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How to Move from Overthinking to Clearer Inner Knowing
We often use the words thinking, reflecting, and knowing as if they mean the same thing.
In practice, they are very different, and understanding how they work can help you move out of overthinking and into clearer decision-making.
Thinking: useful but limited
Thinking is something we all do constantly. It is logical, analytical, and focused on solving problems or planning what to do next.
This kind of thinking is essential, but it can also become overwhelming when it runs continuously. Many people find themselves stuck in loops of analysis, weighing options without reaching clarity.
There is also a more intuitive form of thinking, sometimes described as “thinking from the heart.” This connects more closely to your values and what feels right, rather than just what appears logical.
Reflecting: stepping back to understand

Reflecting is different from thinking.
Instead of trying to solve a problem, reflection allows you to step back and observe what is happening. It is more inward-looking and less judgmental.
When you reflect, you draw on your experience and values to understand a situation more deeply. This might involve considering why something affected you in a certain way, or what you can learn from a recent experience.
Reflection creates space. It slows the process down and helps you move out of reactive thinking.
Knowing: clarity that builds over time
Knowing does not arrive instantly.
It often develops gradually, starting as a faint sense that becomes clearer over time. Many people experience this as a quiet certainty that builds until it becomes obvious.
This kind of knowing is felt in the body - in the gut or the chest - and tends to feel steadier and more reliable than hurried thinking.
However, it requires space. When your mind is constantly busy, it is difficult for this deeper clarity to emerge.
Bringing it together
Thinking, reflecting, and knowing are not competing processes - they are tools that work best together.
Thinking helps you engage with challenges. Reflection helps you understand them. Knowing helps you move forward with confidence.
✨ Practice for the week
If you find yourself stuck in overthinking, pause briefly before trying to solve the problem. Take a step back, reflect on what is really happening, and notice whether a quieter sense of clarity begins to emerge.
✨ Final reflection
Clarity rarely comes from pushing harder. More often, it comes from creating the space to recognise what is already forming beneath the surface.
Blessings,
Alison Reader: 5976



