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How to Journal for Better Mental Health: Simple Techniques to Calm Overthinking and Rumination
Journaling sounds simple: just write your thoughts down . But when you’re overwhelmed, anxious, or stuck in overthinking, staring at a blank page can feel impossible. The good news: you don’t need to be a “writer” to use journaling as a mental health tool. Decades of research on expressive writing show that short, honest writing about your thoughts and feelings can reduce stress, improve mood, and even help your body cope better with difficult experiences. And when journalin
9 min read


How Journaling Can Calm Overthinking and Break the Rumination Cycle
When your mind won’t stop spinning, people love to say, “Just stop overthinking.” If only it were that easy. When you’re stuck in overthinking and rumination, your brain keeps replaying the same worries, memories, and “what if” scenarios on a loop. You know it’s unhelpful, but you can’t find the “off” switch. One simple, science‑backed tool that actually helps many people is journaling : writing your thoughts and feelings down in a structured way. Not as a perfect habit, not
11 min read


Simple yet effective techniques to stop rumination in its track
When your mind is stuck on repeat If you’re reading this, chances are your brain won’t stop replaying the same negative thoughts loop over and over. Maybe you feel trapped in a mental loop, going through every detail of a conversation, imagining the worst-case scenario, and asking “Why did I do that?” or “What if this goes wrong?” on repeat. Many people describe it as being stuck in a thought pattern they can’t turn off, or a repeating cycle of overthinking that hijacks their
9 min read
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