Note: The following is a guest post by Farnoosh Brock of Prolific Living.
“We should start choosing our thoughts like we choose our clothes for the day.” —Farnoosh Brock
Fact: No two physical objects can occupy the same space at the same time.
This is just basic physics. We have to choose between this piece of furniture and that piece to fill a given space in the corner of the living room. We have to choose between a handful of blueberries or a handful of nuts to go into this bowl. We have to choose between this dress or that suit to clothe our bodies.
We have to choose because we can’t have both occupying the same space. And we get this. We learn it as little kids. We live by it even if we fight it once in a while (overpacking a suitcase just a wee bit, anyone?).
In fact, we can even thank this law of physics because it has compelled so many of us to choose a path to a simpler life, to live with less so we can create more space and more openness to breathe and to live a minimalist lifestyle.
We have chosen to unclutter and give away the physical clutter that piles up in our spaces in exchange for serenity, for simplicity, and for a richer life.
But what about non-physical clutter that fills up our minds and fogs our vision every day, every second even?
Why can’t we apply the same principle to our thoughts, which could benefit a thousand fold from a little clean-up in their dusty attic?
What would we do if we knew for a certain fact that a positive thought and a negative thought cannot occupy the same space in our mind at the same time? That they cannot co-exist at all?
We would have to start choosing our thoughts like we choose our clothes for the day.
For the longest time, I could not get on board with the positive thinking movement. It sounded fluffy and shallow at first. It seemed to make light of my problems and most of all, it didn’t seem to work.
I would read books, scan hundreds of blog posts, even write a few of my own, and repeat the positive affirmations over and over to myself, all to little or no avail. Deep inside, I still felt largely negative, unhappy and far from positive or peaceful.
Worst of all, I felt like a fake. I wanted to be positive. I talked about positivity, and I wanted to believe in it but it just wasn’t working its magic on me.
And it wasn’t for lack of trying. I really did try. My husband can tell you about my sincere attempts, and my Kindle can prove how many books I devoured to prove my interest!
But positive thinking still didn’t work for me. Here’s why.
You see, I was committing to the positive thoughts as much as I was holding on to the negative ones. I was thinking “I am powerful beyond measure. I can run a successful business.” as much as I was thinking, “This is not going to work. I am going to mess it up. It is too late for me to start over.” I repeated and reinforced the good as much as the bad.
And since both thoughts could not occupy the same space in my mind, the power of habit sided with the one that it was used to nurturing: the negative thought. It was the familiar voice it knew, and it takes a lot less effort to believe the familiar than to get on board with the new and unfamiliar.
So how do we apply this principle to clean out the mind clutter for good?
If you are reading this, you are either a pro minimalist or a new and aspiring one (welcome). So given our love of “less is more” in the physical world, let’s follow the step-by-step approach below to clean out the clutter in the mind:
1. Get ready to move out of your castle. Imagine your mind lives in a giant castle filled with the stuff that fills up minds: thoughts, worries, anxieties, fears, memories, desires, questions, yearnings, … and more thoughts.
Now imagine you are going to move out of this giant castle. It has been good to you no doubt but the rent is up and you can’t afford it anymore, and you are moving into a clean, open, well-lit but teeny tiny space in your favorite spot in the world. (For me, Queenstown, New Zealand next to Lake Wakatipu and you’re welcome to join me!)
2. Choose carefully what you pack. You have to pack very light. And you can only take with you what you plan to use. Ask yourself (really, loud and clear, ask yourself):
Am I going to use the worries, the anxieties, the fears and the negative thoughts? Am I going to use the memories, the desires and the positive thoughts?
Decide on each one as if this were a real move (because it is). Decide consciously and with intention. What will you choose to take, and what will you choose to leave behind?
3. Find a space for everything you brought as you move into your new place. Everything has to occupy a space and no two things can occupy the same space at the same time so it would be best if you brought not quite so much. There’s room only for half the stuff in your head anyway!
4. Apply the rule to live clutter-free now. If you chose to leave behind the worries, anxieties, fears, and negative thoughts, then you have de-cluttered your mind from the get-go. You are truly a hero, at minimalism and at positive thinking (and the rest of us envy you!)
