Imagine this.
It's Sunday afternoon. Nothing's wrong, exactly — but everything feels grey and heavy.
What's the point? It'll always feel like this. Something's wrong with me.
Know the weight?
Before you can think clearly, you need to calm the nervous system. Try one cycle of box breathing.
Better?
Now that the body is quieter, you can work with the mind.
Here's how.
Before the feeling came, a thought fired — on its own, in a split second.
Automatic thought"It will always feel like this"
You didn't choose it, and you might not believe it once you look closely. That's what we'll do next: catch one, and check whether it's true.
Write what actually happened — what a camera would have caught.
Name what you feel and rate each from 0 to 100%.
Catch the thought that fired on its own — the instant story your mind told. Write it word for word.
Weigh it like a fair judge. What genuinely supports the thought? What argues against it? Facts, not feelings.
"It will always feel like this"
Write a version that fits all the evidence — fairer and more accurate.
Not because the situation changed — because the thought did.
A flat, grey afternoon for no clear reason
"It will always feel like this"
Heaviness, flatness, the pull to withdraw
Between what happened and what you felt sat a thought you never noticed — and you just caught it.
What you just used is a thought record — the core tool of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.
You pull the thought apart from what's real, and catch it before it spirals. With practice, the calm comes easier every time.
You just did that by hand. Unwindly makes it second nature.
Write. Reflect. Rewire.
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The loop doesn't have to run forever — now you know how to interrupt it.
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