for certainty

We all have a need to make sense of the unknowns that show up in our lives for instance, when you go to a new restaurant and don’t know how the food is going to taste, or when you go on a date and don’t know if your date is going to like you or if you’re going to enjoy their company.

Our experience dealing with confusing situations is unique to each one of us; there are no two people that feel ambiguity the same way and with the same intensity. Intolerance of uncertainty feels different from situation to situation, and we can react differently to it from one moment to the next.

Some of us are more sensitive to uncertainty than others, and our reactions can go from extreme aversion to even extreme attraction. When we feel an extreme aversion to confusing situations, we may experience high levels of fear, rejection, and emotional negativity; on the other hand, when we feel extreme attraction toward an ambiguous situation, we may be curious, we might welcome the challenge, and we may even enjoy the process.

The mind of our main character has a low tolerance for uncertainty and organized a thinking pattern of committing to the possibility of exploring how the relationship will go only if she knew it would go well – a tricky business.

(b) Wanting to know more

The human mind also tends to try to understand, analyze, and collect endless data, as if it is a 100 percent reliable organ and everything needs to be filtered through it.

Let’s unpack this a bit: Our brains have been protecting us since the beginning of humanity. Our ancestors’ minds developed survival functions that kept them alive – anticipating potential enemies, remembering old threats, and considering all of the what-if possibilities of wild animals and enemies.

As time passed, and we moved from prehistory all the way to the industrial revolution and the information age, our minds – as sophisticated as they are – didn’t have a chance to catch up with all those changes. So these days, each of us is walking around with a brain designed in prehistoric times, and with protective functions that equipped us for those times, not necessarily for our current situations.

In other words, our minds never got the opportunity to be upgraded to our current living conditions, or to the environment we live in now, and, as a result, we’re more prone to thinking errors than ever before.

Daniel Kahneman (2011) has described this phenomenon in detail when describing slow thinking and fast thinking, and Eastern philosophies have recognized for years our minds’ limitations.

In our dating story, our main character’s mind had four direct experiences of fun, exciting, and rich dates, and yet, her mind wanted to “know more,” as if having more thinking data would help her make the right choice, and as if her mind somehow had the truth about how to effectively handle that situation.

Part III: The Consequences

There is experiential knowledge, and there is the hope that responding to thinking with more thinking will give us all the information and certainty we need to make a decision.

Once again, it’s a tricky business.

Both overthinking patterns – searching for certainty and wanting to know more – while helpful at times, can keep us stuck in our own heads and can feed into our rabbit hole of worry.

When applied to dating, these overthinking patterns may reinforce serial dating behaviors – moving from one person to another, searching for a long-lasting feeling of excitement, avoiding commitment, and confusing lust for love.

But what’s worse is that these patterns can keep a person from one of the most transformative experiences we can hope for – true love – and the intimacy and connection that comes from being with a partner.

Part IV: Key Questions to Undo Those Overthinking Patterns

Few people know that thoughts are letters and words together that our minds come up with and that we can choose how to respond to them. Acceptance and commitment skills invite you to learn how your mind does its own minding and how it has a life of its own.

And, when you learn to choose how to respond to your thoughts, everything changes. This is when you take charge of your actions (instead of being bossed around by your mind and letting it take you in the opposite direction from where you want to go.)

(a) If you’re dealing with a low tolerance for uncertainty:

  • Stop battling against those uncertain thoughts.
  • Ask yourself: Am I willing to go on from here, carrying all these uncertain thoughts wherever I go, noticing how they come and then simply having them?
  • Do not assume something is wrong when you feel uncertain.
  • Observe those uncertain thoughts as though they were printed letters on a page.
  • Make a decision to feel the uncertainty, even if it’s uncomfortable.
  • Check the consequences of your actions when you’re being driven by uncertainty or reacting quickly to it.

(b) If you’re dealing with a reliance on your mind as the arbiter of truth:

And this is pushing you to respond to doubt with yet more thinking, ask yourself:

  • What am I going to trust: my experience or my mind’s desire to know more?
  • What am I going to act on: my wish to know more or my knowledge gained from direct experience?

Behavioral science deals with all of our behaviors – private and public – and while there is much more to say about this dating narrative, and there are different lenses through which we can look at it, I can only speak to and reference my areas of expertise.

Final words

And if you’ve made it to the end of this article, I would like to share two more thoughts with you:

  • I’m not a thinking renegade, but I’m all about a thinking revolution.
  • To be loved and to love, we need the awareness and the courage that behavioral science can help us find in the busyness of our minds.

I leave you with this quote:

“I want to know if you are willing to live day by day with the consequence of love.”

– David Whyte



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