[Another quick post today.]
Sometimes it seems as if the solution to a problem is to NOT do something.
For example, if our problem is “I can’t stop thinking about this person” it might seem that we simply have to stop thinking about them.
Obvious, right?
No. Actually, that’s impossible.
“Stopping thinking about somebody” isn’t an action you can do. It’s an absence of an action, not an action itself.
So when we try, we are doomed to fail. We focus on the one thing we can’t do, and end up doing it.
(The classic example of this is: ‘don’t think about orange elephants’. If you really manage it, you’re not actually paying attention to the instruction.)
Instead, we have to reframe the plan as an action you CAN do.
For example, “stop thinking about this person” becomes “think about something else”, which IS an action.
Instead of focusing on NOT thinking about this person, we consciously put our minds somewhere else (perhaps by getting absorbed in a film or a book or a conversation or exercise or whatever).
This works for all kinds of negative actions.
If you’re ever trying to STOP doing something, remember you can never NOT do something… but you CAN do something else.