- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Psychology
- > psychological guide books
Description
The hardest thing for the human brain to do is intentionally forget. Trying to suppress a thought is the guarantee it will haunt you. If you are instructed right now, for the next sixty seconds, to absolutely not think about a white bear, what is the only image that will flood your mind? A white bear. This simple test reveals a terrifying glitch in the human operating system: our brain cannot subtract a thought; it can only highlight it.Known as the Ironic Process Theory, this neurological trap occurs because the act of suppression requires two mental processes. One part of the brain actively tries to think of other things, while a background "monitor" constantly checks to ensure you aren't thinking about the forbidden topic. The moment you get tired or stressed, the monitor takes over, flooding your consciousness with the exact anxiety, craving, or fear you were trying to avoid.This book breaks down the mechanics of mental rebound. It explains why dieters constantly dream of junk food, why insomniacs cannot sleep by forcing it, and why suppressing traumatic memories ensures their return.Stop fighting your own mind. Learn the counter-intuitive psychological strategies needed to neutralize intrusive thoughts by welcoming them, disarming the monitor, and finding true cognitive peace.



