I agree that it is hard to stop worrying, @Pavati. For me, it helps simply to notice what is going on and to be aware that I'm creating the negative feelings I'm experiencing by what I'm thinking. It somehow let's me take myself less seriously and not really worry about how I'm feeling because I know it will pass when my thinking changes (which it always does).
When it feels like I'm being attacked from someone or something outside of me, it helps to remember that that isn't really the case. Sometimes I stop and ask myself if another person would be feeling differently than I am in a particular situation, and the answer is always 'yes' - proof that my experience is coming from my thoughts about whatever is going on. For example, @lifechange might have a friend who would be so thrilled that her son actually took and passed his first exam, it may not matter to her at all that he wasn't interested in the second one. I'm always amazed at how different my and my husband's accounts are of things we did together. Usually I just think he's nuts and has a terrible memory but really, his experience was actually different. Sometimes because we noticed and paid attention to different aspects of the event and sometimes because our thoughts about it just weren't the same.
It's like the old story of having 5 blindfolded men who've never seen one each touch a different part of an elephant, and describe what an elephant is. The guy at the trunk tells a much different story than those touching the foot, ear, side, or tail of the animal.
I'm not saying I don't worry -- but I don't worry about worrying. xx
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