Mental Overload Is Destroying Your Ability to Think Clearly AND impacting your mental health
Every time you are mentally overloaded, the chances of making good decisions decrease.
Why?
Well, like a slow computer, your mind is packed with too many files—some corrupted, some outdated, some too complex to process—clogging up your ability to think clearly before the message even gets through.
This letter is a reminder to fight for your mental health. Mental health isn’t just for those who have hit rock bottom. It’s for every single one of us. Life itself is a slow mental decline. Everything we experience along the way either strengthens or destroys our cognitive resilience, bit by bit.
Every issue that comes along that we have not resolved adds to our mental clutter and cognitive load. The less clutter we store the better chance we have for mental health.
Think about it. You’ve seen people who were once young, cheerful, and bright—back when life was less stressful, less demanding. But over time, with responsibility and stress, and more and more problems overloading them, they changed. They lost the spark in their eyes.
Then, there are those who, when faced with life’s hardships, wake the hell up. They realise what truly matters, throw in the regular towel, and change everything. These are the good mid-life crises—the ones that shake you wide awake and remind you not to sleepwalk through life without stopping to smell the roses.
Why Some Struggle While Others Thrive
I’ve met people with serious mental health conditions or heavy cognitive barriers who live much healthier lives than those who don’t suffer from these struggles.
Why?
Because when you have a problem that is actually debilitating, it’s the biggest reminder that you have to find a way to solve it. So, people like this begin searching for answers and end up putting real effort into looking after their minds.
Those who don’t have to do this often slowly succumb to their mind’s weaknesses, assuming they’ll be fine. This does not mean there is a magic wand to fix everything. It just means you make sure you allocate time and effort to what you need to and ignore the rest.
2025: A Digital World That’s Destroying Mental Health
Now here we are, in a digitalised 2025, and we are suddenly all at risk. Mental overload is affecting us all as we let too many ideas pour into our minds without the time to process them.
Mental health is declining rapidly. The literature shows it.
Not that I care too much about data and research—I care about reminding you to use your own intelligent cognitive faculties to give you the information you need to know.
Look around. Notice what’s happening.
There are patterns, lessons, and reminders of what’s happening everywhere—docile kids glued to iPads instead of playing outside or making noise, adults staring at their phones receiving cheap dopamine hits instead of getting the real deal by hugging, engaging in touch, or playing games with loved ones.
We are now absorbed by an online world where everyone is trapped in an endless cycle of performance.
Those are the patterns that matter—the ones you can actually see and which are affecting your own life.
Cognitive Decline and Mental Ill Health Are Everywhere
And what do we see from all of this? Cognitive decline and mental ill health.
People are unhappy, edgy, and reactive.
Don’t let that be you.
This letter is to remind you to wake up and keep that cognitive intellect ticking.
Shake it up. Make it work for you.
You Are Smart Enough to See What’s Happening
You can not just make yourself use critical thinking sporadically. You will only do it if it needs to be done.
So, How Do We Use Critical Thinking to Protect Our Mental Health?
The first thing is that your critical thinking ability is greatly reduced because of the amount of time you spend on the internet absorbing.
Stop that. NOW.
If you don’t, you are signing your future mind away.
I don’t know exactly how poorly it will serve you, but I know your mental state is declining right now.
Organic Critical Thinking Comes From Conversation
While there are many ways to activate CT One of the ways we activate natural, organic CT is through human-to-human conversation and idea exchange.
If you spend more time online than speaking to real people, you’re in cognitive trouble. Stop that immediately.
We feel alive, energised, and invigorated through human interaction and the exchange of exciting ideas.
Critical thinking naturally activates when we sit face-to-face, listening to real stories. We also have a reason to think deeper when we connect the stories to a real person. We can not walk away or cancel the human in front of us. We have to finish inside the engagement.
These days, I rarely see this.
People don’t ask each other enough questions, nor do they have the bravery to. We’re living in a world where everyone is so easily offended that no one is willing to take the risk.
This is a grand catastrophe. At the very least you as readers can change what you do.
Therapy Was Once Built Into Our Daily Lives
This is why therapy works—because you are free to talk openly, without having to perform.
But long before formal therapy became a popular daily activity, we had organic therapy built into our lives. The social world is supposed to be the best therapy for your mind. If it is not, your social choices need to be re-thought.
In the old days, after a hard day, we talked. We sat with family, friends, and even strangers, unpacking the day, laughing, venting, and reflecting. We didn’t have a phone to distract us so we were desperate for natural dopamine that came with connecting.
This protected our mental health.
Now? We come home after a hard day to a quiet, lonely house, where everyone is glued to their screens, scrolling through a digital world that doesn’t truly see them.
A Challenge for My Readers: Real Conversations
As readers of my letters, I want you to do one thing for the rest of your life:
Let people ask you questions about your life.
Answer them as if it were the last conversation you might ever have, as if telling your story could save your life.
Respond to their curiosity with passion, love, and openness—share your story, teach, laugh, make fun of yourself, share the lessons, the triumphs, the failures.
Be honest. Learn. Teach.
This is how we truly activate our thinking faculties: by engaging with others and sharing truthful stories.
Activity: The Lost Art of Conversation
Your Task This Week:
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Start one real conversation—not online, not through text, but face-to-face.
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Be fully open. No filters, no rehearsed lines. Just speak honestly.
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Listen deeply. Not to reply, not to win, but to understand.
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Stay in it. If there’s silence, let it breathe. If a topic gets uncomfortable, lean in instead of retreating.
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Notice how you feel afterward. Did it energise you? Did it make you think?
Conversation is one of the most powerful tools we have for mental clarity and to develop cognitive health in a way that is directly meaningful to your life.
Use it.
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