Whenever I came across a wrong
thought it always struck me to energise and kick it off, it happens like when a
breach has occurred and an alarm triggers off, and this imaginary plywood just automatically
pops up and seals up that feeling before it weighs me down. I have learnt this
strategy overtime in addition to a few others and they have really helped. I came
across these other ways and thought I should share them as well. They make a
lot of sense. But they didn’t add one of my favourites, listening to hard core
rap – that just blunts your affect. Read on anyway as no one is immune to bad
thoughts, some are just immune to its effects on their activities.
Scientifically tested ways to
stop bad thoughts:
1.
Show It The Door
We've
all had the frustrating experience of going into another room to get something
and then realizing... we've totally forgotten why we're there. What's
happening, say scientists from Notre Dame University, is that the act of passing through the doorway serves as a cue (an
"event model" in science-speak) to your brain, telling it that it's
finished with the immediate task and to move on to something else, freeing up
space and energy for new memories. You can take advantage of this mechanism in
order to help you "forget" more strategically: If you find yourself
getting worked up about something while you're preparing dinner, stop and exit
the room. And if you happen to have an open-plan layout, keep on walking right
out the front door (just come back in before the water boils and the pot
overflows).
2.
Try The Lady Macbeth Method On It (With More
Success)
Decisive
people have no idea how lucky they are to be spared the kind of second-guessing
that can lead to sleeplessness, queasiness and general obsessiveness. But the
rest of us now have a secret weapon against waffling: soap. Psychologists at
the University of Michigan found that washing your hands with soap and water can
help you stop questioning your judgment. The study authors explain that the act
of washing up serves as a powerful metaphor of "cleaning the slate"
and helps us mentally wipe away doubts and misgivings.
3.
Head It Off With A Decoy
When
our brain insists on reminding us of that awful thing we said at the party last
night, most of us react by suppressing the thought (and perhaps groaning). This
often works, found British neuroscientists Roland Benoit and Michael Anderson, who used an fMRI machine to trace the brain activity of people who were
trying to forget something. In a study published in the journal
Neuron, they explained that when we push a memory out of our head, activity in
the hippocampus, the region of the brain critical for remembering the past, is
inhibited. However, there's always the threat that the thought will pop up
again... and again. Another trick that the scientists tested was thought
substitution: Whenever you start rehashing the night, tell yourself instead to
think about your vacation to Aruba, or reimagine every bite of a meal you
enjoyed. Doing this will induce frenetic activity in the parts of the brain
that need to work to retrieve memories and along the pathways to consciousness.
The two thoughts will literally compete for your attention, so make the
substitution memory engaging and pleasurable enough to win.
4.
Treat It Like A Heartbroken Poet Would
Those
troubled souls who vent their grievances on paper are on to something, found
Ohio State University psychologist Richard Petty, Ph.D., and
his colleagues. In one of their studies, high school students who
were asked to write down thoughts about body image and then rate their own
figures were only affected by their thoughts if they were asked to hold on to
their papers and review them.Those who were told to chuck the papers in the trash showed no difference
in how they rated themselves, regardless of whether they confessed
positive or negative thoughts. "By physically throwing away or protecting
your thoughts, you influence how you end up using those thoughts," Petty
said. So write them down and then -- this is key -- be sure to shred them, burn
them, toss them in the compactor or drag them into the trash can on your
desktop -- and empty it.
5.
Work It Out -- But Choose The Right Kind Of
Exercise
At
any road race, you'll find dozens of running enthusiasts who have successfully
kicked bad habits (as well as chronic bad moods) by following a regular
training schedule. And intense physical activity has been shown in studies to
raise serotonin and dopamine levels and lower the stress response. But while
distance running, biking and swimming can boost general mental wellness, these
solitary, repetitive activities can be the worst thing when you're dwelling on
something specific and unchangeable. They can provide you with uninterrupted
time to obsess, and that may reinforce negative thought patterns. During those
times, consider seeking out physical activity that makes your brain work as hard as
your body, like a class (Spinning, Zumba, Bikram or Ashtanga yoga), a group
sport (community soccer, pickup basketball) or a team activity (rowing, a
running group, a master's swim team). You could also try going for a meditative run, in which you focus so intently on your
breathing or the rhythm of your footsteps that your mind doesn't have an opportunity
to wander into a dark place.
6.
Turn It Into A Mantra
If
you've ever tried to teach English to a child or a friend, you know how
repeating the same word over and over -- "water," "water,"
"waawderr" -- can make it sound like gibberish. You can use a similar
strategy on words -- and, therefore, concepts -- that are bothering you,
according to therapists who practice a form of clinical psychology called acceptance
and commitment therapy (ACT). A tenet of ACT is that when something upsetting
happens, we cause ourselves additional pain by rehashing how wrong it is, how
unjust life is and how it may prove that we're a bad person. One technique to
stop yourself from doing this, called cognitive defusion, is to repeat a troubling word or phrase
over and over for at least a minute. This helps you drop the baggage around the
word and focus on what it is: a combination of sounds. You can then change the
context around the word and give it a new, more positive meaning (or at least a
less powerful one), explains Dennis Tirch, Ph.D., author of The
Compassionate-Mind Guide to Overcoming Anxiety. Try it
first with a neutral word, like "laptop," and then say your troubling
thought aloud ("taxes," "flare-up," "failure")
and keep repeating until it no longer has the power to disturb you.
7.
Show It Your Studious Side
You're
surprisingly vulnerable to negative thinking when you're doing something that's
practically second nature to you, says psychiatrist Rebecca Gladding, MD,
coauthor of You Are Not Your Brain. When you're in the flow --
say, knitting another scarf -- the brain's prefrontal cortex, which handles
executive function, kicks back and lets the basal ganglia, or the habit center,
take over. This is when the toxic thought sneaks in and gains control, while
your knitting needles continue to clack away rhythmically. Get your prefrontal
cortex to refocus by turning your attention to a challenging activity that
requires your full attention, like listening to Coffee Break French podcasts,
playing Words With Friends with a responsive pal or cooking (only if you aren't
a gourmet chef). Gladding says that it's important to do this quickly, because
the more time you spend dwelling on things, the stronger those mental pathways
become. "Then every time you get anxious, you'll automatically switch into
obsessive mode," she says -- and that's something you definitely want to
avoid.
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