Why Your Head Feels So Full of Thoughts?
Let me ask you something simple.
“Is there anything red around you right now?”
・・・・
What happened just now?
Did your attention immediately start searching the room?
That movement —
that automatic scanning —
is not a mistake.
That is how the mind works.

The brain does not tolerate “not knowing.”
When uncertainty appears, it searches for answers.
When anxiety arises, it tries to resolve it.
That constant mental noise is proof of one thing:
Your mind is trying to protect you.
As long as we live among others, emotions will arise —
anger, jealousy, competition, control, self-doubt.
These are not flaws.
They are natural human reactions.
Your emotions and thoughts are not enemies.
They are mirrors,
reflecting a sense of insecurity or lack within you.
When thoughts keep looping,
it doesn’t mean something is wrong.
It means something wants to be understood.
Notice this carefully.
When something triggers you,
there is often an unspoken belief underneath:
- “This is how things should be.”
- “This way of thinking is correct.”
When reality contradicts that belief,
the reaction fires instantly.
“Wait — this isn’t right, is it?”
And frustration appears.
Not because the situation is wrong,
but because it clashes with something
you have been holding onto unconsciously.
Even now, are you trying
— avoiding being rejected, corrected, or seen as wrong?
You don’t have to answer.
Just notice.

In moments like this, many of us think:
- “I’m unhappy because of that person.”
- “Things aren’t working because of the situation.”
But the noise in your head is not caused from outside.
The answer the mind is searching for
has always been inside you.
That is why the thoughts keep circling —
like a browser endlessly refreshing,
waiting for a result that can only come from within.
Relationships.
Money.
Work.
Health.
So why is it so hard to see the real cause?
Because looking at our own vulnerability feels frightening.
What we are aware of is called the conscious mind.
What we cannot easily see is the subconscious.
Only a few percent of our awareness is conscious.
Most of it lies beneath the surface.
Painful beliefs are often pushed into the subconscious,
because keeping them in awareness would hurt too much.

Imagine a child who is naturally quiet.
She loves reading and drawing at home.
Her parent believes,
“Children should play outside.”
So they say,
“Why don’t you play with other kids?”
“There are children at the park.”
Repeated over time,
the child unconsciously feels:
“Who I am is not okay.”
Even well-intended advice
can become a feeling of rejection.
That belief sinks deep.
As an adult, it shows up as fear —
fear of being judged,
fear of being dismissed,
fear of being seen as wrong.
The pain does not come from others.
It comes from an old fear of rejection,
still quietly operating inside.
You don’t need to fix everything.
Just do this:
Today, notice one moment when you reacted.
Only one.
Not to judge it.
Not to analyze it deeply.
Just notice:
“What belief was touched just now?”
That is enough.
Before changing anything,
the mind needs to settle.
Meditation helps because it loosens
the tight bond between emotion and thought.
With time,
a natural, objective perspective begins to appear.

It’s okay to be imperfect.
You don’t need to become someone special.
Doing what you can,
right now, is enough.
Suffering begins
when you try to be someone other than yourself.
If you allow yourself to be as you are —
even if life carries you like a flowing river —
you may notice something quietly surprising:
You’re not as afraid as you thought.
And if you don’t feel that yet,
that’s okay too.
For today,
just noticing
is already enough.
If something in this article stayed with you,
you might want to save it and return to it later.
Awareness doesn’t always arrive all at once.
If you enjoyed this article, please give it a few claps!
— Yuki, Qigong Practitioner at Empower Labo ,Zen Japan
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