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Frustrated man driving while a woman yells from the backseat, representing overthinking and the noisy backseat driver in the mind.
Emotional Ease

The Backseat Driver That’s Always With You

Nobody likes a backseat driver barking directions and corrections. It’s annoying — and it steals the focus we need to drive safely. Most of us don’t realize we have an internal backseat driver demanding our attention a good deal of the time we’re awake. The Hidden Cost of Overthinking The backseat driver I’m referring to is your own mind, on overdrive. Just to be clear, overdrive — or overthinking — may be the state you often find yourself in, but it’s not your natural state. It’s a product of how we’ve been taught to use our minds, or more correctly, how we’ve been taught to misuse our minds. Why Overthinking

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Calm sunrise over a still lake with gentle reflections, symbolizing the shift from calm to crazy.
Emotional Ease

Toggling from Calm to Crazy

How We Toggle from Calm to Crazy I’m fascinated by how quickly we humans can toggle from calm to crazy — and back again. We’re calm one minute, and crazy the next. We can toggle back to calm as well, though it happens less often. Even though it can happen quickly, once we get our crazy on, we often struggle to allow ourselves to return to calm. Strangely, allowing is really all we have to do when we want to move from crazy back to calm. The difference between calm and crazy is much less than you might believe. The simplest way to say it is this: when we’re calm,

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Linden tree blossoms on a summer day, reflecting a shift from low moods to quiet presence and well-being.
Emotional Ease

I Wish I Felt Well Enough to Enjoy This Beautiful Day

“I wish I felt well enough to enjoy this beautiful day.” — That was my first low-mood thought of the morning… ten minutes after a strong thunder shower swept the sky clear of anything but blue. The humidity was gone, the temperature was in the high seventies and there was a cool, fresh breeze. And here I was, somehow thinking my physical condition wasn’t up to the task of enjoying the day. The second after this thought crossed my mind, I saw it for what it was: low-mood thinking brought about by several acute sources of physical pain. There is an enormous advantage to understanding that low moods can only

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A young boy sitting with his knees pulled to his chest, showing visible emotion, while a concerned woman gently listens and offers support.
Emotional Ease

What if Anger is the Only Emotion You Can Feel? (Part Two)

In part one of this blog, I wrote about how when anger is your primary emotion (as it is for a lot of people) it cuts you off from the world, and from the best parts of yourself. I also talked about how anger can only arise from one source. The source is fear, and whether we call it by that name, or by any of its other name (anxiety, insecurity, etc) anger isn’t possible with a substrate of fear.

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A distressed man screams with his mouth wide open, surrounded by motion blur, creating a ghostly, fragmented effect—symbolizing emotional overwhelm and the isolating intensity of anger he feels.
Emotional Ease

What if Anger is the Only Emotion You Can Feel? (Part One)

Something very familiar caught my attention in a public space the other day. I watched someone get very angry over what seemed like very little. The place where I saw this was crowded enough that I was able to watch this person over a period of time without drawing attention to myself.

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A broken ceramic bowl with its pieces laid out on a soft surface, symbolizing the concept of breaking open rather than being broken.
Emotional Ease

Broken? Or Just Broken Open?

Yesterday, I was listening to a speech by the author and New York Times columnist, David Brooks. He was talking about moving beyond the challenges we face in life when he said, “You can be broken. Or you can be broken open.” I loved what he was saying, but I have a slightly different take on it.

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An older man deep in thought, resting his chin on his hand, with a solemn expression and a shadow cast on the wall behind him, reflecting the weight of pain.
Emotional Ease

What Does Pain Have to Teach Me This Time Around?

During the past years, and without really wanting to do so, I’ve developed a deep understanding of what it’s like to live with constant physical pain. This understanding has nothing to do with the science behind pain, it’s about the experience of living with pain as a constant companion. I decided a long time ago that it was in my own best interests to learn what I could from pain that might make my life, and perhaps the lives of others, a bit easier.

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