Categories
Mental Health Personal Growth

Apply Meaning with Intention

Quoted 3-2-1: On mediocrity vs. genius, taking risks, and when to ignore a problem | James Clear by James Clear (James Clear)

3 short ideas from James Clear, 2 quotes from other people, and 1 question for you.

“The events of your past are fixed. The meaning of your past is not.

The influence of every experience in your life is determined by the meaning you assign to it.

Assign a more useful meaning to your past and it becomes easier to take a more useful action in the present.”

— James Clear

This is a good reminder for a ruminator like me.

You are in control of interpreting your past. Apply meaning with intention to not be trapped by past mistakes.

Categories
Mental Health

Listened to Becoming Better 43: A Subset of Worry

Listened Becoming Better Podcast from alifeofproductivity.com

Make a list of everything you’re worrying about, and divide it into what you do and don’t have control over. Then, deal with the items on your list accordingly.

I’ve seen the advice to set aside time to worry before and it always sounded just implausible. But I like this active approach to worry: listing out all the things you’re worried about and then sorting them by how much control you have over them.

They also called out that chronic stress is caused by burnout, which can be influenced by activities that we choose (like news), even if sometimes it’s caused by external factors like societal issues. So it’s worth thinking about how much stress we’re bringing on ourselves.

Categories
Mental Health Personal Growth

Countering Rumination

Bookmarked On worrying about what you think people think by Madeleine Dore (Extraordinary Routines )

Have you ever had an afternoon free, or even an hour you could be resting or doing something you enjoy, only to wither it away ruminating past disappointments, worry about the future, or replaying embarrassing moments or awkward conversations over and over.

I took the advice of the late poet and philosopher John O’Donohue. In an interview with Krista Tippett, he suggested a simple thought exercise that involved tracking your most common thoughts and devising a new set.

For the first week of the experiment, I noted and catalogued my thoughts in the notes section of my iPhone. By day seven, the themes were clear—worrying about the future; worrying about what other people think; beating myself up for perceived flaws; comparing myself to others; negatively internalising other people’s actions or words; and ruminating on the past.

What was most startling when reflecting on this list was that each worrying thought was outside of my control. What people think of me, the future, and what other people do is not something I can change by mulling over it. For the most part, I can’t control what happens in my life, but I can control how I think about it.

In the second week, I developed an alternative thought to each on my list.

— Madeleine Dore