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6 Buddhist techniques to stop overthinking

etimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 20, 2025, 11:00 IST
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6 Buddhist techniques to stop overthinking

When the mind begins to loop, replaying conversations, predicting disasters, and analysing tiny details that don’t matter, it’s rarely the situation that exhausts you. It's thinking about the situation. Buddhist teachers often say the mind is like a puppy: adorable, energetic, and constantly running somewhere you didn’t ask it to. The good news? It can be trained. Gently, patiently, consistently. Here are six Buddhist-inspired practices that help quiet the noise so your thoughts stop feeling like a traffic jam.

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Watch your breath, not your thoughts

In Buddhism, the breath is the anchor, always present, always accessible, always steady. Each time the mind begins to spiral, bring attention to a single inhale and a single exhale. Not to control it, not to deepen it, just to notice it.

This simple shift does two things:

•It pulls you out of the future and back into the body

•It interrupts the momentum of overthinking

Over time, the mind learns a new habit: come back home.

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Name what the mind is doing

Buddhist monks use a practice called “noting.” Instead of getting sucked into every thought, you label it gently: “worrying,” “planning,” “comparing,” “judging,” “remembering.” When you give something a name, you create distance. The thought becomes a passing cloud, not a storm you’re trapped inside. The power of noting is subtle but strong. Once you observe the mind, you stop being ruled by it.

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Drop the second arrow

A well-known Buddhist idea says that pain is the first arrow, and your reaction is the second. Someone says something rude, that’s the first arrow. But when you replay it in your mind, think of comebacks, or doubt yourself for hours, those are the extra arrows you shoot at yourself. Overthinking is usually a collection of these extra arrows.

The practice is simple: when something bothers you, pause and ask, “Am I adding more arrows by thinking about this again?” That question alone cuts the habit in half.

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Return to the present moment through the senses

Overthinking is time travel, mostly into a future that doesn’t exist or a past that can’t be changed.

Buddhist teachers suggest grounding yourself through sensory awareness:

•Notice the feeling of your clothes against your skin

•Listen to the smallest sound in the room

•Look at one object and take in its colour, texture, edges

•Place your palm over your heart and feel the warmth

The senses bring the mind into now, and “now” is usually peaceful.

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Practice ‘letting go’ like opening your palm

Letting go is often misunderstood as forcing yourself not to think. But in Buddhism, letting go is more like unclenching your fist. Imagine holding a handful of sand. The tighter you grip, the more it slips away. The looser the palm, the more it stays still.

When a thought keeps returning, instead of fighting it, imagine opening your mental fist. Let the thought sit without wrestling. This softens its power and dissolves the urge to obsess. Letting go is relaxation, not rejection.

7/7

Sit with the feeling, not the story

Every episode of overthinking is driven by an emotion underneath - fear, uncertainty, guilt, rejection, or desire. Buddhism teaches that emotions move through the body in waves. They rise, peak, and fade, usually within 90 seconds. What keeps them alive is the story we attach to them.

Try this:

When spiralling thoughts start, stop and notice the emotion beneath them. Where is it in the body? Chest? Throat? Stomach? Allow the sensation to exist without explaining it. When you sit with the feeling instead of the narrative, the mind stops building stories, and the wave passes.

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