Your brain doesn’t have an off switch. But it does have a window.
That thought that won’t stop looping. The “what if” that hijacks your whole afternoon. The 2 AM spiral about something that happened three years ago. We’ve all been there:
- The parent replaying every decision they made today, wondering if it was enough
- The student staring at a group chat, convinced everyone else has it figured out
- The person driving to work, already rehearsing an argument that hasn’t happened yet
- The one lying in bed, mentally re-reading a text for the tenth time
- You, right now, carrying a worry that’s been running in the background all day
Here’s the truth: you don’t have to solve every worry the moment it shows up. You can schedule it instead.
Try this: The 10-Minute Worry Window
- Pick a time each day — 10 minutes, same time if you can.
- When a worry pops up outside that window, jot it down and tell yourself: “Not now. Later.”
- When your window opens, let yourself worry fully. Set a timer if it helps.
- When time’s up, close it. Physically stand up, take a breath, move on.
This isn’t about ignoring what’s bothering you. It’s about giving your mind permission to rest in between. Worry doesn’t disappear just because you name a time for it — but it does lose some of its grip.
If your worry window keeps spilling into everything else, that’s worth talking about too:
- 988 Lifeline: Call or text 988 (24/7)
- Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741
- Find local DC support: knowyourpathdc.com
Small tools, practiced daily, add up. You’re allowed to worry. You’re also allowed to let it go.
#BeMindfulDC #MentalHealthMatters #BreakTheStigma #YouAreNotAlone
Want me to draft 2-3 more variations (shorter for Instagram, more clinical for LinkedIn, etc.) or keep building out captions for other graphics in this series?