View allAll Photos Tagged overthinking
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Stop Overthinking. You can’t control everything just let it be. via (ThinkPozitive.com)
Sharing is Power – Don’t forget to share this quote !
hallofquotes.com/2017/10/15/positive-quotes-stop-overthin...
Overthinking is the WORST. Seriously, it's torture. But you can totally beat it -- and enjoy the process, too. Website: sosmethod.co/
For Say Si, there are always galleries showing what the students have made and this was one of my favorite works to look at. I don’t remember why this was made, the purpose, but the way everything is basically covered in white and levitating from the floor was really nice to look at. This piece has always been my favorite for the past 4 years, I just cannot help but think about it every so often. It really makes me think when I see this but for some reason it also leaves my mind blank. Like I can just stare at this for quite a while and have no thoughts about it. Maybe that's why I like this piece, I do tend to overthink a lot and this piece helps calm me down. Because this piece also seems to be all over the place yet neat at the same time.
Did you know that walking in nature has positive effects on our wellbeing?
It is especially beneficial for those who are struggling with burnout, anxiety, or depression. Walking in nature at least once a week can help us improve our heart condition and decrease our blood pressure. Our stress hormone, cortisol, decreases and our breathing becomes more relaxed. As you receive more oxygen, you boost your immune system and restore your cells. The cognitive function of your brain also improves! And all of these benefits are completely free! ☺️😁
By walking outside in nature, we focus on what is happening in the present moment. It is a great practice to foster mindfulness in your everyday life. After all, you become more grounded and grateful, you submit yourself fully to the present moment instead of going into a rabbit hole by overthinking your past and future. Allow nature to heal you - just walk.🚶🌳
I love it when all you need is to point the camera, take the photo without overthinking anything and the picture comes out better than you'd ever believe!
Oregon Caves National Monument & Preserve
Looking for connected stalagmites and stalactites has to be a mandatory activity when visiting a cave, right? I was glad to find many of this connection at Oregon Caves. Was that nature’s way of demonstrating the importance of patience and endurance, or the might of time, or the futility of ours to see gradual changes? I think I’m overthinking again but will continue to do so to appreciate the wonders of nature.
This piece of advertising above Target’s skincare area stood out because of its size and the fact that it is not tied to a specific brand. Rather it looks like a generic advertisement for makeup or skincare. Both of the women in the photo smiling with a carefree expression. Presumably the products are related to this mood; the advertisement is aiming to create an association between the two. Or they are trying to make the customers feel just as carefree as the women by looking at the ad, and they will therefore not overthink their purchases. The fact that it is so large, to me, implies that they think that these images are powerful and therefore want customers to see them. To me, this ad doesn’t really have an effect. It’s not giving me any helpful information or advice about a product, and the illusion of the emotion from these women is broken for me knowing that its not genuine (these are simply paid models). It would be more effective for me as a consumer if I could believe in their emotion or that these products could really make one feel that way. Makeup and skincare can certainly make one feel beautiful or empowered or carefree, but empowerment doesn’t require purchases or money. I would rather find ways to feel this way without spending money. The advertisement just falls flat for me due to how generic and corny it is overall.
There's a shot missing before this one, where he would need to turn a corner or something. Of course, I may be overthinking what is basically a montage. But I also want to get some variety in the shots. Basically he would run towards camera, then turn camera left and the camera would track with him.
Words to jump start a journal entry. Not one of my favorite entries but trying to remember not to overthink it and "it doesn't have to be perfect,"
Author: Sarah “Dani” Daniels | The Backcountry Apex
A hatchet is the bigger brother of the bushcraft knife. Splits kindling. Drives stakes. Builds a shelter frame. Processes camp wood. The best survival hatchets under $100 give you a 1-1.5 lb head, a 14-16 inch handle, and a forge-hardened edge that sharpens with a file.
5 Best Survival Hatchets Under $100
1. Estwing E24A: American forged-steel one-piece, 14”. ~$40. Buy this and stop overthinking.
2. Fiskars X7 14” Hatchet: FiberComp handle, 1.4 lb head. ~$45.
3. Gerber Pack Hatchet: Lightweight, 9.4” long. Backpacking pick. ~$50.
4. SOG Camp Axe FastHawk: Tactical profile, 12.5”. ~$75.
5. CRKT Woods Chogan T-Hawk: Tomahawk style, Hickory handle. ~$85.
“A hatchet is a knife with serious commitment. Master the bite.” — Dani
Shop the OSS America Survival hub.
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In a downturn, momentum matters more than perfection. Delay costs more than missteps. The biggest risk isn’t moving too fast—it’s moving too slow while the world speeds up.
And yet, In times of uncertainty, the most natural instinct of all is to wait. Wait for the data. Wait for a signal. Wait until the noise settles, the picture clarifies, and the next steps feel obvious. But here’s what too many leaders forget - the path forward doesn’t get clearer by standing still, it gets clearer by moving.
We are deep into a moment when the cost of indecision is far greater than the cost of action, and the trap of your 'aggressive indecision' becomes more significant every day. I've seen it play out countless times: a moment of economic volatility hits, and leadership teams and people fall into a state in which they decide the easiest decision to make is to simply .... not make them.
It’s not that they don’t care. It’s that they overthink things. They fritter away time in endless meetings. They chase every scenario. They wait for perfect timing. They pause strategic initiatives. They delay customer-facing launches. They stall their momentum—believing they’re being cautious when in reality, they’re just stuck. And so in a world in which the future belongs to those who are fast, they slow down.
And while they stall? Markets shift. Competitors move Talent gets restless. Customers look elsewhere. That's the wrong thing to do - history favors the decisive, and who move at the speed demanded by fast-changing circumstances.
Data backs this up. A comprehensive Harvard Business Review study of 4,700 public companies over three recessions found that the top performers weren’t the ones who paused—they were the ones who acted strategically, quickly, and with confidence. Only 9% of companies outperformed their peers after a downturn—and they did it by balancing discipline with decisive moves at speed. A McKinsey study found the same: companies that moved first and fast during a downturn consistently gained market share during the recovery.
In short? While caution may feel responsible, the real risk lies in hesitation.
Doing nothing often costs far more than doing something imperfectly.
So what should you do? Start moving. Fast. Start moving before you’re ready - simply because you know that speed matters.
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Futurist Jim Carroll recognizes that moving at speed matters and that with this period of uncertainty set to linger for quite some time, a book to help leaders dance through the rain is timely.
#Speed #Indecision #Action #Momentum #Uncertainty #Leadership #Strategy #Agility #Opportunities #Progress
Original post: jimcarroll.com/2025/04/decoding-tomorrow-your-daily-futur...
In this piece I tried to depict anxiety disorder. The vines symbolise the suffocation that overthinking causes and the resulting explosion of negative thoughts. Reality becomes distorted and fears acquire an almost physical form such as the multiple skeletal hands reaching towards the figure.
Title: "Night Terrors"
Materials: Ink and Photoshop on paper
Date: 2019
Size: 11x14 Inches