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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
The most dangerous, oddly glorified, yet overlooked problem in the world:

Overthinking and underacting.

It's why you're stressed, depressed and your immune system is always in chaos.

Here's Eckhart Tolle 7-step protocol to escape the prison of overthinking: ๐Ÿงต
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Most people don't realize that unnecessary negative mind activity generates a significant part of their unhappiness.

Overthinking isn't just annoying - it's physically damaging your body...
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
As Tolle discovered, your body can't distinguish between an actual threat and your anxious thoughts.

When you think fearful thoughts, your body reacts as if you're in real danger.

Here's what's happening in the mind...
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Your mind says "what if I fail?" and your body releases stress hormones.

Do this for years and it depletes your immune system.

Even mainstream medicine now acknowledges this mind-body connection.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
The first awakening, according to Tolle, is surprisingly simple:

Recognizing there's a voice in your head that never stops commenting on your life.

This realization alone can be transformative.

Most people are completely unaware they're trapped in continuous mental chatter.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Listen to your self-talk patterns:

โ€ข"I shouldn't have said that."
โ€ข"You really messed up again."
โ€ข "Why can't I stop thinking about this?"

That last one? Still overthinking!

For many people, this internal dialogue is predominantly negative and rarely stops.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Here's where it gets fascinating...

Your mind dwells on negative events much longer than positive ones.

You can think about a beautiful sunset for a moment.

But someone who slighted you yesterday? You can ruminate for hours, days, even years.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
This creates what Tolle calls a "cluttered mind" where you:

โ€ข Identify completely with your thoughts
โ€ข Instantly judge everything you encounter
โ€ข Live in a near-constant state of mental noise
โ€ข Feel compelled to have opinions on everything

Sound familiar?
Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Tolle discovered this at age 29 after contemplating suicide:

"I cannot live with myself any longer."

This thought created a breakthrough - who is the 'I' that can't live with 'myself'?
Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
If there are two - the 'I' and the 'self' - then one must be false.

In that moment, Tolle experienced what neuroscientists now call "cognitive defusion" - separation from thought.

His mind collapsed into silence.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Tolle discovered something profound through his own suffering:

There's a correlation between your mental-emotional state and what happens in your life.

Your predominant thoughts influence who you spend time with, where you work, and even what events occur around you.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
It works like this:

Your thoughts โ†’ create emotions โ†’ influence behaviors โ†’ attract similar people/situations โ†’ reinforce thoughts

If you believe "bad things always happen to me," you'll notice, remember and create more negative experiences.

Here's Tolle's 7-step protocol to escape overthinking:
Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 1: Witness Consciousness

Don't just "be aware" of thoughts - create deliberate distance by labeling them: "Having a thought about failure" instead of "I'm going to fail."

This neurologically activates your prefrontal cortex and deactivates your amygdala, breaking the stress cycle.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 2: Pattern Interruption

Tolle recommends a specific technique: When caught in rumination, focus on your hands for 30 seconds.

Feel the subtle energy or tingling sensation in your palms.

This instantly shifts brain activity from Beta to Alpha waves, breaking thought loops.
Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 3: The Power of Pause

When negative thoughts arise, wait 90 seconds before responding.

Neuroscientist Jill Bolte Taylor proved this is exactly how long emotional reactions take to flush through your body - if you don't feed them with more thoughts.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 4: The Reality Test

Ask: "Is this thought happening in physical reality right now?"

Not "Is this thought true?" (which keeps you in thought).

Tolle emphasizes testing against present sensory experience, not debating content.

This activates your right brain hemisphere.
Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 5: Body Anchoring

Instead of general "body awareness," Tolle recommends feeling your inner energy field:

The tingling life-energy inside your hands, feet, and entire body.

This creates what neuroscientists call "embodied cognition" - thinking from your whole nervous system.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 6: Radical Acceptance

Don't just "accept what is" - Tolle teaches saying "yes" to the feeling of resistance itself.

When you feel yourself fighting reality, accept the fighting.

This paradoxical approach dissolves the ego's oppositional nature at its root.
Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
Step 7: Present Moment Anchoring

Rather than trying to "be present," Tolle suggests focusing on one sense perception completely:

The sound of water, the sensation of breath, the feeling of air on skin.

This creates what he calls "portals to presence" - gateways beyond thinking.
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Lorwen Harris Nagle, PhD
@LORWEN108
But here's what makes Tolle's approach different from standard mindfulness:

He's not just teaching a technique to feel better.

He's revealing that your true identity isn't your thinking mind at all.

You are the awareness behind thoughts - unchanging, peaceful, and whole.
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