Ever find yourself stuck in a spiral of “what if,” “I should,” or “this always happens”? Thought traps — also known as cognitive distortions — are mental shortcuts your brain uses to protect you under stress. The problem? Those protective patterns can quietly box you in, keeping you from saying what you mean, trying what you want, or becoming who you’re growing into. In this post, we explore common thought traps like catastrophizing, all-or-nothing thinking, mind-reading, and emotional reasoning — along with practical, nervous-system-aware tools to soften them. You’ll learn how subtle language shifts can calm your body, create choice points, and help you step out of rigid thinking patterns. Because you’re not broken — you’re patterned. And patterns can shift.
Tag Archives: psychological resilience
Staying Sane in an Insane World
There are moments when the world stops feeling coherent. Not just chaotic, but unhinged in a way that settles into the body. People aren’t shaken simply because something bad happened. What destabilizes us is the erosion of predictability. The quiet loss of shared rules, upheld values, and the assumption of basic human dignity. When those foundations begin to fracture, the nervous system notices immediately.
Staying sane in an insane world does not mean becoming unaffected or detached. It means learning how to remain present without being overwhelmed. It means understanding that chronic exposure to harm, injustice, and instability changes how the brain and body function, and that this response is not a personal failure. It is human.
This piece is an invitation to tend the nervous system while bearing witness. To ground without bypassing. To make meaning without collapsing into despair. To stay connected to yourself, to others, and to your values, even when the world feels difficult to recognize.