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How to Control Your Mind (When It's Loud, Lying, and Unhinged)

What to Do When Your Inner Monologue Turns Into a Megaphone

By Dishmi MPublished 8 months ago 3 min read
Leonardo ai

Introduction

Let's be honest: your mind is not always your best friend. Sometimes it feels like a chaotic roommate who won't shut up, lies constantly, and thrives on drama. But here's the truth: your mind isn't the enemy. It's just misunderstood. This article isn't about achieving total mental silence or becoming some monk on a mountaintop. It's about building a new relationship with your thoughts - one based on clarity, distance, and agency.

1. You Are Not Your Thoughts - You're the Space They Appear In

When your brain is a whirlwind, the first step is remembering: you are not your thoughts. You are the awareness that sees them.

Thoughts are involuntary. They're patterns of mental noise, not facts.

Learning to observe them without identifying with them is liberating.

Awareness is a muscle. The more you train it, the calmer the storm becomes.

Practical Methods:

Label your thoughts: "There's that worry again" instead of believing it.

Do a 60-second mindfulness check-in: just notice, don't judge.

Journal nightly: write recurring thoughts, then ask, "Is this true? Is this useful?"

2. Emotional Hijacking Is Real - But You Can Regain Control Sooner

Your brain was built for survival, not serenity. When emotions flare, your logical brain often gets sidelined.

The amygdala can hijack your nervous system before you're even aware.

Regulating emotions is physiological, not just psychological.

It's not about never reacting. It's about shortening recovery time.

Practical Methods:

Try box breathing (4-in, 4-hold, 4-out, 4-hold) to calm the nervous system.

Name the emotion aloud: "I'm feeling anxious." This engages logic centers.

Use your senses: List 5 things you see, 4 you feel, 3 you hear - and so on.

3. The Stories You Tell Yourself Shape Your Reality - So Choose Them Carefully

Thoughts become stories, and stories become beliefs. Many of them aren't true - just rehearsed.

Cognitive distortions (catastrophizing, black-and-white thinking) are sneaky.

Reframing isn't toxic positivity. It's clarity.

Choosing your internal narrative changes how you experience life.

Practical Methods:

Ask: "What would I say to a friend right now?"

Use CBT thought records: break down your thought-emotion-behavior patterns.

Identify default stories ("I'm not enough") and challenge them with data.

4. The Body Keeps the Score - Your Mind Can't Be Calmed Without It

Your brain and body are one system. Mental chaos often begins in physical tension.

Stress and trauma live in the body.

Breath, posture, and movement shape mood.

Ignoring your body leads to mental loops.

Practical Methods:

Body scan: Close your eyes, find where tension lives, breathe into it.

Shake it out: Move your limbs like you're flicking off water.

Grounding poses: Stand with feet flat, spine tall, and breathe slowly.

5. Distraction Is Not Coping - Learn the Difference Between Avoidance and Regulation

It's easy to confuse numbing out with self-care. One relieves; the other restores.

Distraction offers short-term comfort, long-term chaos.

Real regulation helps you face what you're avoiding - with support.

Building resilience means sitting with discomfort, not fleeing it.

Practical Methods:

Timer trick: 10 minutes of distraction, then come back to the feeling.

Create a regulation kit: calming music, journaling, a walk, a mantra.

Ask yourself: "Am I avoiding or regulating right now?"

6. Uncertainty Tolerance Is a Muscle - Train It Like One

When your mind screams for answers, it's craving certainty. But peace lives in the opposite.

Anxiety feeds off the need to know.

Learning to tolerate uncertainty is mental strength training.

Uncertainty isn't failure - it's life.

Practical Methods:

"Not knowing" meditation: Sit quietly and watch the urge to solve.

Keep an uncertainty log: Note daily unknowns you survived.

Reframe: Instead of "What if this goes wrong?" try "What do I need right now?"

7. Healing Isn't Linear - But Progress Leaves Traces

Healing looks like a maze, not a ladder. Expecting straight lines leads to burnout.

Mental health is a cycle, not a finish line.

Bad days don't erase progress - they reveal where growth is still unfolding.

Celebrate micro-moments. They're proof of movement.

Practical Methods:

Track non-linear wins: "I noticed the thought faster," not just "I felt good."

Reflect weekly: What did I learn? What helped? What didn't?

Celebrate every pause, breath, or thoughtful choice.

Conclusion: You Already Have What It Takes

You don't need to fix yourself. You need to witness yourself - with honesty and patience. The mind will still be loud, and it will still lie. But you won't be so easily fooled. You'll remember who you are beneath the noise: the awareness, the calm center, the listener.

And that's the quiet power they can't take from you.

"Confidence isn't the requirement, it's the result."

- Leila Hormozi (CEO of Acquisition.com)

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About the Creator

Dishmi M

I’m Dishmi, a Dubai-based designer, writer & AI artist. I talk about mental health, tech, and how we survive modern life.

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Comments (2)

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  • Bǔ Líng Xiǎo Jiě8 months ago

    Well said. I tried too. sometimes when my thoughts gets louder. Thank you for giving good tips!

  • Michael Hicks8 months ago

    I like how you break down the relationship with our thoughts. Labeling thoughts really helps me distance myself. And box breathing is a game-changer for calming down. But how do you keep up with journaling nightly? I always mean to, but it gets tough. Also, any other tips for catching those cognitive distortions early?

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