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Old Jul 20, 2014, 08:39 AM
Anonymous100149
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hvert View Post
I couldn't come up with the right word for the subject line, but I think people will understand what I mean.

You know how little things can set you off? Something trivial just makes you more unhappy than you really need to be, like forgetting to return a library book? How do you make yourself snap out of doom thinking?

I'm volunteering at a conference in a few days. I have been waiting for an email asking what sessions I want to attend. It never came. Now I realize that I may have misunderstood the first email they sent -- maybe I was supposed to send that information in last week.

So I spent some of last night and this morning upset about this. What if other people have already signed up for all the sessions I want? What if I look greedy by sending them my list if they haven't specifically asked? What if I choose the wrong sessions and the ones I sign up for are boring and then I am trapped in them?

Finally I sent an email asking if I was supposed to send that information in already.

I feel like I spend most of my life dwelling/ruminating instead of taking the appropriate actions. What are some strategies people use to break free from this pattern?

I know that exercise helps, even if I don't do it. Maybe if I just went for a quick walk or did 10 jumping jacks every time it would help?

I try to ask myself 'what is the simple solution?' and 'Am I making this more complicated than it needs to be?' I would just like to get to the point where I am asking those questions sooner...
I am 100% with you on exercise helping. Vigorous and sustained exercise. Try working out for at least 10 minutes. 30 would be even better. Ten jumping jacks probably isn't going to do the trick (but I could be wrong).

I get the suspicion a lot of people write off exercise as a cliche suggestion. I disagree. When I go rock climbing it feels like my brain has been "defragmented" after I'm done. I know it's the very last thing depressed/anxious people feel like doing, but you have to be willing to swim upstream sometimes (or at least to the shore) or the current is just going to carry you down.

Opposite Action
Thanks for this!
hvert