Overthinking usually shows up as a loop: the same “what if” scenarios, replaying conversations, or trying to predict every outcome. The fastest way to relax your mind is to shift from solving thoughts to settling your nervous system—then give your brain a clear boundary for when (and how) you’ll think about the issue.
Try the 4-7-8 breath: inhale for 4, hold for 7, exhale for 8, repeating 4 cycles. Long exhales cue your body to downshift, which makes thoughts less “sticky.” If breathing feels hard, do a 60-second “cold splash” on your face or hold something cool—quick sensory input can break rumination.
Silently label what’s happening: “catastrophizing,” “mind reading,” or “future tripping.” Labeling reduces emotional intensity and creates distance, so your mind can unclench.
Set a 3-minute timer and write everything you’re looping on—no structure. Then draw two columns: “Can act today” and “Can’t act today.” Choose one tiny action from the first column (send an email, make a list, schedule a call) and deliberately park the rest.
Pick a 10–15 minute block (same time each day). When rumination hits, tell yourself, “Not now—at 6:15.” When the window arrives, review your notes and end with a next step. This trains your mind to stop dragging worries into every moment.
Overthinking gets louder when you’re tired, hungry, overstimulated, or caffeinated. Prioritize sleep, regular meals, and a short evening wind-down (dim lights, no scrolling, light stretch) to lower baseline tension.
For more step-by-step techniques and calming routines, visit the full guide here: https://luxifyo.com/blog/how-to-relax-my-mind-from-overthinking/.
Nighttime is quieter, so unfinished tasks and emotions have more room to surface. Fatigue also lowers your brain’s ability to “filter” thoughts, making worries feel more urgent and believable.
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