🧠 Weekly Mind Sweep No. 159 | Manage Your Mind | Introspection

January 2025

Week 157: Curated Conversation: Introspection

Week 158: Mind Your Business: Introspection

*Week 159: Manage Your Mind: Introspection

Week 160: What’s On My Mind: Introspection

Let’s sweep the brain


🎬 Rather watch or listen instead of read? Now you can!

👉 Click here to Listen

 

In the MindSweep this week:

  1. Curated Conversation with curated GIF’s & puns (for your entertainment).

  2. Jamie’s Second Brain Corner: Links to references. Need a map? I’ve got you!

  3. A fun survey for your feedback!

  4. What’s I’m Reading - Storyworthy - Matthew Dicks

  5. Collaborations with Terri Hamilton (Thursday) & Shannon Giordano and the MetroWest Chamber of Commerce.

  6. My face 💜 and a link to schedule your free consultation.

 

Navigating the Mind: Inside Out and the Journey of Introspection

You've likely experienced moments where you've paused to reflect on something important:

  • a conversation with a client or friend,

  • a decision you made for your business or your family,

  • or a challenging situation that you navigated.

This is your brain at work! Specifically, this is your medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) in action. But sometimes, it's not working for you—it's getting stuck in a loop. [1]

Imagine your mind has a control room like in Pixar's movie Inside Out 2. In this room, you have all the tools you need to reflect on your thoughts, decisions, and emotions. Instead of a team of emotions pulling levers, it's actually your medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) making the moves. This critical part of your brain helps you make sense of your experiences and guides you through introspection. [2]

It helps you think critically about your experiences and form judgments to make informed decisions.

In Inside Out 2, the main character, Riley's control room, helps her manage her emotions and make sense of her experiences. Similarly, your brain uses introspection to gain deeper insights into your feelings, motivations, and actions. It's where you examine your actions and think about:

  • what went well,

  • what you could improve,

  • and how you might approach things differently next time.

Reflecting on your choices is your brain's way of processing what's happened, considering adjustments, and planning for the future.

Just like Riley's emotional team grows stronger by working together and understanding her better, introspection can enhance your decision-making, emotional intelligence, and personal growth.

In the control room of your mind, your medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) acts as the captain of this ship, just like the film's character, Joy, ensuring that all of your emotions and thoughts work together to navigate life. Your posterior cingulate cortex and precuneus help you process your past, create a sense of self, integrate memories, and make decisions based on your inner wisdom. [3]

This process is crucial for understanding how past experiences influence present behavior and helps you navigate life and business with a clearer sense of purpose.

However, when they take too much control, they can make the entire process feel overwhelming—keeping you trapped in a loop of self-doubt and second-guessing.

Sometimes, the control room gets a little too focused. The brain, especially for those of us with ADHD, can get caught up in deep self-reflection, often digging into every.tiny.detail of a situation. This is where your introspection can become less helpful and more overwhelming. You might catch yourself going over a conversation, again and again, asking yourself,

  • "Did I say the right thing?" or

  • "What if they didn't understand my point?"

When the control room gets a little too focused on one thing, it loops through certain emotions and thoughts like a stuck button. This is where you end up replaying a negative thought or event over and over again, unable to escape.

When this happens, introspection can turn into rumination. [4]

Like Inside Out's character Sadness, who pulls all of Riley's focus into one feeling and refuses to let go, the posterior cingulate cortex and precuneus can become overactive, making it harder to break free from this loop and move forward with confidence.

When you're caught in this loop, it's like being trapped in a maze with no exit. Every path leads back to the same thought:

  • “Did I mess up that meeting?” or

  • “Was that the wrong decision for my business?”

These questions are not genuine introspection anymore—it's the brain getting stuck in unnecessary self-questioning.

But, just as the character Riley's emotions can learn to adapt and grow, you, too, can learn to recognize when you're veering too far into rumination. That's the moment to hit the "reset" button, just like Joy and Sadness do when they guide Riley's emotions back on track.

When you notice rumination taking over, remember that introspection is meant to help, not hinder.

This moment is your chance to reset and regain control. It's not about pushing through—it's about giving yourself the space to process and then move forward with a clear mind. Being aware of the difference between rumination and intrusive thoughts can ease guilt, shame, or fear by clarifying these experiences' nature and origin.

You can regain control over the process by acknowledging when you're spiraling.

Sometimes, the most productive thing you can do is pause and reset. Give yourself permission to:

  • Power of the Pause: Pause to notice the feelings you are experiencing in your mind and body. Use breathwork to calm your nervous system down from fight-or-flight.

  • Set a mental time limit for your reflection: Only reflect on a thought for a set amount of time—maybe five minutes—before you move on to something else. Scheduling time to feel anxious about something can help you focus on your task.

  • To help reset your focus: step away and engage in a grounding activity, such as a short walk, brief meditation, or even a creative break.

Remember, it's not about pushing through.

