Monkey Mind: Taming the Chatter
In honor of Mental Health Awareness Month this May, we are reposting this blog to help you recognize when “monkey mind” may be hijacking you and provide strategies to quiet the monkeys. Practicing these strategies will lead you to a more peaceful, productive self. Enjoy!
Have you ever searched everywhere for your glasses and found them on top of your head? Or driven somewhere and not be able to remember the exact route you took to get there, or worse, ended up somewhere different than where you planned? Do you find yourself changing topics frequently in a conversation and then having to remember to go back to the original point? If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, then you’ve experienced “monkey mind.”
Monkey mind is a Buddhist term that refers to being unsettled, restless, confused or distracted. Monkey mind is likened to monkeys swinging from branch to branch and on to the next one, much like our mind moves swiftly from one thought to another. While our brains are powerful and our thoughts can be helpful, when we have too much chatter in our heads (some say our brains produce up to 50,000 thoughts in one day!), we can become overwhelmed or worried and that chatter can become overly focused on the negative. Fear can then dominate our thoughts and create anxiety -- all of which is exhausting.
The pace and sheer volume of information bombarding us from all directions, especially our smart phones, tablets or home assistants beeping at us can take its toll.? Whether it’s telling us to go to the next meeting or highlighting texts we need to respond to or giving us 24x7 (not so good) news, this assault can take its toll. While the monkey mind chatter can be playful and fun, it can be distracting and inhibit you from focusing on the task at hand or person you’re with. Monkey mind can impact the quality of your relationships, meetings, productivity, and health. For example, if you’re impacted by monkey mind in a conversation with another person, you are probably not fully listening to them and instead jumping around to various topics, so it takes longer to complete a conversation. While that may sound normal – it can be exhausting and draining for you and to the other person. And, if it’s at work, you probably find that you have to circle back on conversations, decisions, or actions that were supposed to happen because your conversation was so convoluted. And, worse, monkey mind can be dangerous if we’re so distracted with all the chatter in our head that we bump into someone while walking or get into a car accident because we’re too busy engaging with our inner thoughts.
So, what can you do to tame your inner monkeys or thoughts? The first step is to notice the thoughts and realize that you don’t have to respond to them. You can choose to interact with the monkey thoughts that are swinging from branch to branch telling you everything you have to remember to do or that could go wrong, or you can just let them swing by. To help you quiet the monkeys, practice these following tips:
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Monkey mind doesn’t have to be your norm. You can tame your monkeys by practicing these strategies. I’d love to hear your experiences of monkey mind and what you do to calm the chatter. Please share!
Warmly,
Tamera
**This was originally published on the ConvergenceCoaching, LLC Inspired Idea blog on May 22, 2024. https://convergencecoaching.com/monkey-mind-taming-the-chatter-2/