ChatterBank3 mins ago
Worrying and sleeping
4 Answers
If worrying is so pointless why do we still do it? And why do I find it so hard to get to sleep when I think "I must get to sleep"?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by iwbus. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No real answer, as everyone is different. But here's my tip, which is slightly wacky.
Close your eyes and imagine you are in a room where all the anxt about your worries is contained. then imagine yourself stepping from the room, and just outside it you can still just hear the worrying thinking going on inside the room you left. Close the door to your worry room, and say to yourself you'll deal with them anothertime.
Its abuot using another part of your mind, that's all. Everything in the mind is a choice - choose to think something different, by mentally closing a door on the worries - afterall, worrying doesn't solve problems.
If you return to your worries, then the worrying thoughts have too much invested "feeling" - think some happier thoughts and don't be afraid to move on.
Close your eyes and imagine you are in a room where all the anxt about your worries is contained. then imagine yourself stepping from the room, and just outside it you can still just hear the worrying thinking going on inside the room you left. Close the door to your worry room, and say to yourself you'll deal with them anothertime.
Its abuot using another part of your mind, that's all. Everything in the mind is a choice - choose to think something different, by mentally closing a door on the worries - afterall, worrying doesn't solve problems.
If you return to your worries, then the worrying thoughts have too much invested "feeling" - think some happier thoughts and don't be afraid to move on.