Domino thinking and anxiety

Published by

on

domino thinking is when ideas get carried away and this image is showing you that you can stop this effect from taking place

After I posted yesterdayโ€™s note where my mind was โ€˜spinning outโ€™, I realized that some of you might think Iโ€™m a bit of a looney.ย  That may be true, but I also trained myself to think that way โ€“ for better or for worse.ย 

When I was at university and studying architecture, I created what I call โ€˜domino thinkingโ€™.  The idea was a form of brainstorming based on the word association game. 

I say cat โ€“ you say dog โ€“ friend โ€“ party โ€“ drink โ€“ champagne โ€“ strawberry.

And just like that, with 6 degrees of separation, you get from a cat to a strawberry.ย  Now sometimes, such as when the cat is ginger-colored, where you end up is not as far away from the โ€˜sourceโ€™ as you had hoped.ย  Other times, however, you create an interesting way of looking back at the subject that is related to the source, but in a lateral rather than literal way, creating a more figurative than formal connection.ย  As a design student, it helped to reposition your view of the site and the brief, avoiding the more โ€˜obviousโ€™ and โ€˜crowdedโ€™ solutions.ย  The trick of course, was not to get too far afield.ย  Presenting a library project that looks like a rocket might work if you can convince people that knowledge โ€˜launches us into the stratosphere’, but presenting a library shaped like a lemon is unlikely to win you any support.

Domino thinking became almost automatic for me.  As the teachers were speaking, my mind was skipping off to the periphery, wondering what other avenues I could explore, intuitively guessing whether they were likely to provide exciting new vistas or dead-ends.

The problem is that this way of thinking, which used to be a sort of super-power for creative problem solving, is a curse when it comes to anxiety and managing my chronic pain triggers. 

“The sun is a bit bright today โ€“ I should have brought a hat โ€“ if the sun gets in my eyes Iโ€™m going to frown โ€“ if I frown I get pug-puppy face โ€“ the tension in my face will give me a migraine โ€“ I feel like Iโ€™m getting a migraine โ€“ I donโ€™t believe in self-fulfilling prophecies or blaming myself for โ€˜making-my-migrainesโ€™ but gosh I really do feel like I could be getting a migraineโ€ฆ”

These days, I have to shift the metaphor and instead of celebrating domino thinking, I have to remind myself that once the train leaves the station it tends to build up steam pretty quickly, and the anxiety-journey inevitably ends in catastrophe (real or imagined). 

Next time your mind starts โ€˜spinning outโ€™ or ‘racing away’, remember that thereโ€™s a time and place for that sort of thinking.  Brainstorming is good when youโ€™re in your creative mode.  Storming your brain with worse case scenarios is not, however, so great for managing brain-pain.

Good luck thinking clearly today, and take care, Linda x


Discover more from The Mindful Migraine

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

8 responses to “Domino thinking and anxiety”

  1. Soul Ventures Avatar
    Soul Ventures

    I too find difficulty with doing regular formal mindfulness meditations. STOP , I find is helpful – when overwhelmed with emotions STOPPING/PAUSING , Taking 3 deep mindful breaths – exhaling longer than inhaling, Observing – 5 things around us touch taste smell etc and also checking in and finally Proceeding slowly with peace & love . I use it sometimes with tea drinking. Thanks a lot for your blog , helps people open up and share ๐Ÿ™๐ŸŒ

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      ๐Ÿฅฐ

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Soul Ventures Avatar
    Soul Ventures

    I can kind of relate to the anxiety , which I started to realise is due to on and off steroids for my asthma many years as a kid . Although I do get anxious over small things than say bigger issues in life , I have tried to include mindfulness, meditation , reading /blogging philosophies / spirituality which helped me. There is an ” awareness of breath ” meditation on YouTube Memorial Sloane Kettering channel which I find relaxing. As I can’t always do formal mindfulness Mindful STOP – , coordinating deep breathing with Zen gathas /affirmations have all helped me. Thanks for sharing your experiences ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh, thank you for the links to follow up – I love getting new leads from people who have trod the path before me! I get the difficulty of finding time for BIG FORMAL forms of mindfulness, I recently switched to “mindful-lite” and a tend to do home-made (i.e. made up) versions of what I’ve learnt along the way – it would make the gurus cringe, but it works for me – and that’s a win in my opinion. Thanks for being here, it means a lot to me. Linda xxx

      Liked by 1 person

  3. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

    Surely your domino game always ended with Kevin Bacon;-P

    No, you’re not looney, but it’s almost as though you’ve set up a thought process to keep looking for something related until it finds something scary. Anxiety is fear (of the future) quite simply. Maybe you’ve used your habit of exploration to test your strength against these fears, or set up a particular scenario on purpose.

    Maybe you want to be in a vulnerable state to be saved by someone to prove their love?

    Maybe you want to find out what you are capable of? That you can cope with these fears. You haven’t died yet, so you’ve won that game so far.

    Why do you need to find something to fear, what are you validating? To whom are you proving that you are strong, or can’t cope?

    Is there a particular emotion associated with your migraine?

    And no, you’re not looney. We all have these things.

    Like

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you! Migraines do cause a lot of fear and anxiety, but I think mostly it’s just a bad habit of mine. Maybe next time I’m worried about getting sick I’ll think of Kevin Bacon! Linda x

      Liked by 2 people

  4. SiriusSea Avatar

    So well put! I do hope that migraine rolls on by with that runaway train. ๐Ÿ™‚

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yeah, me too – I think it’s got a glitchy timetable though, it has a tendency to turn up at all the wrong times!! Linda xxx

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Soul Ventures Cancel reply