03/06/2026
🧠 Your inner voice is powerful. But sometimes it's working against you.
Psychologist Ethan Kross discovered something fascinating: when you're stuck in a negative mental loop, simply replacing "I" with your own name can break the cycle.
Instead of "Why am I so anxious about this?" you say "Clint, why are you anxious about this?"
That tiny shift creates psychological distance between you and the emotion. Your brain switches from reactive mode to problem-solving mode. Stress drops. Clarity increases.
It's called distanced self-talk, and the research backs it up.
Your name turns you from the victim of the story into the observer of it. And observers make better decisions.
Try it next time your inner critic gets loud. You might surprise yourself.
📖 From Ethan Kross's book: Chatter: The Voice in Our Head, Why It Matters, and How to Harness It