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Six ways to stop dwelling on it

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Amalthea
joined 12 Nov 2006
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Posted by Amalthea, 13:08 8 November 2007

By Naomi Barr


(Oprah.com) -- It's 5 p.m., the deadline for an important work project is at 6, and all you can think about is the fight you had with the next-door neighbor this morning. You're dwelling, says Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at Yale and author of "Women Who Think Too Much."

"It's natural to look inward," she says, "but while most people pull out when they've done it enough, an overthinker will stay in the loop."

Ruminating regularly often leads to depression. So if you're prone to obsessing (and you know who you are), try these tactics to head off the next full-tilt mental spin cycle ...

Distract yourself

Put on music and dance, scrub the bathtub spotless, whatever engrosses you --for at least 10 minutes. "That's about the minimum time needed to break a cycle of thoughts," says Nolen-Hoeksema, who's been studying rumination for more than 20 years. Or choose something to focus on. "A friend told me that she once started counting the number of times the speaker at her conference said 'like,'" Nolen-Hoeksema recalls. "By the time he finished, she'd stopped ruminating."

Make a date to dwell

Tell yourself you can obsess all you want from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., but until then, you're banned. "By 6 p.m., you'll probably be able to think things through more clearly," says Nolen-Hoeksema.

Take a 3-minute dose of mindfulness

For one minute, eyes closed, acknowledge all the thoughts going through your mind. For the next minute, just focus on your breathing. Spend the last minute expanding your awareness from your breath to your entire body.

"Paying attention in this way gives you the room to see the questions you're asking yourself with less urgency and to reconsider them from a different perspective," says Zindel Segal, Ph.D., co-author of "The Mindful Way Through Depression."

Ask yourself ..

"What's the worst that could happen?" and "How would I cope?" Visualizing yourself handling the most extreme outcome should alleviate some anxiety, says Judith Beck, Ph.D., director of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Therapy and Research in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. Then consider the likelihood that the worst will actually occur.

Next, imagine the best possible outcome; by this point, you'll be in a more positive frame of mind and better able to assess the situation more realistically.

Call a buddy

Ask a friend or relative to be your point person when your thoughts start to speed out of control.

Say "Oh, well."

Accept that you're human and make mistakes -- and then move on, says Beck. Be compassionate. It's harder than it sounds, so keep practicing
Amalthea
joined 12 Nov 2006
500 posts

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Posted by Amalthea, 13:11 8 November 2007

I hope you all don't mind me sharing this. I thought it was particularly pertinent to those of of dealing with SAD.

I'm putting some thought into trying to identify which patterns of thoughts serve no other purpose than to emotionally drain me at a time I don't have much emotional energy to spend on things. And I'm the queen of "dwelling on things."

Anyhow, I hope someone else finds this useful. It was from CNN.com.
paulst
joined 5 Oct 2005
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Posted by paulst, 16:09 8 November 2007

I dont think anyone will mind you sharing this,anything that helps us to cope better with sad has got to be a good thing, thankyou Amalthea.




paul
PurpleIvy
PurpleIvy
joined 16 Mar 2005
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Posted by PurpleIvy, 19:52 8 November 2007

Thanks for sharing.. if I tackle a different spot every time, it wouldn't just be the bathtub that's spotless!
Hadrian
Hadrian
joined 11 Sep 2007
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Posted by Hadrian, 20:02 8 November 2007

I remember reading a book by Doctor Clare Weeks many years ago about daeling with obsessive,repetitive thoughts-her recipe was in four steps
1,Face the thought
2,accept it
3,Float;not fight or flight-imagine floating along with your thoughts(however disturbing) like a balloon.
4,Let time pass.
PurpleIvy
PurpleIvy
joined 16 Mar 2005
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Posted by PurpleIvy, 15:35 11 November 2007

I don't have obsessive/repetitive thoughts. But substitute the words 'difficult situation' for the word 'thought' and it's really good advice for me too. I tend to let things get to me when they shouldn't.

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