
hitesh.eth_
2025/08/18 04:27
Are you overthinking?
Is it good or bad?
Overthinking becomes constructive when you are overthinking about processes. The more you think about how you do it, the more clarity you get about it.
You will find open questions during those overthinking sessions, and if you address those open questions with knowledge by seeking help from AI or the Internet, you will find confirmation.
That confirmation slows down the act of overthinking, and it leads you closer to a path you can finally decide on.
Psychologists call this structured reflection, and studies show it actually improves problem-solving and creativity because your brain begins connecting dots you normally overlook.
The best way to deal with overthinking about processes would be while taking nature walks, gym sessions, running, or even closing your eyes in meditation.
Let those thoughts flow through, contemplate on them, and whenever you feel like you have found a solid clue, just deep dive into it. Those clues will help you find the right direction.
Movement and meditation give the mind a safe space to wander, and often the best solutions appear when your body is active but your mind is loose.
Overthinking becomes destructive when you think about chasing an outcome without having any direction on the path that would take you there.
Sometimes you overthink about what is gone, wishing you could change your past. But you cannot, so it is better to think about what you could do in the future.
Again, when you start thinking about future outcomes and you see no clarity on how you will get there, your mind becomes restless, your intellect becomes numb, and you stop learning new things.
You think assumptions are enough to lead a good life. Those assumptions are poison for your mind. They will show you the wrong path, create self-doubt, and trap you in the loop of overthinking which leads nowhere.
Psychology calls this rumination, replaying fears, regrets, or comparisons. Left unchecked, it feeds anxiety and depression because your mind gets stuck in a loop without resolution.
One of the best way to stop that loop is to redirect yourself into extreme physical activities where you challenge your body. Run 10 KM daily, lift weights, and those physical challenges will slow down those destructive thoughts to some extent.
Science backs this: exercise lowers stress hormones like cortisol, increases serotonin and dopamine, and resets brain chemistry so the same destructive loop cannot dominate.
You will get resting periods, and in those moments, when you feel like you are getting fewer thoughts, do something productive in terms of acquiring knowledge.
Read books, watch documentaries, watch educational videos, build a new hobby. Do something meaningful with your time. Build genuine interest in learning something new.
Neuroscience shows that active learning stimulates the prefrontal cortex, which strengthens decision-making and quiets the emotional overdrive that fuels overthinking.
Destructive overthinking does not only come from chasing outcomes. It also comes from the fear of uncertainty, which makes you delay action while you keep playing mental simulations. The solution is to take small, imperfect steps forward.
Even tiny actions break the cycle faster than endless thinking. And if the root of overthinking lies in emotions like regret, ego, or comparison, physical effort alone will not be enough.
You need journaling, therapy, or spiritual practices to process those emotions, otherwise the loop returns in a different form.
The more you learn, the less you overthink, and the more clarity you build around process. And once you build clarity around process, even through the act of overthinking, it eventually helps.
You end up flipping the script from destruction to construction.

ShafynKhan
2025/08/11 08:44
Being too confident in a trading bias can make us overlook clear signs that the market is moving in a different direction.
When we stick to that bias out of stubbornness, losses can grow quickly, and emotions start guiding our decisions, which only makes things worse.
The market is always shifting, and no opinion or bias stays right forever. The conclusion is that
It’s better to stay flexible, protect our capital, and adjust when the facts change, rather than letting ego take the
Decisions.