What to do if your inner voice is cruel

a english material from Big Think

Your inner voice isn’t always very nice or helpful. When we turn our attention inward, we tend to focus on problems rather than solutions. This causes us to worry, ruminate, and catastrophize, which traps us in a negative thought cycle. The good news is that there is a science-based toolkit that can help you regain control of your inner voice.

vocabulary

   
species /ˈspiːʃiːz/ A species is a class of plants or animals whose members have the same main characteristics and are able to breed with each other.
Pandas are an endangered species
reflect [/rɪˈflekt/] When you reflect on something, you think deeply about it.
I reflected on the child's future.
ruminate [/ˈruːmɪneɪt/] If you ruminate on something, you think about it very carefully.
He ruminated on the terrible wastage that typified American life...
catastrophize /kəˈtæstrəfaɪz/
When that internal monologue starts and we catastrophize and we start to get that tunnel vision.
possess /pəˈzes/ If you possess something, you have it or own it.
He is said to possess a fortune of more than two-and-a-half-thousand million dollars.
simulate [/ˈsɪmjuleɪt/]If you simulate an action or a feeling, you pretend that you are doing it or feeling it
He performed a simulated striptease.
presentation [/ˌpriːzenˈteɪʃn/]When someone gives a presentation, they give a formal talk, often in order to sell something or get support for a proposal.
I always ask how much time I have to make my presentation.
narrative [/ˈnærətɪv/] A narrative is a story or an account of a series of events.
identity [/aɪˈdentəti/] Your identity is who you are
Abu is not his real name, but it's one he uses to disguise his identity
sink [ /sɪŋk/] If a boat sinks or if someone or something sinks it, it disappears below the surface of a mass of water.
The boat was beginning to sink fast
friction /ˈfrɪkʃn/ If there is friction between people, there is disagreement and argument between them
Sara sensed that there had been friction between her children
irritable [/ˈɪrɪtəbl/]If you are irritable, you are easily annoyed
He had been waiting for over an hour and was beginning to feel irritable.
aggression /əˈɡreʃn/ Aggression is a quality of anger and determination that makes you ready to attack other people.
severe [/sɪˈvɪr/] You use severe to indicate that something bad or undesirable is great or intense.
I suffered from severe bouts of depression...
ritual [/ˈrɪtʃuəl/] A ritual is a religious service or other ceremony which involves a series of actions performed in a fixed order.
   

Article

- I think chatter is one of the big problems

we face as a species.

We spend between one-third and one-half

of our waking hours not living in the present.

And what do we do during that time?

We’re talking to ourselves.

Your inner voice is your ability to silently use language

to con your life.

Chatter refers to the dark side of the inner voice.

When we turn our attention inward to make sense

of our problems, we don’t end up finding solutions.

We end up ruminating, worrying, catastrophizing.

We get stuck in a negative cycle that takes

this remarkable tool that we possess, this inner voice,

and it turns it into a curse rather than a blessing.


My name’s Ethan Kross,

I’m a professor of psychology and management,

and I’m the author of the book,

“Chatter: The Voice in Our Head, Why It Matters,

and How to Harness It.”

In terms of whether there’s an evolutionary purpose

to the inner voice,

many scientists believe that language is a tool

that helps us navigate the world,

and our ability to use language

not only to communicate with others,

but to communicate with ourselves,

provides us with a survival advantage.

It’s an incredible problem-solving device.

At the most basic end of the spectrum, our inner voice

is part of what we call our ‘Verbal Working Memory System.’

It’s a basic feature of the human mind that helps us

keep verbal information active in our heads.

Our inner voice also lets us simulate and plan.


So before a big presentation, I’ll go over in my head

what I’m gonna say, what are the different talking

points that I’m gonna run through-

I’ll hear what questions the audience is gonna ask me,

and then I’ll respond in turn.

I’m simulating that exchange, and I’m using my inner voice

to help me do that.

Our inner voice helps us control ourselves.

Think about the last time you may have wanted to reach

for a treat late at night, but then you think to yourself,

“Don’t do it, you’ll regret it in the morning.”

That’s your inner voice.

And then finally, the inner voice helps

us ‘storify’ our lives.

Many of us turn our attention inward to come up

with some narrative that explains our experiences

in ways that give shape to our understanding

of who we are, our identity.

So sometimes this inner voice can be

an incredible source of help, but at other times

it can really sink us.


First, it makes it incredibly hard for us to focus.

Chatter consumes our attention.

Chatter can also create friction in your relationships

because you’re talking about your problems over

and over again, and not being a great listener to others.

It can also make us more irritable,

and lead to something called ‘displaced aggression.’

Finally, we know that chatter can have severe,

negative, physical health effects.

You’ve probably heard that stress kills-

that’s not exactly true.

A stress response is a really adaptive response.

What makes stress toxic is when it remains

chronically-elevated over time.

This is precisely what chatter does.

We experience a stressor in our life,

it then ends, but in our minds our chatter perpetuates it.

We keep thinking about that event over

and over and over again.

And that keeps that stress response active

in ways that can predict things like cardiovascular disease,

chronic inflammation, and even cancer.

It’s hard to overstate how negative the implications

of chatter can be.


The good news is there is a science-based toolkit

that you can use to regain control of your inner voice.

There are things we can do on our own,

ways of harnessing our relationships with other people,

and even ways of interacting with physical environments.

One really great example of these tools are rituals.

We love having control.

When you experience chatter, you often feel

like your thoughts are in control of you.

One of the things that we’ve learned through science

is that we can compensate for this feeling out of control

by creating order around us- rituals are one way to do that.

A ritual is an ordered sequence

of behaviors that you rigidly perform the same way each time

by engaging the same sequence

of behaviors every time the same way.

That’s giving you a sense of order and control.

That can feel really good when you’re mired in chatter.


The tennis great, Rafael Nadal,

he said the hardest thing that he struggles to do

on the tennis court is manage the voices inside his head.

He engages in rituals.

During breaks between play he goes over to his bench.

First, he takes a sip out of one water bottle.

Then he takes a sip out of another.

Then he puts each water bottle back exactly

where he picked them up from on a diagonal to the court.

It’s a ritual he does to manage his chatter.

There are no individual tools that work for all people

in all situations to help manage your chatter.

Instead, the real challenge is to figure out

what are the unique combinations

of tools that work best for you?

Are you weaker for experiencing chatter?

Absolutely not.

You are human for experiencing chatter,

so welcome to the human condition.