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In this week’s Think Thursday, Molly builds on last week’s conversation about overwhelm and takes it one level deeper—into uncertainty and the brain’s fundamental need for coherence.
Many people say, “I’m overwhelmed by everything.” But often, what they’re describing isn’t simply busyness. It’s destabilization. The pace of technological change, the relentless news cycle, economic uncertainty, global conflict, and cultural instability create a steady stream of input that the human brain was not designed to process.
Our brains evolved for village-level information flow—not constant global exposure in real time.
The Brain as a Prediction Machine
Modern neuroscience describes the brain as a prediction engine. Researchers such as Karl Friston (predictive processing theory) suggest that the brain’s primary job is not just to react to reality, but to anticipate it.
Your brain is constantly generating internal forecasts about what is likely to happen next. It builds models of what is safe, familiar, and probable. When those models align with experience, the brain operates efficiently. Monitoring decreases. Stress drops. Calm increases.
But when prediction fails—when the future feels unstable or unclear—the brain increases vigilance. Cortisol rises. The amygdala becomes more reactive. Monitoring intensifies.
Uncertainty is not just emotionally uncomfortable. It is neurologically expensive.
Research comparing predictable and unpredictable stressors shows that unpredictable stress can create stronger physiological responses than predictable stress—even when the predictable stressor is objectively worse. The brain often prefers a known negative outcome to an unknown one because predictability allows preparation, and preparation reduces perceived threat.
Coherence vs. Ambiguity
Researchers such as Travis Proulx and Steven Heine have explored how disruptions in meaning and narrative coherence increase anxiety and motivate the brain to restore order. Coherence stabilizes the nervous system. Ambiguity destabilizes it.
When someone says, “I’m overwhelmed by everything,” that word everything represents a collapse of hierarchy and narrative. The brain cannot model everything at once. It cannot prioritize everything simultaneously. So it defaults to alarm.
Language plays a powerful role here. Molly revisits her recent quote:
“Every time you replace ‘I’m overwhelmed’ with ‘I need to decide what matters most and go slow,’ your brain stops firing alarm signals and starts organizing information again.”While this shift does not immediately shut down the amygdala, research on cognitive reappraisal by psychologist James Gross shows that reframing increases prefrontal cortex activity and decreases amygdala activation over time. Changing language changes the predictive model the brain uses.
Molly also revisits a core Alcohol Minimalist concept: thoughts are both descriptive and prescriptive. Repeating “I’m overwhelmed” reinforces a future expectation. The brain uses repeated thoughts as data. Language influences prediction.
Why This Feels Amplified Now
The modern nervous system is metabolizing more information than at any point in human history. Our brains evolved to monitor a small social circle, not global crises, economic forecasts, political unrest, and technological revolutions delivered instantly.
When input exceeds the brain’s capacity to construct stable models:
This is not fragility. It is neurobiology.
And it has direct implications for behavior change.
The brain invests effort when it believes the future is navigable. When the future feels chaotic, it shifts toward short-term safety behaviors—scrolling, avoidance, comfort-seeking, and returning to familiar habits—not because discipline has disappeared, but because predictability feels safer than uncertainty. Coherence builds confidence. Confidence supports effort. Effort sustains behavior change.
When coherence drops, consistency often drops with it.
Five Ways to Restore Coherence
While you cannot eliminate global uncertainty, you can restore local coherence. The brain does not require certainty everywhere. It requires stability somewhere.
Here are five actionable steps:
Each of these steps restores hierarchy. Each reduces prediction error. Each sends a stabilizing signal to the nervous system.
You are telling your brain: “The world may be uncertain, but my behavior has structure.”
The Bottom Line
Your brain does not require absolute certainty in order to function well. It requires enough pattern to feel oriented. Enough structure to reduce constant monitoring. Enough stability to believe its predictions will not be continuously disrupted.
You cannot calm the entire world. But you can restore order in your immediate sphere.
When coherence returns, clarity follows.
