Just life · 13 April 2022
Confessions of a recovering overthinker
Are you someone who lies awake at night worrying about things? Are you overly concerned about what other people think of you? Chances are you're an overthinker. Professional career coach and recovering overthinker Claire Seeber is here to help you understand the pattern of your overthinking and use it to your advantage.
If used in the right way, your overthinking can become a strength instead of a weakness.
Hi, my name is Claire, and I'm a recovering overthinker.
What does that mean? That means I have spent far too many years thinking far too often and far too long about what others thought of me. And the day I realized that none of that energy was worth it, was the day my life changed for the better.
Overthinkers are often highly empathetic and passionate people. However, this care and concern for others, and the insatiable desire to feel that you are doing well, can sometimes overtake the actual doing of things. It can paralyze you and ensure that you invest more time dissecting conversations — what you did or didn't say — over the positive contributions that you made to the conversation.
Overthinking can make you anxious and stunt your ability to learn and grow because you don't see growth, you only see failure.
There are an endless number of books out there that will tell you how to ban overthinking, or offer a 'five-step guide' to stop thinking about what others think of you, forever. I call bullshit on that — and I can, because I am an overthinker. I don't believe it is something you can just 'cure'. It's a part of you, but when understood and used in the right way it can be a strength instead of a weakness.
I recently ran a coaching session with someone who wanted to 'beat' overthinking. The truth is, you can't. But you can learn how to use your overthinking for good and not as a stress trigger.
It's not the overthinking itself that causes stress or anxiety, it's what you're thinking about when you're overthinking. I still catch myself from time to time caring about things I shouldn't, people's opinions of me, or whether I did or didn't say something.