There’s a social media meme about how many exclamation marks to use in emails. Or, rather, the panicky internal debate that can be sparked by this dilemma. Is two unprofessional or too keen, but one – or none – not friendly enough?
Chances are, I’ll overthink this issue when I email the Body+Soul editors with this article. From second-guessing a freelance pitch to worrying at 3am that I overshared with the barista, things have a tendency to take up rent-free residence in my mind.
Sound familiar? It’s no wonder: University of Michigan research suggests 73 per cent of those aged 25 to 35 and 52 per cent of 45 to 55ers experience overthinking, with women more likely to wrangle with it than men.
Psychologist Nancy Sokarno tells me the majority of her clients report this sort of rumination. “We can overthink the past, trying to break down a scenario that we’ve already experienced to make more sense of it,” she explains. “Or it’s about assessing a future situation and trying to gain some sort of control over how you might go into it. But we can get really stuck in that loop and just go over it again and again.”
Navigating these loops can impact wellbeing, from our energy levels to the opportunities we do and don’t end up taking. So, how can we start to break free for calmer, happier and more productive lives? I’m so ready to find out.