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Overthinking can feel strangely safe. You’re not failing, but you’re not moving either—stuck in a mental waiting room where nothing terrible happens, and nothing meaningful happens, either. In this episode, Flo explores overthinking not as “the enemy,” but as a shield—a protection against feelings we don’t want to face: failure, rejection, uncertainty, change.
Through personal stories (money anxiety, delaying this podcast, quitting a job, teaching AcroYoga) and accessible psychology, we unpack how the brain’s planning system (prefrontal cortex) and fear system (amygdala) can lock us into a loop: fear → analysis → inaction → fear not disproven → more analysis. We’ll also look at the “privilege paradox”—how comparing our pain to others’ can invalidate our own experience, block self-compassion, and intensify the loop.
What if overthinking isn’t a cage, but a compass? What if each spiral is pointing toward the thing that most needs our attention?
In this episode:
Overthinking as a defense mechanism (why your brain thinks it’s helping)
The fear–analysis loop and how it keeps you stuck
The “privilege paradox” and how comparison silences your needs
Reframing overthinking from judgment to curiosity: What is this protecting me from?
Practical tools to shift from paralysis to presence
Tools you can try:
Self-compassion: Talk to yourself like you would to a friend; name the protector: “My brain is trying to keep me safe.”
Mindfulness in the body: Three slow breaths; notice chest/shoulders; interrupt the loop by returning to sensation.
Micro-actions: Reduce the size of the next step until it feels almost silly; take one step today.
Body-based practices: Breathwork, stretching, movement to drop out of rumination and into presence.
Share openly: Say the fear out loud to a trusted friend (or aloud to yourself); naming it often weakens it.
Listener prompt (mini-exercise):
Think of a decision you’ve been postponing. Ask: What is my overthinking protecting me from right now—failure, rejection, uncertainty, or change? Notice what shows up in your body. Write it down without judgment.
Journaling prompts:
When I spiral, what feeling am I avoiding?
If I acted without overthinking, what’s the honest worst-case—and how would I handle it?
Where am I invalidating my struggle by comparison? What would self-compassion sound like instead?
What is one micro-action I can take today?
After taking that step, what changed in my body, mood, or thinking?
Takeaway:
Overthinking might feel safe, but safety isn’t the same as growth. Treat the loop as information, not identity. Get curious, take one step, come back to your body, and let action—not analysis—restore your momentum.
By FloOverthinking can feel strangely safe. You’re not failing, but you’re not moving either—stuck in a mental waiting room where nothing terrible happens, and nothing meaningful happens, either. In this episode, Flo explores overthinking not as “the enemy,” but as a shield—a protection against feelings we don’t want to face: failure, rejection, uncertainty, change.
Through personal stories (money anxiety, delaying this podcast, quitting a job, teaching AcroYoga) and accessible psychology, we unpack how the brain’s planning system (prefrontal cortex) and fear system (amygdala) can lock us into a loop: fear → analysis → inaction → fear not disproven → more analysis. We’ll also look at the “privilege paradox”—how comparing our pain to others’ can invalidate our own experience, block self-compassion, and intensify the loop.
What if overthinking isn’t a cage, but a compass? What if each spiral is pointing toward the thing that most needs our attention?
In this episode:
Overthinking as a defense mechanism (why your brain thinks it’s helping)
The fear–analysis loop and how it keeps you stuck
The “privilege paradox” and how comparison silences your needs
Reframing overthinking from judgment to curiosity: What is this protecting me from?
Practical tools to shift from paralysis to presence
Tools you can try:
Self-compassion: Talk to yourself like you would to a friend; name the protector: “My brain is trying to keep me safe.”
Mindfulness in the body: Three slow breaths; notice chest/shoulders; interrupt the loop by returning to sensation.
Micro-actions: Reduce the size of the next step until it feels almost silly; take one step today.
Body-based practices: Breathwork, stretching, movement to drop out of rumination and into presence.
Share openly: Say the fear out loud to a trusted friend (or aloud to yourself); naming it often weakens it.
Listener prompt (mini-exercise):
Think of a decision you’ve been postponing. Ask: What is my overthinking protecting me from right now—failure, rejection, uncertainty, or change? Notice what shows up in your body. Write it down without judgment.
Journaling prompts:
When I spiral, what feeling am I avoiding?
If I acted without overthinking, what’s the honest worst-case—and how would I handle it?
Where am I invalidating my struggle by comparison? What would self-compassion sound like instead?
What is one micro-action I can take today?
After taking that step, what changed in my body, mood, or thinking?
Takeaway:
Overthinking might feel safe, but safety isn’t the same as growth. Treat the loop as information, not identity. Get curious, take one step, come back to your body, and let action—not analysis—restore your momentum.