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Most of us are running around life worrying about the worst that can happen. We try to prepare ourselves for the worst by dress rehearsing tragedy so we can be “ready” when (not if!) it comes. We focus on all the things we don’t want to happen way more than we focus on the things we do.
But here’s the thing: we all know that it doesn’t feel good to focus on the worst that could happen. So why do our brains do it?
I’ve had several clients ask me this lately, and I am just as good at dress rehearsing tragedy as anyone else. But I’ve trained myself to redirect my brain when it gets focused on the worst that could happen, and think instead about where I want to go + what I want to create in my life.
When we focus on the worst that could happen, we get anchored there. When we focus on what we really do want, then we move slowly + surely in that direction.
In this week’s episode, we’re talking about why our brains like to worry about the worst that could happen instead of thinking about all the good things in our lives. We’ll chat all about why trying to “prepare” ourselves for bad things to happen actually takes the joy + peace out of the good times, and I’ll give you some ideas for redirecting your brain. And we’ll talk about committing to the best-case scenario instead of the worst.
LISTEN HERE
The post Why your brain focuses on the worst that can happen [DEEP DIVE] appeared first on howshereallydoesit.com.
By Koren MotekaitisMost of us are running around life worrying about the worst that can happen. We try to prepare ourselves for the worst by dress rehearsing tragedy so we can be “ready” when (not if!) it comes. We focus on all the things we don’t want to happen way more than we focus on the things we do.
But here’s the thing: we all know that it doesn’t feel good to focus on the worst that could happen. So why do our brains do it?
I’ve had several clients ask me this lately, and I am just as good at dress rehearsing tragedy as anyone else. But I’ve trained myself to redirect my brain when it gets focused on the worst that could happen, and think instead about where I want to go + what I want to create in my life.
When we focus on the worst that could happen, we get anchored there. When we focus on what we really do want, then we move slowly + surely in that direction.
In this week’s episode, we’re talking about why our brains like to worry about the worst that could happen instead of thinking about all the good things in our lives. We’ll chat all about why trying to “prepare” ourselves for bad things to happen actually takes the joy + peace out of the good times, and I’ll give you some ideas for redirecting your brain. And we’ll talk about committing to the best-case scenario instead of the worst.
LISTEN HERE
The post Why your brain focuses on the worst that can happen [DEEP DIVE] appeared first on howshereallydoesit.com.