Integration - Wednesday 3/25 at 6 pm PST - Zoom link below
Overthinking. Most of us can relate to this. It is often framed as a bad habit or a lack of discipline. In the book - Stop Overthinking - the author, Nick Trenton offers a more accurate view. Overthinking is not a thinking problem - it's a stress response. From Chapter 1: "There is no aspect of life that anxious overthinking doesn't impact. When you perceive a threat, your HPA axis (hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenals) is stimulated. Your brain triggers a cascade of neurotransmitters and hormones in the body, which then have physical effects - this is the classic fight-or-flight response to prepare the body to survive the perceived threat" The author outlines the consequences of overthinking as mental fatigue, indecision, emotional exhaustion, anxiety, sleep disruption, and a shrinking sense of confidence. Over time, overthinking doesn't lead to better decisions - it leads to paralysis and self-doubt. From a nervous system perspective, overthinking is what happens when the system doesn't feel safe enough to rest, act, or feel. Thinking becomes the primary strategy for control. Overthinking is the mind's attempt to: predict danger, prevent regret, avoid emotional pain, create certainty where there isn't any. The problem is that the mind keeps looping without resolution. Each thought generates another "what if", another scenario, another self-check. Instead of clarity, the system becomes more activated. The mind is working overtime because the body doesn't feel settled enough to move forward. The author highlights that overthinking: reduces trust in your own judgment, creates constant mental noise, keeps you stuck in analysis rather than the experience, and reinforces fear-based decision making. Over time, this trains the nervous system to believe that thinking is safer than acting or feeling. The cost is presence. Life becomes something to mentally manage rather than participate in. This is why telling yourself to "just stop thinking" doesn't work. Your system doesn't feel safe enough to stop.