Truth & Goodness
The Cruel Myth About the Ancients: How They Really Cared for the Sick
10 December 2025
A single bad thought can return relentlessly, making it impossible to rest. This is the effect of a specific brain mechanism, one we can gradually weaken. This constant cycle of recurring negative thoughts in the brain is a challenge many people face, but conscious effort allows us to break the pattern.
Many individuals experience this exact thinking pattern, though they rarely speak about it aloud. One negative situation can dominate the entire rest of the day—or even the night.
“No matter what happens in my life, no matter how much good comes my way, my thoughts always return to that one thing that keeps me awake. Of course, it’s negative, usually embarrassing, thinking about when I could have said or done something differently. I wonder what someone thought of me, what the consequences are for me. I do this even dozens of times with the same situation.”
Kinga, 34, from southern Poland, shared her experiences in an interview with the Holistic News portal. There are many similar stories; numerous people fixate on a single negative thought, even when their lives include plenty of positive experiences. Where does this mechanism originate?
For many years, our ancestors had one goal in life: survival. Every mistake in assessing a situation could cost a life, so the brain preferred to be overly vigilant and risk-oriented. This is precisely why early humans quickly learned that the beautiful sight of a sunset was unimportant, but the roar of a wild, dangerous animal was critical.
Although living conditions have changed over the years, our brains remain just as vigilant regarding bad thoughts and impulses. Today, those impulses are no longer real threats but a single sentence of criticism among many praises, financial uncertainty, or the subjective feeling that others are doing better.
Researchers described this phenomenon as the brain’s negative bias. This mode activates so that we feel what is bad, sad, or even shameful more intensely.
Studies published in the PubMed database show that we embed negative experiences much more strongly than positive ones. The amygdala—the part of the brain responsible for processing emotions and danger signals—plays a key role in this.
This has a powerful effect on our minds, which, based on such experiences, learn how to react and make decisions in the future.
These negative experiences become a kind of filter through which we view subsequent situations. This filter influences the decisions we make. When we focus too much on what we failed at, we less often decide to try again—all to prevent the return of negative emotions we already know.
If we do not consciously recall what we succeeded at and what we do well, the brain habitually focuses exclusively on the negative. Over time, this does not remain without consequence.
When we concentrate mainly on failures for an extended period, we react much more strongly in similar situations than reality requires. The brain is already set on alert and expects the worst-case scenario.
Therefore, when a stimulus appears that resembles a previous failure, the reaction can be violent—even if objectively there is no reason for it. This is why the ability to stop and weaken negative thoughts in the brain carries such great significance.
The brain is like a muscle—you can train it and develop new habits if you want to. That is precisely why you should introduce three practices that will change how you perceive negative experiences:
This is not easy—in fact, it will take some time to form a habit. Nevertheless, it is worth it. Why?
You cannot entirely avoid difficult situations and negative experiences. However, consciously managing negative thoughts in the brain allows you to go through them more calmly and prevents them from dominating your daily life.
Read this article in Polish: Złe myśli wciąż powracają? Te 3 rzeczy pomagają to przerwać
Truth & Goodness
10 December 2025
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