Negativity in small doses is a good thing. We evolved the ability to experience negative emotions for a reason. What's problematic is when those negative thoughts end up unraveling into chatter, where it's not my friend has cancer, how am I going to help her and move on? And then you come up with an answer that can be quite destructive. The idea that our inner voice speaks at 4,000 words per minute is astonishing too.
Whether or not we care to admit it, we all talk to ourselves. A lot. The voice in our heads yaks it up about half the time we’re awake, and it can speak at a rate of 4,000 words per minute. When it really gets going like that, not everything it says is particularly helpful. We’ve all gotten stuck dwelling on the past, worrying about the future, or standing idly by as our inner monologue devolves from introspection into negativity. Experimental psychologist Ethan Kross calls those moments chatter. “When the inner voice runs amok and chatter takes the mental microphone,” he writes, “our mind not only torments but paralyzes us.” Luckily, there are tools we can use to take back the mic, and in this episode, Ethan talks Rufus through them.