What is stopping people from getting the results they want?
Well, for one I’d say a pretty common and self-imposed roadblock is thinking too much.
In fact, one of the best tips for getting things done that I have learned so far is simply to stop thinking and start doing.
I think this problem of overthinking things is nothing that I’m alone with in the personal development community. I think it may be one of the problems that draw people to books and websites on self-help and one of the things that still keep them from achieving what they want even after they have picked up on a lot of helpful advice.
Because after having read five books you think and plan and think a little more. You get lost in thinking. At least that’s what I did. If you’re an overthinker then getting your hands on personal development information becomes just another way to creatively procrastinate. But now you can label it as making progress and get an emotional kick out of it.
Now, I’m not saying that educating yourself or thinking is something bad. But overdoing it won’t help you either.
Here are a couple of good reasons why.
1. Thinking can’t replace action.
I sometimes think there is some kind of wish when overthinking that thinking will somehow replace action. A wish that if you just think enough you can find some easy way out or get what you want without having to actually do something.
Without taking action you’ll most likely not get what you want. Thinking is however seldom as scary or uncertain as taking the leap into the unknown and taking action.
So it can become a place where you hide from taking action and then rationalize to yourself in different ways how all this thinking will help you. Even though you know deep down that what you really want and need is to take action and get going.
2. You may overcomplicate things.
Are things hard and difficult? Yeah, they might be. But you may also want consider that it’s you that are making them even harder.
By overthinking things you make them more and more complicated in your mind. You can turn something fairly simple into a really complicated and big mess. And so it goes from something you can do with some discomfort and persistence into an epic battle where you keep moving inch by painstaking inch.
A problem here is that when what you are doing is difficult and complicated then you and others think that it must be important. And so you feel important. You derive a sense of importance from making things into big struggles.
Such a thing can form into an identity where you are struggling and keeping on moving forward while you imagine other people lying at home in the sofa lazily watching some TV. It can strengthen you. It can make you feel negatively about other people. It may feel good in a sort of way to feel like an outsider or some kind of misunderstood underdog that’s up against so much. So it has its upsides.
However, you may also want to consider not making things to so hard for yourself. You don’t have to be a rebel that’s going against the world. You can just accept what you choose to do. And that other people choose to do other things.
Upsides such as a feeling of importance or of being the underdog may make it hard to give up the notion that what you are doing may not be that difficult and complicated. But I have found that when I do that then I become more relaxed and things tend to be easier to accomplish.
You can to some degree control how difficult something will be. Much of your struggle is up there in your head. Just try letting go of the notion of how awfully difficult something is and see what happens. You may be relieved. And surprised at how you have been making your life more complicated than it needs to be.
3. You’ll perform worse.
If you overthink things you may overcomplicate them. And so you become nervous and start to second guess yourself all the time. It also becomes harder to focus on doing something when you have a have a habit of thinking a lot. You may often slip into possible future scenarios in your mind instead just focusing on what you are doing right now.
All of this can cripple your performance and produce results that are worse than they could have been.
How to stop thinking so much
So, I used to be a big overthinker. Still am. From time to time. But I have made progress. Here are three things I use to cultivate a habit of not overthinking things.
Be aware of the problem.
The most important thing is to be aware that you tend to overthink. And to keep being aware of that in your everyday life. You can for instance do that with post-it notes that say “Don’t overthink things. Act!” or something along those lines.
By just being aware of your habit you can often pick up on when you are doing it, stop yourself and do something more helpful instead. Over time it also becomes easier to step out of the loop of thoughts and not get stuck back in it a half an hour later.
Set deadlines for decisions.
Instead of thinking about something for days, tell yourself that you have – for example – 30 minutes to think. Then you will make a decision.
Be present.
Focus on what’s in front of you instead of flying off to the past or Tomorrowland for long periods of time. A tennis player will for instance not think much while playing. She just trusts in her own subconscious and stays with flow. Her body will – after years of practise – know what to do automatically.
The same goes for many things in everyday life. You don’t have to think a lot about everything. You can just stay present and let the right actions naturally arise.
This may sound a bit wonky, but if you just do things while being present you may discover that the results are often better than if you put in a lot of thought.
Like the tennis player, you know what the right thing to do is and how to do it well from years of experience and practice. You just have to let go of all that thinking that can cripple you. And have trust in your capabilities.
For tips on how to be present have a look at 8 Ways to Return to the Present Moment.
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Henrik Edberg is the creator of the Positivity Blog and has written weekly articles here since 2006. He has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Gothenburg and has been featured on Lifehacker, HuffPost and Paulo Coelho’s blog.
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If content is king in blogging, action and consequently experience is king in personal development.
When it comes to decide if you should adopt a new way of living in the end the only way to know if it is going to work is to go all out using it for a set period of time. If the change is supposed to bring serious change into your life you probably want to practice all out for 3 – 9 months to see how real and long term its effects are.
Its far to easy to do things for a couple of weeks and then decide its not working and start reading again. :)
Hi Henrik,
I completely agree with everything you’ve mentioned in this article and I appreciate the suggestions you’ve offered. Sometimes planning, mapping, and organizing can get in the way of the end goal which is ultimately, to take action. I don’t know how many times overthinking has only made things worse for me, both professionally and personally. My productivity mantra recently has been “Just do it.”
It’s like you peeked into my overanalytical mind! I’ve spent many hours reading about a new hobby or idea without ever actually trying it. Lame, right?
