If you’ve ever told yourself to “just stop overthinking” and found that advice completely useless, you’re not alone.
Overthinking isn’t a habit you can switch off through willpower. It’s usually an attempt to feel safe.
Why Overthinking Feels Productive (Even When It Isn’t)
When something feels uncertain, ambiguous or high stakes, the mind starts scanning. What did they mean by that? Did I handle that well? What if this goes wrong? What should I have said differently?
On the surface, it looks like diligence. Underneath, it’s threat detection.
The problem is that once the loop starts, thinking feels productive. You tell yourself you’re analysing the situation properly. In reality, you’re trying to eliminate risk. And because no situation is ever completely risk-free, the mind keeps going.
That’s why reassurance rarely works. Even if someone tells you everything is fine, your nervous system may not believe it. The body is still braced. The thinking continues.
What Actually Interrupts the Overthinking Loop
Stopping overthinking requires something different from forcing calm.
First, you need to recognise the moment the loop begins. Not halfway through when you are already exhausted, but at the first tightening. Often there is a physical cue before the mental one.
Second, you learn to separate facts from interpretation. What has actually happened? What are you adding?
Third, you practise neutral thinking. Not positive thinking. Neutral.
Over time, this changes the pattern. The goal is not to eliminate thinking. It is to stop treating every ambiguous situation as a potential disaster.
Cleaner thinking frees up energy. Conversations feel lighter. Decisions take less time.
If you want to go deeper into this process, including how stress physiology feeds overthinking, that’s something we explore inside Change Your Mindset, my 6-week mindset course that starts on 14th April.