Negative Thinking: A Most Dangerous Addiction

Why we can’t stop thinking about the things that make us feel the worst. Six ideas for letting go.

I have borrowed this piece from something I saw at Psychology Today. It is their work, but I have edited it somewhat for my audience.

Have you ever noticed how much time you spend thinking about negative or painful situations, ruminating and replaying what’s not working in your life?  It’s not just you.  The last statistic I read claimed 80% of our thoughts are negative and 95%, repetitive. Strangely, the more negative an experience, the more we return to it.  Like vultures to a carcass, we’re drawn to what hurts.  As the Buddhist saying goes, we want happiness and yet we chase our suffering.  Why?  What’s at the root of our mind’s addiction to suffering, why do we compulsively cling to our pain, and how can we shift this unwise and unhelpful habit of ours?

We return to our suffering because, fundamentally, we’re trying to make the negative experience come out a different way.  Our mental replays are attempts to re-script what we don’t want into a new reality.  If we can just understand our pain more clearly, spend more time with it, we’ll be able to figure it out, in other words, make it go away.  If we can know the cause, who’s to blame and what needs to be done about it, we’ll be okay. 

We hold onto our pain, paradoxically to figure out how to let it go.

With pain or any sort of negative experience, comes a host of uncomfortable feelings.  In response to the feelings we don’t want to feel, our mind takes control and steers us in a more familiar direction.  Over and again the mind restructures and reframes the contents of our pain to avoid directly feeling it.  The mind will always choose thinking about pain over experiencing it directly.

So too, we counter-intuitively cling to suffering as a way of taking care of ourselves.

Continually thinking about what hurts helps us feel that our pain matters, that it didn’t happen for no reason, and that it won’t be forgotten.  Our ruminations award our suffering importance and value, which it doesn’t always receive from those it wants it from. To stop revisiting our pain can feel like abandoning it, moving on before it’s been truly heard or taken care of.

Pain is also profoundly intertwined with our sense of identity.  We remind ourselves of our pain as a way of keeping alive our personal narrative, our story of me, what’s happened to me, and my life.  We’re deeply attached to our stories of suffering; you could say we love our pain.  As a result, we’re reluctant to let it go, to stop bringing it back into the present moment even when it’s no longer useful or active.  To do so would be to lose touch with who we believe we fundamentally are, what makes “us” us.

If we didn’t keep reminding ourselves of our story, we might forget who we are in our minds, and then what?  Who would we be and what would life look like if we didn’t relate from an already formed idea of who we are?

At an existential level, returning to our suffering allows us to feel a primal sense of I-ness, to feel that we exist. We experience ourselves as a distinct self when we’re thinking about a problem.  With a problem in its craw, the mind can feel alive and working, and because we imagine ourselves to be synonymous with mind, our sense of self is also alive and strong in this process.  It is through the process of thinking that we create a sense of self; we literally think ourselves into existence.

To give up ruminating over problems feels threatening at a primal level.  How would we know that we were here if we didn’t keep engaging the mind in problems, the very activity that allows the mind to feel itself?  How would we know who we are if not through the mind by which we know ourselves to be?  What would happen if we stopped remembering and reestablishing who we are all the time?  Without an agenda of what needs to be fixed, we literally lose our separateness from life.

Our addiction to suffering is at some level driven by a desire to feel better.  But regardless, the result is that it makes us feel worse and causes us to suffer more even than we actually need to.  What can be done then to break this addiction to pain?

Solutions

  1. Awareness.  The key to breaking any habit is awareness.  Start noticing those moments when you’re actively choosing to revisit your pain, to literally direct your attention back to what could bother you. Become conscious of your tendency to insert moments of peace with morsels of suffering. Noticing that you are doing this to yourself.
  2. Acknowledge that you’re caught. When you notice that you’re down the rabbit hole in your story of suffering, Velcro’d to it, take a moment and acknowledge that you’re there, that you’re caught.  Say it out loud, “Wow, I’m really caught.”  “I’m really doing this to myself right now,” or whatever words fit.  Stop for a moment and with kindness, be with yourself exactly where you are, acknowledge the truth of feeling powerless or stuck inside your pain story.
  3. Inquire. Ask your mind (without judgment) what it’s hoping to accomplish in luring your attention back to your suffering.  Is it to figure out your problem, make it come out a different way, make your pain feel heard?  Do you need to remember the pain to protect you from it happening again? Is it scary to just feel good? Does remembering your problem ground you? Get curious about your mind’s intentions: does the rehashing and ruminating lead you to peace?  Does it make you feel better?  Eventually, you will discover that trying to get to peace with the mind is like trying to open a lock with a banana; it’s simply the wrong tool.  The next time you return to the scene of your pain you can remind yourself that more thinking doesn’t actually work, and you will know this from your own experience, your own inquiry. Failure is a great teacher here.
  4. Shift your focus from thinking about the problem to feeling it. Sense where and how in your body, in what sensations you are experiencing this pain story.  You can place your hand on your heart as you do this and offer yourself some sweet words, perhaps even a prayer of healing for this suffering.  Unhook from your head story and drop into a body-felt experience.
  5. Say “no” or “stop” out loud. We can learn to just say “no” to our mind’s inclinations just as we say no to a child who’s doing something that will harm her.  Sometimes a wiser and more evolved part of us must step in and put a stop to the harmful behavior the mind is engaged in.  Say “no” or “stop” out loud so you can hear and experience it directly through your senses, rather than as just another thought inside the negative-addicted mind.

Ask yourself, what’s at risk if you let go of your pain?  Investigate what feels dangerous about living without reminding yourself of what’s happened to you and what’s still wrong.  Make the active choice to not fill your now with the past.  Be bold: create a new identity that’s not pieced together from your personal narrative, but always fresh and endlessly changing.  In the process, you will discover that you can be entirely well and happy at this moment without having to go back and make anything that came before it different.

About Dr Joseph Russo

Born and raised in Woodland Hills, California; now residing in Laramie, Wyoming (or "Laradise" as we call it, for good reason), with my wife Cindy, our little schnauzer, Macy Mae, and a cat named Markie. I hold a BBA from Cal State Northridge and an MBA from the University of Nevada at Reno. My first career was in business, for some 25+ years. In 2007, I shifted gears and entered the helping professions as a mental health counselor. I earned an MA in Educational Psychology and a Doctorate (PhD) in Counselor Education and Supervision. In my spare time I enjoy mentoring young and not-so-young business and non-profit executives as they go about growing their businesses and presence. I also teach part-time at the University of Wyoming, in both the Colleges of Education and Business.
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