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Secret Stressors - What's Making You Feel Frazzled?
You have a good life—really!—but you still feel strung out and frazzled. Here's what could be getting to you.
By Corrie Pikul
Original Content  |  February 27, 2012
Women complaining about their problems Photo: Thinkstock
The Rehash Hangover

Symptom: You can't stop talking about what happened with your stubborn husband/boss/mother.

Causes: This habit is called "co-ruminating," says Amanda Rose, an associate professor of psychological science at the University of Missouri. She has found that while we expect that getting everything off our chest will make us feel better, that often isn't true. "We've seen that there's a snowball effect where talking about your problems causes you to dwell on them, and dwelling makes you feel depressed, which makes you complain even more," she says.

Treatment: Rose says the tricky part is that the problems we tend to rehash—relationship snafus, for instance—are inherently difficult to solve (you can't change other people). Resist unloading on your neighbor or the babysitter, and wait to share the story with someone you trust to give sane advice. Rose says that sometimes changing the topic will be enough to distract you (making conversation is good; it's overanalyzing problems with others that can get to you). Focus on other people's stories until you lose interest in your own.
Printed from Oprah.com on Friday, May 24, 2013
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