But not all of us can detach so quickly from our cozy familiar world even if it means our negative thoughts.
So if you chose to bring everything—the good, the bad and the ugly—your tiny space will be beyond cluttered. That’s okay. Just consciously apply the rule: No two things can occupy the same space in your mind at the same time. Choose either a negative thought or a positive one for this day or this hour or this very minute. Discard the other.
For instance, you can either choose a peaceful memory or a big worry, fear or courage, acceptance or denial.
And listen, you can choose the worry if you want. Just choose it consciously. No fooling yourself. And then, worry. Worry until you are sick of it. Worry a lot. Then choose fear if you must and fear as much as you can. Then choose anxiety and be anxious for a few hours.
I am not saying you can’t choose the bad. I’m just saying you can’t choose both and this is where we finally start to outsmart that clever mind of ours.
And it’s where you begin to think simpler now: You can have one thought at any given moment, but not two or ten.
Sometimes you choose right, sometimes you learn, but if you keep applying the rule, every day you will get closer to the freedom and peace that only a clutter-free mind can give you.
But what if you can’t choose? What about the times you feel indecisive or don’t care?
Every time you give up the choice, you return to what you know, you go back to default, to the familiar face, the good old smell and taste. Your familiar and your default mode is different from mine but as far as our desires, I’ll go out on a limb and say we both want the same thing, you and I.
We want to be happy, free of worry and anxiety, free of stress and fear, and definitely free of clutter. We want to fill our minds with positive thoughts and our hearts with peace and joy and love. No?
So as you settle into your new tiny clean clutter-free space in your favorite spot in the world, make room only for positivity, for joy, for serenity, for optimism and for happiness. It’s a process, my dear, it’s an adjustment, it takes time but It Works.
Choose to fill your new abode in this manner one thought at a time and you will be surprised how the small stuff adds up to take you where you were always belonged: with a quiet clutter-free peaceful mind.
***
Farnoosh Brock left a 12-year corporate career to start her own company, Prolific Living Inc. You can also find her on Twitter.
Ketan Deshmukh says
I was feeling really anxious and sad before coming to this blogpost. Amazingly written. Lucidly conveys the author’s perception of importance of thoughts. I know that achieving it is difficult but not impossible. After all even thinking this is a thought, isn’t it ?
Jan Ramsey Brick says
This is wonderful advice Farnoosh. I’ve become much more aware recently that sometimes I actually choose to clutter my mind with worry. Awareness is the first step to recovery right?
Thanks so much for validating my thoughts on this. :)
Carol says
I feel like my mind is in a fog from my negative thoughts. I’ve heard the phrase, “choose your thoughts”, but I’ve never really tried it. I guess that the first step is to fully realize that I have a choice about which thoughts to keep in my mind.
Brent says
I am a drug addict. I have been for a long time. I get clean time here and there but I have no real significant amount of clean time that I can look back on and feel good about. My negative thoughts occupy me. It is really a stressful place. You know what? And it sucks because I have a really really supportive and motivating girlfriend who has literally made me a better person. Just being around her makes me want to do better. Right now she is in San Francisco on an internship for CBS. We both are having separation anxiety. We are both really feeling it. I’m here in NYC after, screwing up the past few months being with her. I’ve been acting like a selfish a-hole that I am afraid I really am through and through. The thing is though I really love her. I was thinking about what makes me happy and it is very clear that she makes me a better person and makes me happy to actually be around her. I’m so afraid she’ll leave me. Like, one day she’ll eventually just stop and say to herself “what the f am I doing?” and just break up with me like (snap). I’ll surely be a wreck, and she probably would have made a smart decision by leaving me like she should have long ago. I really am screwing up, man. I just want to be normal. I know, I know. Who and what is normal anyway? Well, I just want to be able to be free of bad thoughts that consume my brain. I want to not be so negative and make fun of everything because I secretly am scared of failing. I want to be able to just have a moment where if my brain isn’t occupied, I think about doing bad things like doing drugs. Boredom is my worst enemy. And the thing is, I have lots of positive things to focus on. Like I have finals coming up and I can’t seem to concentrate because my girlfriend has freshly left and is across the country. We’re still in touch a lot on text and phone but I am literally having withdraw from her. I need her, man. She takes care of me. And I take care of her. At least I try and take care of her. I just wanna be a better person and not think about such negative thoughts and actually try.
