Leroy Scott MS, MDiv, LPC, NCC
Where do they come from? How do they form? How do they know which ones bother me the most? Why don’t they stop coming up? Don’t they know they don’t help us, but they hurt us? Why would they do that? Why don’t they stop?

The plea of a 24-year old college athlete in counseling for depression, “I wish there was a button I could press to make my thoughts stop. They tell me things that are not true. They lie to me about myself and others. They make me cry. They make me feel feelings I wish I didn’t feel. They remind me of all the negative things I’ve been through and the torture my drive for my future. Why? Why? Why? Please help!”
Then he paused for a second and said nothing. The room went silent. You could almost hear him breathing. The stress ball he held in his hand, you could hear him squeeze. Then he cried and went silent again.
Fifteen seconds into that silence, I chose a skillfully timed moment to interject. Matching his tone and reflecting his affect, I said, “Something happened to your thoughts just now.” He replied, “They stopped – for a second.” Then he went on, “Hmm. Interesting. Now they’re coming back because you asked about them. “That’s weird,” he said. In that moment he realized that his thoughts were directly connected to his experience and conversation. They didn’t just flow independently, but could be influenced and controlled by conversation.
Getting in touch with how you interact with your thoughts can change your life and here are a few things you should think about deeply, so that you can start taking control of your thought life.

#1. Your brain is designed to protect you
Without fight or flight, you wouldn’t be able to protect yourself. So, for the brain it’s all about perceiving threats. It focuses on things that are threatening and puts most of its energy in anything it perceives as a threat because that’s the only way for it to prepare the body for a survival response. For example, if you scroll all the comments on your timeline and have five hundred great comments and one negative comment, your brain will grab the negative comment and begin running thoughts in your head concerning the one comment. It’s natural – If it feels threatened, it begins to set up its defense and won’t let it go without you intervening. You have to start testing what your brain is perceiving with reality to let your brain know that you’re fine. Literally, you should tell it that – “I’m fine.” Then you should start comforting it by practicing Deep Nasal Breathing, which releases chemicals in the brain relaxing the diaphragm and calming the central nervous system. Try it!
#2. You cannot have two thoughts at the same time
Take a pen and place it on the right side of the table. Then take a pencil and place it at the left side of the table. Think to yourself – “I want to write with the pen.” Then think to yourself – “I want to write with the pencil.” Then try to run the thoughts together at the same time. What you’ll find is that you can’t. If you tried hard enough, you could feel your brain switching and mixing the thoughts up very quickly – trying to push them through together at the same time – but it simply can’t do it. The reason is because the brain can’t consciously process two thoughts at the same time. That simply means what ever thought the brain turns on – you can turn off by adding a different thought. Practice blocking and countering negative thoughts with positive thoughts. The more you practice the better you get. Eventually, you will condition your brain to expect a flood of positive thoughts for every negative thought it produces. Try it!
#3. Perception influences thoughts and form beliefs
Your brain often thinks based on your perception. Take responsibility for that! Don’t just blame it on the thoughts. Sometimes you have to be honest about how you’re actually seeing things, in order to change your thoughts. You may be looking at things the wrong way and if you are, you have to change your perception of things in order to influence your thought life. Remember, it does no harm to look at things from a different perspective, especially if it helps you. Try it!
If you would like more strategies on changing your thought life and learn more about how to take control of your thought life and your success, contact our Thought Life Institute by filling out the contact information below.
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