Thoughts, inside out
Most of us assume we know what’s happening in our own minds. After all, we’re the ones thinking the thoughts. But there’s a strange paradox about thinking: the closer you are to it, the harder it is to actually see. Awareness sounds simple, but real clarity often requires stepping outside the mental swirl.
This week I found myself noticing something that seems obvious at first… but isn’t.
How difficult it actually is to see your own thoughts.
Not hear them.
Not react to them.
But truly see them.
We all live inside a constant stream of thinking. Commentary, interpretation, predictions, explanations — the mind is always narrating something about what’s happening.
And because those thoughts feel so familiar, they rarely announce themselves as thoughts.
They simply show up as truth.
It’s a bit like trying to read the label from inside the jar.
When you’re inside the thinking, it just feels like reality.
This is one of the reasons meaningful change can feel surprisingly difficult.
We try to change our actions, habits, or circumstances while the thoughts shaping our experience keep running quietly in the background.
One of the most reliable ways I’ve found to see them more clearly is surprisingly simple.
Get them out of your head and onto paper.
Not in a polished journal entry. Not in carefully written sentences.
Just capture the raw thought.
Because the moment a thought leaves your head and lands on a page, something shifts.
You can see it.
You can question it.
Sometimes you’ll even read it back and think, “Oh… that’s interesting.”
What felt so convincing inside your mind can suddenly look very different once it’s sitting in front of you.
This practice can be especially helpful when something in life feels confusing or emotionally charged.
Interestingly, the trigger isn’t always negative.
In fact, it can be something positive.
A new opportunity.
A change in direction.
A possibility you’re excited about.
Even good things can stir up a surprising amount of mental noise.
Excitement and uncertainty often arrive together.
Questions.
Pressure.
Doubt.
Interpretation.
Before long, what began as something energizing starts to feel heavy or confusing simply because the mind is trying to process too much all at once.
This is another moment when putting thoughts on paper can bring clarity.
You begin to see the swirl.
The assumptions.
The interpretations.
And once those thoughts are visible, something important becomes possible.
Choice.
Because when a thought remains inside your head, it tends to run the show.
When you can see it clearly, you gain a little distance from it.
And that distance creates space.
Space to decide whether that thought is helpful.
Space to consider a different perspective.
Space to respond rather than react.
This is why awareness is such a powerful skill.
Not because it eliminates thinking.
But because it helps you recognize that not every thought deserves to be treated as truth.
Get the thought out of your head and onto paper.
Some thoughts only sound reasonable inside your head.
On paper, they tell a very different story.
Reflection
The next time something feels confusing or emotionally charged — even something positive — try this simple experiment.
Write down exactly what your mind is saying.
No editing.
No filtering.
Just get it out of your head and onto the page.
Then read it back with a little curiosity.
What do you notice?
If something here resonates, I’d love to hear. You can share it with me on Instagram.
If you’re starting to see your thoughts a little more clearly — and noticing they’re not always as true as they seem — this is the kind of work we gently explore in coaching.