Worrying Feels Useful. It isn’t.
People say they “can’t stop worrying,” but that’s not usually true.
They won’t stop because somewhere under the anxiety is a belief that worrying helps.
It feels like preparation. Like vigilance. Like control.
But let’s be honest: it’s just rehearsing powerlessness.
Over and over. Loudly. In your own head.
Worry drains your energy, hijacks your focus, and makes you less able to engage with the actual moment you’re in.
And no, it doesn’t prevent the thing you’re scared of. It just makes sure you feel like shit before anything even happens.
Read more: Why Always Going to the Worst Case Scenario in Your Head Hurts You
Worst-case thinking isn’t realism. It’s habit.
The brain treats repetition as evidence. So if you run the worst-case scenario enough times, it starts to feel like the most likely scenario.
But it’s not.
It’s just the most familiar one.
You rarely imagine the best-case scenario with that level of detail or commitment.
Which is weird, considering both are equally fictional.
So why are you so loyal to the bleak version?
Worry wrecks problem-solving./span>
So how do you break the habit of worrying about everything?
Chronic worry doesn’t make you sharp. It makes you tunnel-visioned.
You miss options that are right in front of you because your nervous system is acting like there’s a bear in the room.
When the only real threat is a slightly uncomfortable email.
The truth is, you’re probably intelligent enough to figure this out.
But worry hijacks intelligence.
You can’t think clearly if you’re bracing for impact all the time.
You don’t need to fix everything. You need to change how you show up.
The goal isn’t to control life so perfectly that nothing goes wrong.
The goal is to stop spending your entire life rehearsing for disaster.
You can’t force people to behave better. You can’t control every outcome.
But you can stop spiralling over things that haven’t even happened yet.
This is a habit. Not a personality trait.
And it can be changed.
But not just by thinking about it harder.
Here’s the uncomfortable part:
Personal change isn’t an idea.
It’s not a quote you read or a podcast you half-listen to while doomscrolling.
It’s repetition. It’s pattern disruption. It’s catching your own BS in the moment and choosing a different path—even when it feels unnatural.
It’s experimental. It’s inconvenient. And yes, it actually works.
So how do you stop worrying about everything?
Imagine who you’d be if you didn’t live in a state of constant anxiety.
Not a fantasy version of you. A realistic one. Six months from now. What do they think about instead of looping? How do they spend their attention?
1. Write down every thought you have that leads to worry.
All of them. Even the ridiculous ones. Especially the ridiculous ones.
You can’t shift what you won’t name.
2. Find a believable shift.
Not positive thinking. Plausible thinking.
If “I nailed that email” is too far, try “It probably didn’t ruin my reputation permanently.”
3. Interrupt the loop in real time.
When the old thought shows up, replace it with the new one.
Even if it only takes you from dread to mild unease—good. That’s movement.
4. Adjust. Practice. Repeat.
Worry is persistent. You’ll need to be more persistent. That’s it.
Alignment coaching guides you through this process step by step and keeps you focused on applying the tools. And you will have more energy for the stuff you want to be present for and life gets easier.
If you’re serious about changing this, don’t do it alone.
Alignment coaching is designed to do exactly this:
Interrupt the mental noise, teach you how to override your default wiring, and help you build a thought process that doesn’t eat you alive.
This isn’t about becoming chill or never caring.
It’s about getting your mind back so your time, your attention, and your decisions are actually yours again.
If you’re ready to stop spinning, start here:
Book a Coaching Exploration Call
No pressure. No sales pitch. Just a brutally useful hour to see what’s possible when your brain isn’t running a 24/7 disaster simulation.
P.S. If you want some help figuring out the next part, book a free coaching exploration call. We’ll talk about what’s going on and whether group coaching or 1-on-1 coaching fits. No pressure. Just clarity.
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