You can find balance by taking a moment to recalibrate, allowing yourself to return to your control room with a fresh perspective.

You can learn to use introspection to your advantage. Instead of letting your thoughts control you, you can take charge and steer the ship back on course.

After all, introspection isn't meant to trap you—it's meant to guide you. Helping you make better decisions, understand your feelings, and grow both personally and professionally.


My questions for you this week :

  • How do you distinguish between healthy introspection that drives growth and rumination that keeps you stuck?

  • When your brain gets stuck replaying a negative thought, how do you regain control over your focus? What tools or strategies do you use to avoid getting caught in an endless cycle of 'what-ifs'?

Reply and share with me!


Are you a like-hearted entrepreneur ready for support? Let's connect.

Book a free consultation.

Please take a moment and provide your feedback about the Weekly MindSweep and our Chickbook Creative Community!


Was this blog forwarded to you? Sign up!

Jamie’s Second Brain Corner:

[1] Brain regions and neuroscience. Also note: In the past, psychologists relied on humans to self-report introspection. Now, scientists can see consistent patterns of neural activity that correspond to these subjective reports by matching what people say they experience (introspection) with brain scans (like fMRI) under controlled experimental conditions.

[2] Pixar's Inside Out 2

[3] Default Mode Network (DMN). Medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate cortex, and precuneus. ( pre·​cu·​ne·​us -ˈkyĂŒ-nē-əs)

[4] Rumination

Did you miss our month on Reflection?

Did you miss our month on Decision?

Did you miss our month on Change

Did you miss our month on Choice?

Did someone say MindSweep MAP?! Learn more about my Personalized MindSweep Mapping Process


MONDAY: 8 am - Curated Conversation - Zoom

Changing the world, one Monday Morning at a time. Learn more + Sign Up for a Monday morning reminder!


What I’m reading

Storyworthy

Written by Matthew Dicks

This book has changed the way I write.

For 155+ weeks I’ve been developing my creative writing and this book gave me an invaluable insight on how to tell better stories.

Whether we realize it or not, we are always telling stories. On a first date or job interview, at a sales presentation or therapy appointment, with family or friends, we are constantly narrating events and interpreting emotions and actions.

In this compelling book, storyteller extraordinaire Matthew Dicks presents wonderfully straightforward and engaging tips and techniques for constructing, telling, and polishing stories that will hold the attention of your audience (no matter how big or small). He shows that anyone can learn to be an appealing storyteller, that everyone has something “storyworthy” to express, and, perhaps most important, that the act of creating and telling a tale is a powerful way of understanding and enhancing your own life.

Storyworthy Book


Collaborations!


Join us Friday, February 7th, at the MetroWest Chamber of Commerce for this two-hour interactive business community experience.

We'll discuss ways to cultivate business through Sales, Marketing, and Communication methods that support relationship building, showing up authentically, and connecting deeper with colleagues and the people you serve.

9-11 am - Open discussion, community support, brainstorming ideas

Join me in meeting business owners in our community. You'll leave with new tools to help you make connections and build your business!

Free; Registration is required: REGISTRATION

Mindful Connections

Connecting like-hearted entrepreneurs to build relationships, offering support, understanding their passions, and sharing their names in rooms of opportunity.

Join us Thursdays, 12-1 pm EST.

12:00 - Take 5—a guided meditation with Terri Hamilton of Positively Terri to ground your week with peace and focus.

12:05-1 pm Round-table Share

  • Who you are

  • The gifts you bring to the world

  • Who you serve

  • The answer to a Curated question to spark conversation.


If you found this on the web, sign up to join us!

Sign up


In other news


Feeling #FOMO about Curated Conversations? Join us!

Jamie Chapman

Oh, Hi! I’m Jamie Chapman

I’m a Small Business Consultant who recognizes you might do things a little bit differently, and I’m here for it. I help support small businesses in a wide variety of industries and have a special place in my heart for neurodiverse entrepreneurs and ADHD business owners.


If you find that you’re often dancing to the beat of a pen tapping against your desk instead of your own drum, I see you and get you. And I want you to keep on dancing.


I value getting to know the whole person as a business owner and taking a holistic, human view of their needs. I meet you where you’re at and support you in getting to where you want to go.


I love watching small business owners thrive and feel proud of what they’re building.


Founder and Owner of Chickbook Creative, I’ve gained years of career experience in systems, processes, accountability, leadership, and project management. I bring a multi-faceted approach to problem-solving and extensive knowledge of executive functioning, habit formation, and the neurodiverse and ADHD entrepreneur’s mind.


I see and understand the ADHD entrepreneur brain at work, and I'm passionate about supporting neurodivergent business owners in a way that lets them shine their light and bring their gifts to the world for all to see (and pay them for!).

https://www.chickbookcreative.com
Previous
Previous

🧠 Weekly Mind Sweep No. 160 | What’s On My Mind | Introspection

Next
Next

🧠 Weekly Mind Sweep No. 158 | Mind Your Business | Introspection