By Molly Watts, Author & Coach4.8
156156 ratings
In this week’s Think Thursday, Molly builds on last week’s conversation about overwhelm and takes it one level deeper—into uncertainty and the brain’s fundamental need for coherence.
Many people say, “I’m overwhelmed by everything.” But often, what they’re describing isn’t simply busyness. It’s destabilization. The pace of technological change, the relentless news cycle, economic uncertainty, global conflict, and cultural instability create a steady stream of input that the human brain was not designed to process.
Our brains evolved for village-level information flow—not constant global exposure in real time.
The Brain as a Prediction Machine
Modern neuroscience describes the brain as a prediction engine. Researchers such as Karl Friston (predictive processing theory) suggest that the brain’s primary job is not just to react to reality, but to anticipate it.
Your brain is constantly generating internal forecasts about what is likely to happen next. It builds models of what is safe, familiar, and probable. When those models align with experience, the brain operates efficiently. Monitoring decreases. Stress drops. Calm increases.
But when prediction fails—when the future feels unstable or unclear—the brain increases vigilance. Cortisol rises. The amygdala becomes more reactive. Monitoring intensifies.
Uncertainty is not just emotionally uncomfortable. It is neurologically expensive.
Research comparing predictable and unpredictable stressors shows that unpredictable stress can create stronger physiological responses than predictable stress—even when the predictable stressor is objectively worse. The brain often prefers a known negative outcome to an unknown one because predictability allows preparation, and preparation reduces perceived threat.
Coherence vs. Ambiguity
Researchers such as Travis Proulx and Steven Heine have explored how disruptions in meaning and narrative coherence increase anxiety and motivate the brain to restore order. Coherence stabilizes the nervous system. Ambiguity destabilizes it.
When someone says, “I’m overwhelmed by everything,” that word everything represents a collapse of hierarchy and narrative. The brain cannot model everything at once. It cannot prioritize everything simultaneously. So it defaults to alarm.
Language plays a powerful role here. Molly revisits her recent quote:
“Every time you replace ‘I’m overwhelmed’ with ‘I need to decide what matters most and go slow,’ your brain stops firing alarm signals and starts organizing information again.”While this shift does not immediately shut down the amygdala, research on cognitive reappraisal by psychologist James Gross shows that reframing increases prefrontal cortex activity and decreases amygdala activation over time. Changing language changes the predictive model the brain uses.
Molly also revisits a core Alcohol Minimalist concept: thoughts are both descriptive and prescriptive. Repeating “I’m overwhelmed” reinforces a future expectation. The brain uses repeated thoughts as data. Language influences prediction.
Why This Feels Amplified Now
The modern nervous system is metabolizing more information than at any point in human history. Our brains evolved to monitor a small social circle, not global crises, economic forecasts, political unrest, and technological revolutions delivered instantly.
When input exceeds the brain’s capacity to construct stable models:
This is not fragility. It is neurobiology.
And it has direct implications for behavior change.
The brain invests effort when it believes the future is navigable. When the future feels chaotic, it shifts toward short-term safety behaviors—scrolling, avoidance, comfort-seeking, and returning to familiar habits—not because discipline has disappeared, but because predictability feels safer than uncertainty. Coherence builds confidence. Confidence supports effort. Effort sustains behavior change.
When coherence drops, consistency often drops with it.
Five Ways to Restore Coherence
While you cannot eliminate global uncertainty, you can restore local coherence. The brain does not require certainty everywhere. It requires stability somewhere.
Here are five actionable steps:
Each of these steps restores hierarchy. Each reduces prediction error. Each sends a stabilizing signal to the nervous system.
You are telling your brain: “The world may be uncertain, but my behavior has structure.”
The Bottom Line
Your brain does not require absolute certainty in order to function well. It requires enough pattern to feel oriented. Enough structure to reduce constant monitoring. Enough stability to believe its predictions will not be continuously disrupted.
You cannot calm the entire world. But you can restore order in your immediate sphere.
When coherence returns, clarity follows.

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