amblypygid ([info]amblypygid) wrote,
@ 2008-06-03 14:01:00
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Overthinking
[info]kalikanzera Just posted something mentioning overthinking, and, well, it made me think.

I've never understood what "overthinking" is. I've been accused of doing it, though. "Just say what comes into your mind," people tell me. Or "Just do what you feel." Neither of these is very helpful to me. In Myers-Briggs terms, I'm a really strong thinker. Feelings often come only after I think about something and figure out how I feel about it. I know this can be hugely confusing to feelers who tend to have feelings first and then think about them. There isn't anything that "just comes into my mind." I don't feel like I'm a pot overflowing with stuff that I have dammed up all the time. It's not a matter of just removing the dam and letting things spill out. Things have to be picked up and looked at and analyzed before they come out in any way. There's not much to come out unless I think about it.

So back to overthinking. Does overthinking mean thinking instead of feeling? That doesn't seem right to me; thinking and feeling are both good and important, and I don't know why feeling would necessarily be better than thinking. Does overthinking mean analyzing things? I can't figure out what's wrong with analysis; I like it and it helps me understand myself and others and the world. Does overthinking mean obsessing about something to a degree that makes you unhappy with your life and unable to make decisions? I can see why that would be a bad thing. But why is that overthinking? Isn't that obsessing? Is there a difference?

I have the feeling that the people who accuse me of overthinking will look at this post and say, see, you're overthinking now! Because, after all, I'm trying to figure something out that seems obvious to a lot of people. But it's not obvious to me, and how else can I figure it out?

Edit: [info]resolute tells me overthinking is a term used mainly by Myers Briggs feelers.



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[info]wiredferret
2008-06-03 07:37 pm UTC (link)
My personal definition of overthinking involves my tendency toward decision paralysis. If I keep analyzing and processing and gathering data, and analyzing the new data and....
then I end up not making a decision, missing the crucial time when all of this analysis would have come into play.

Not making a decision is a decision.

A classic example of me overthinking has to do with trying to get a document exactly, precisely right. I try to cover all the bases, write up each scenario, document the exceptions, research the edge cases. It takes forever. In the meantime, I have not met the need of the 80 percent of the people who need the good-enough 80% document. While I have been trying to build this elaborate thing, I have allowed the core need to go unmet.

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[info]sionnain
2008-06-03 07:55 pm UTC (link)
Ooh, that's interesting! You know, I wonder if "overthinking" doesn't mean something a bit different to each person, depending on their MB type or some other factor? I'm an extrovert and creative and have quite the imagination, and am very, very social and people-oriented. My "overthinking" is *always* about other people and what they mean/are trying to say/etc.

It's why communication and honesty are a MUST--I can recognize when I'm being dumb and having wild crazy suppositions about things, but if people are less-than-honest with me or don't fess up to feelings or whatever, I go insane. I need honesty because I make enough stuff in my head, hee.

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