Setting deadlines with concrete action points is probably the best strategy for me. Embracing small steps also helps.
In my life, action has always benefited me more than overthinking things. So, I’m trying to embrace failures as successful experiments in not thinking too much.
I agree. Even if we do manage to gather all the information and process it, usually we can implement one or two points of it only. Then we start looking for information all over again :)
Great article Henrik! I especially like you’re point about how over thinking generally complicates things. While I think it is possible to have an attitude of simplification in your thinking, which allows you to think about ways to make things easier and easier, that is much more difficult to achieve.
This is me. I overthink my life and I have been crippled. I have wanted to start my own business for a while now, but have looked for reasons why I shouldn’t…what if I can’t make enough money to pay my bills, and can’t find another job in my business if I fail, and I go totally broke?…or, I can’t do anything yet until my home sells and I can move back home and get on with my life…etc. I am finally learining to take steps towards what I want.
I love this blog and it always keeps me mentally in check.
Thank you very much for the support.
Brilliant post, Henrik! My mantra that snaps me back into action whenever my mind wanders while I’m working is “Make it work.” These tree little words encompass many core concepts: (1) No obstacle is too great to overcome; (2) It has to get done so do whatever it takes to get it done; (3) There are many different ways to get to the same desired result — none are perfect — so just get moving and get there; (3) It doesn’t need to be perfect — it just needs to be “good enough”; and, most importantly, (4) it needs to get done on time!
I’ve learned to trust my instincts much more (just like your tennis player example), and it’s made a world of difference. In fact, I wrote about why our instincts are rather weak if we have had a particularly challenging child and about how to overcome that in my article “Fan Your Inner Flame Till It Burns Bright” at http://shanelyang.com/2008/05/10/fan-your-inner-flame-till-it-burns-bright/
So, now I have a better sense of when I’ve thought enough about a problem and what initial steps/actions I need to take just to get the additional information I need to have any further fruitful thoughts about the issue at hand. Again, great post!
This is so timely for me, as i have been trying to “figure things out” on work/life/goals
A friend told me that sometimes we just have to let purpose come to us. So i realize i have to “let go” of those things i cannot control, like other people’s behaviors, and i need to be responsible for myself and TAKE responsibABILITY for my actions.
thanks
I think we are all at some time or another, victims of over-thinking. Problems and road-blocks can seem so intimidating sometimes, that we tend to feel that thinking about it keeps us from having to “act” on it. But at the end of the day, the challenge is still there, waiting for us to make a move. I agree with many of the points you made. It’s important to focus, give yourself a timeframe within which you can make your decision, and not allow fear to keep you from doing something that will benefit you. Thank you for sharing.
Kei
http://therevealedoasis.blogspot.com
Thinking rather than simply doing is just like waiting for the “right time” to buy a personal computer or laptop. If you wait for the right specs or right price, you will wait forever, as things are getting faster and cheaper continuously. There are particular times, such as transient high memory prices, when you should wait. But, in general, the utility value that you get from using the tool is far greater than the money saved by waiting. Perhaps the most frequent wait rather than do scenario is “i’ll write that novel when I ‘have enough time'”, which of course never comes.
The other problem with waiting is that you start to miss the opportunities and variances in the path that you have chosen. If you wait, you don’t make the mistakes that provide great opportunities to change your path to something that aligns more closely to what you intended to get out of it.
What a delighful post!
It amazes how many on this internet thing, who “want to be in Business” spend all their time Buying Junk, never reading; Attending Teleseminars; Listeneing to Sizzle calls…
And DO NOTHING!
I have rushed into ventures for 5.5 decades, messed up a couple of times, SO WHAT.
85% of Intuition will take you to next level, If you ACT ON IT NOW.
Thanks,
Chuck
Henrik,
I really enjoy your article and this site. I will bookmark it! Positivity is definitely key, after all, the law of attraction encourages like to attract like. The more positive we think the more positive will come our way. As for quieting the mind, that’s another story since I feel like it is always running a mile a minute. Meditation does help though. Anyways, I appreciate the knowledge you share on this site as I too am an advocate for self improvement. I have recently started my own site, http://www.theyoumovement.com because of this desire to not only improve myself and others but also the world. Check it out if you have the time.
Barbara
Great article. I am a huge over thinker and it continually gets me in trouble in terms of completing things that I’ve started (because my ideas tangent and tangent until the end result is so far removed from where I am that I can never finish!).
I also appreciate a personal development writer who isn’t trying to perpetuate the vicious circle often seen in personal help manuals. I’ve read my fair share and you get to the end of it and feel like you need a lot more work, rather then feeling confident and “fixed”! So thanks.
I’m SO guilty of overthinking. Thanks for this reminder to move forward and take action.
I am in the process of limiting my thinking time by creating concrete guidelines for myself (I did this for my blog to keep things simple and focused). It is great to have a bit of guidance to keep my thoughts on track and productive so I can make my list of tasks and GO!
Thinking is an amazing topic. Its one THE topics of zen thought, if not the major one, and Chinese have a many words that dont work in the way of thinking that our Western ways of language do. The word
“Mouchen” means mindless or that happens of itself
this is an important word that symbolizes that of all thinks, because whether we believe it to be so, we are always acting spontaneously. Even though we become flustered with endless arrary of words, we can get lost in action as well. Perhaps finding that which captures our attention and fully maintaining our ability to get mindlessly caught in action.