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When Your Mind Won’t Stop Running

Worry is wasted energy. Most of what you fear never happens. Let go, breathe, and trust God; He’s already in tomorrow, so you can live in peace today.

You wake up to the sound of your alarm. Before your feet even hit the floor, your mind starts racing.

Did I reply to that email?
What if that pitch goes wrong today?
Who’ll pick up the kids today if the meeting runs longer?

By the time you’ve had your first sip of coffee, you’ve already lived a dozen worst-case scenarios that haven’t even happened.

You make it through the day, but not really.
You’re at work, but your thoughts are already on tomorrow’s deadlines.
You’re at dinner, but your mind is still running through the day’s mistakes.

And when you finally lie down to rest, your brain starts the same exhausting reel all over again.

Sound familiar?

The thing is that 85% of what you worry about will never happen. Psychologists have proven it. Eighty-five percent!

That means almost all your overthinking and anxious thoughts are about problems that exist only in your imagination.

Overthinking is like paying interest on a debt you don’t owe.

We might think that by overthinking, we’re in control, but it is actually exhausting!

It’s like a mental marathon with no finish line. You burn energy, but you don’t go anywhere.

It feels productive because your brain mistakes rumination for control. But in reality, it’s just feeding your fear.

And your soul was never meant to live in a constant state of emergency.

Jesus said it long before modern science did: "Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?" (Matthew 6:27)

Worry drains today’s strength for a tomorrow that may never come.

So how do we stop the loop?

Start with awareness. The moment you catch your mind spiraling, interrupt the pattern.

Stand up. Breathe deeply. Move. Your body is wired to reset your mind when you change your physical state.

Then, name it. Say it out loud: “This is my overthinking circuit.”
Naming the worry takes away its power. It moves your brain from panic to perspective.

Finally, give your mind a job. Do something real: pray, write, send a message, take a walk, wash a dish.
Completion tells your brain, we did something, and that simple act creates calm.

You don’t beat overthinking by thinking harder, but by returning to peace.

Peace is the presence of perspective. And perspective begins when you remember: you’re not your thoughts.

You’re the one who chooses where your energy flows.

So, the next time your mind starts racing toward what could go wrong, pause.
Breathe.
Pray.

And remember: God is already in tomorrow so that you can live fully in today.

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