
Are you sure you’re overthinking? Or is your mind doing something entirely different, like planning, reflecting, or even just processing deeply? Does this sound familiar? You’re trying to make a simple decision—like where to go for dinner—and suddenly you’re three Google searches deep, reading reviews from 2017, wondering if the music will be too loud or if parking will be a nightmare.
What if I told you your “overthinking” might actually be something else? The truth is, what we label as overthinking is often a completely different type of thought process—one that might be healthy, intentional, and even helpful. Once you know the difference, you’ll be able to tell whether you’re stuck in a loop or moving toward real clarity and action.
Big picture: Productive thinking moves you forward. Unproductive thinking keeps you stuck.
How you manage your thoughts matters. God gave you a mind designed for creativity, discernment, and wisdom. It’s not meant to stay trapped in cycles that steal your peace.
The Overthinking Trap: Mental Burnout on the Track
Imagine a high-performance race car stuck in a burnout. The engine is roaring, the tires are spinning, smoke is everywhere, but the car isn’t going anywhere.
That’s overthinking.
It’s an excessive, repetitive, and unproductive mental loop fueled by anxiety, fear, or a desperate need to control an outcome. Overthinking feels like problem-solving, but it often leads to analysis paralysis. You’re burning mental energy without progress or peace.
Sometimes it shows up subtly: thinking through your to-do list over and over, questioning if you should even start, or second-guessing the email you already sent. And other times, it’s loud and overwhelming: racing thoughts, insomnia, indecision, and fear of getting it wrong.
But here’s the spiritual truth:
“For God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control.” —2 Timothy 1:7 (ESV)
Overthinking trades power and peace for fear and frustration.
Example of Overthinking:
You send an email to your boss. For the next hour, you reread it over and over, stressing about your tone, word choice, and if you came across too casual—all without taking any meaningful action. The thought loop becomes emotional exhaustion.
Ruminating: When the Past Holds Your Mind Hostage
Ruminating is a specific form of overthinking that focuses on the past. It often involves replaying mistakes, reliving moments of shame, or obsessing over things you can’t change.
It’s like hitting rewind over and over without ever pressing play again to move forward.
Ruminating thoughts often have an emotional charge. They’re connected to wounds, trauma, or shame. And although they feel urgent, they rarely lead to healing on their own. That’s because they loop for the sake of survival not resolution.
Example of Ruminating:
You’re still mentally stuck on something you said five years ago. You play it in your head like it happened yesterday, feeling the same embarrassment all over again, yet there’s no resolution or peace.
Ruminating isn’t reflection. It’s being emotionally hijacked by something that’s already over. The past becomes the present all over again—in your body, your brain, and your emotions.
“Casting all your anxieties on him, because he cares for you.” —1 Peter 5:7 (ESV)
The Productive Path: Mental Activity That Moves You Forward
Let’s flip the script because you could be calling your thinking process incorrectly.
Now we’ll look at constructive thinking styles that are intentional, solution-focused, and emotionally healthy.
Planning:
Planning is the process of laying out specific, actionable steps to accomplish a goal. It’s organized, intentional, and it lowers anxiety by bringing clarity.
Planning invites your brain into structure. It shifts you from “what if?” to “here’s how.”
Example: You decide to learn a new language. You create a plan to study 30 minutes a day, join a conversation group, and track progress weekly. There’s clear direction, progress markers, and space for accountability.
Strategizing:
Strategizing is big-picture thinking. It goes beyond the “how” to consider the “why,” “when,” and “what if.” This form of thinking is especially useful in leadership, business, ministry planning, and life transitions.
It involves asking, “How can I maximize my time, talent, and tools for the best result?”
Example: Your company is launching a new product. You strategize the rollout, assess competitors, define the target audience, and create a marketing roadmap.
Strategizing helps create systems that serve sustainability and scale.
Contemplating & Pondering:
These are slow, spacious, thoughtful types of thinking. They aren’t rushed, and they aren’t pressured to find a solution. They allow room for curiosity, insight, and emotional connection.
Contemplation is often tied to self-awareness, faith, and emotional growth. It’s deep soul work.
Example: You’re reflecting on a friend’s behavior. You’re not judging or analyzing—you’re simply sitting with it and asking what it might reveal about your friendship.
“But Mary treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart.” —Luke 2:19 (ESV)
Pondering gives space for spiritual insight, not immediate answers.
Reflecting:
Reflection is about looking back with the goal of learning and growing. It often involves evaluating experiences, choices, and lessons. It’s intentional, purposeful, and fueled by grace.
Example: At the end of the year, you journal about what you’ve learned personally and professionally. You’re gaining insight, not beating yourself up.
Reflection is healing awareness. It connects the dots between where you’ve been and where you’re going.
How to Know What Kind of Thinking You’re Doing
Sometimes, our thoughts feel automatic, but they’re not out of our control. Here’s how to pause and assess:
1. Am I moving closer to a decision or action?
If yes, you’re probably planning or strategizing. If no, and you’re just mentally circling, it might be overthinking or rumination.
2. How do I feel?
Productive thinking feels focused and engaging. Overthinking feels heavy, frustrating, and exhausting.
3. Is this helping me solve a problem or just dwell on it?
Solving is forward. Dwelling is stuck.
4. Does this thought honor God’s truth or feed my fear?
God’s wisdom brings peace. Fear brings mental clutter.
Grow Through Reflection
Take a moment to ask yourself:
- Which type of thinking has been dominating my mental space lately?
- What thoughts have I been spinning on that no longer serve my growth?
- Where can I shift from spinning to stepping forward?
“You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you, because he trusts in you.” —Isaiah 26:3 (ESV)
God isn’t asking you to silence your mind. He’s asking you to surrender it.
Your brain is powerful, but it needs alignment to serve you well. Learning to recognize the difference between healthy processing and mental burnout is a game-changer.
You don’t have to stop thinking. You just have to start thinking in ways that actually move you forward.
And remember: the goal isn’t to empty your mind. The goal is to renew it.
Ready for Your Next Step?
If you’re ready to stop the mental overload and start thinking with more clarity and peace, I’ve created a free 5-Day Mind Renewal Plan to help you put these ideas into practice. It includes daily devotions, actionable steps, and reflection prompts to guide you from anxiety to peace.
Download your free guide here and start the journey to a quieter mind today!
Muah!



