Any good strategies how to make the negativity of that flow stop? I literally can’t stop it, spend the last 15 minutes envisioning how my relatives may get poisoned by a Blue Ring Octopus. The time before that I think some made-up political discussion ending up in the family exploding (very popular).
I really would prefer less negative stuff. And please don’t just say therapy, I live in Germany, we don’t have any therapists available before 2030 for 2nd class healthcare receivers.
I know our life sucks. That is exactly why meditation is so helpful, and important. You can easily do a gratitude meditation - breathe in thinking about something you’re thankful for, breathe out letting that gratitude flow down from your head through your body. This will instantly help your body and brain feel better. Other meditations help us separate what we want (everything to be better) from what we actually need (air, water, food, a place to sit), and see that we cause our own suffering through attachments to our expectations, which finally gives you a real way to stop hurting yourself constantly, by letting go of the weapons you use. You already hold the key. There is honestly, no judgement in meditation. Just keep gently guiding yourself back to your breath and/or whatever you are trying to focus on, and let yourself just be you for a while. It’s surprisingly helpful.
From what I picked up, CBT is basically telling a bad thought to stop and moving to a different topic. Like literally tell the idea or your thought precess in your head to fuck off and process something useful until your default thoughts are not constant nuclear war in your head.
Its a million times harder than it sounds at first, but progress snowballs. Eventually you retrain the briains default reaction to chill out instead of contatntally assuming your doom. You figure out how to extinguish a thought chain thats going to end with your brain telling you to neck rope before it goes that deep.
Not to be flippant, but if you want to alter the way you think, then therapy is probably the answer.
The good news is that in my experience, the valuable part of therapy is totally free and you could start today.
I’ve had success with Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT). The model for CBT says that our automatic thoughts initiate our feelings, and while our feelings are valid, our thoughts can be bullshit.
Our brain is like an overgrown field, and each thought is like a person passing through it. Each time a thought passes through the field, it wears down a groove which will become a trail or a road. Our thoughts want to take the path of least resistance, so they follow the well-worn paths. However, we can create new paths with better thoughts that lead to more positive feelings, and eventually the negative paths have more resistance than the positive ones.
The key technique is recognizing Cognitive Biases, which are common ways that our brains lie to us, and then restructuring our thoughts through journaling exercises. Common biases include assuming other people think poorly of us, making predictions of the future with limited information, or thinking that because we feel bad we must be bad.
Now on the flip side, therapeutic techniques are not a one-size-fits-all solution. What’s worked for me might not work for everyone. And that’s okay because there’s plenty of tools in the toolbox left over.
I got a lot of mileage out of CBT. It’s logical, there’s a process to follow, and it improved the quality of my life to a point. It didn’t happen overnight, and I still have bad times more often than I’d like, but there was improvement
Whether you have access to a therapist or not, the greatest impact from therapy comes from doing the homework. It’s lame, but there it is. But if you really don’t vibe with a technique, the good news is there’s a zillion other techniques you could try a web search away.
Any good strategies how to make the negativity of that flow stop? I literally can’t stop it, spend the last 15 minutes envisioning how my relatives may get poisoned by a Blue Ring Octopus. The time before that I think some made-up political discussion ending up in the family exploding (very popular).
I really would prefer less negative stuff. And please don’t just say therapy, I live in Germany, we don’t have any therapists available before 2030 for 2nd class healthcare receivers.
Mediation. The practice focuses, in part, on training you to avoid persistent thoughts and staying present.
The last thing I want is staying present tbh, my life sucks ass (which is one reason why I’d like to focus more in aspects that may improve it).
I know our life sucks. That is exactly why meditation is so helpful, and important. You can easily do a gratitude meditation - breathe in thinking about something you’re thankful for, breathe out letting that gratitude flow down from your head through your body. This will instantly help your body and brain feel better. Other meditations help us separate what we want (everything to be better) from what we actually need (air, water, food, a place to sit), and see that we cause our own suffering through attachments to our expectations, which finally gives you a real way to stop hurting yourself constantly, by letting go of the weapons you use. You already hold the key. There is honestly, no judgement in meditation. Just keep gently guiding yourself back to your breath and/or whatever you are trying to focus on, and let yourself just be you for a while. It’s surprisingly helpful.
From what I picked up, CBT is basically telling a bad thought to stop and moving to a different topic. Like literally tell the idea or your thought precess in your head to fuck off and process something useful until your default thoughts are not constant nuclear war in your head.
Its a million times harder than it sounds at first, but progress snowballs. Eventually you retrain the briains default reaction to chill out instead of contatntally assuming your doom. You figure out how to extinguish a thought chain thats going to end with your brain telling you to neck rope before it goes that deep.
Huh, I figured this out myself a decade ago. It’s getting to be about time to go through it again.
Not to be flippant, but if you want to alter the way you think, then therapy is probably the answer.
The good news is that in my experience, the valuable part of therapy is totally free and you could start today.
I’ve had success with Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT). The model for CBT says that our automatic thoughts initiate our feelings, and while our feelings are valid, our thoughts can be bullshit.
Our brain is like an overgrown field, and each thought is like a person passing through it. Each time a thought passes through the field, it wears down a groove which will become a trail or a road. Our thoughts want to take the path of least resistance, so they follow the well-worn paths. However, we can create new paths with better thoughts that lead to more positive feelings, and eventually the negative paths have more resistance than the positive ones.
The key technique is recognizing Cognitive Biases, which are common ways that our brains lie to us, and then restructuring our thoughts through journaling exercises. Common biases include assuming other people think poorly of us, making predictions of the future with limited information, or thinking that because we feel bad we must be bad.
Now on the flip side, therapeutic techniques are not a one-size-fits-all solution. What’s worked for me might not work for everyone. And that’s okay because there’s plenty of tools in the toolbox left over.
I got a lot of mileage out of CBT. It’s logical, there’s a process to follow, and it improved the quality of my life to a point. It didn’t happen overnight, and I still have bad times more often than I’d like, but there was improvement
Whether you have access to a therapist or not, the greatest impact from therapy comes from doing the homework. It’s lame, but there it is. But if you really don’t vibe with a technique, the good news is there’s a zillion other techniques you could try a web search away.
My best answer is to get diagnosed and treated for an anxiety disorder because these are not things that have ever popped into my head