Here’s the thing…If you’re still reading this and thinking that I’m being too hard on myself…Believe me, I’m not being hard enough on myself. I have screwed up so much and she has stood by all my empty broken promises that I actually mean when I make them. I mean them. But I have trouble on the followthrough. Always. I’m so lucky to have her and I’m screwing it up, man. I just wanna be enough for her. I just want to be enough.
zeshaan Kumar says
Love is the most powerful and the most beautiful emotion to keep and to follow. Try to replace your drug addiction with this. Love and caring for you gf , yourself & your life and for others(be careful) too. It will be hard but it is going to be ok.
Julia says
If she’s still with you, then your are more than enough for her. Dont overcome your addiction on drugs for her, do it for yourself, then eventually you will be doing good for her. She will love you more. You need to learn to love yourself first, then everything else will fall into place. Have you tried travelling, I dont mean sun and beach in sunny california or thailand, thats all man made, I mean mother nature, go free yourself to the beauty that comes with the world. Free your mind. Love your self.
Deborah says
Just be enough for yourself and you will be enough for her. Love you first and others will love you. Your self loathing is tangible. You might think you deserve it but you have to leave the past behind you and move on. Move into a space of showing up for you. Just for you. And the rest will start falling into place. Sending love ????????
Ioanna Dimitriou says
Lovely and useful article!
I think a quick thought that can help is to ask yourself “do i prefere to be happy or unhappy right now?” and the reply will guide you to think right.
Zach says
I liked the idea of using memories to fill the tiny space in the mind. In fact, I am going to try and remember all the positive ways I was successful in the past so I am not so bleak about my future success. Thank you, Joshua!
Hiii says
Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you, my dear ;)
Yun Da says
Hey! I’m a new comer and I’ve always loved the whole philosophy of not growing attached to physical stuff. I’ve gotten to a point where for me, myself. It’s easy to change. But unfortunately I’m eighteen, I live with my family and I have many exams, careers, jobs to choose from and I can’t possibly throw thoughts like worry and fear away because worry and fear is the only thing that’s driving me to work hard right now. Kinda like the strongest instinct is your survival instinct. I cant just forget about my future. I claim that I’m in pursuit of liberation but yet my physical circumstances make me super stressed and unhappy. And it hurts even more to know that my cohort mates are all getting along so much better me, maybe it’s coz they’re born smart, they’ve always been in the top 1% band of all students in Singapore. I guess you can say I’m “better” because I accept i suck. But once I’ve done that… It feels like I’ve lost all motivation. I concede defeat. Sigh. Thoughts?
Virginia says
Some of the most successful people I’ve known were not necessarily the smartest in school – they worked hard. Keep your chin up. Do not concede defeat!!
Raychel Lydon says
I think I would like to move from my castle to a small cabin in the woods. I will be taking my wifi with me. Thank you for the beautiful image.
https://motherteacherartistwoman.blogspot.com
Bill Hayden says
You are right. Do you know what a computer bit is? It is the smallest unit of data in a computer, short for “binary digit”. A bit has a single binary value, either a “1” or a “0”. Our mind is like a computer, except with “positive” or “negative” thoughts. Like a computer bit, our mind can only have one or the other, occupying the same space, at the same time. However, unlike a computer that is programmed, thoughts come into our minds that are both positive and negative, over which we have no control. But, we do have the power to choose which ones we keep and which ones we discard. This is the one thing in life over which we have been given power to control. Everything else can be taken away from us (read, “Man’s Search for Meaning”, by Victor Frankl, or The Old Testament: Book of Job). But, in giving us power over this one thing, our Creator has given us the greatest gift of all: the power to choose our thoughts. If you exercise this power you have been given, which is simple but not easy, then you have the power to create your own destiny. Your thoughts become your words, your words become your actions, your actions become your habits, your habits become your character, your character becomes who you are, and who you are is your destiny. Choose your thoughts carefully.
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