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They practice mindfulness ѧ»áרע

Because staying in the present is so fundamental to squashing worry, practicing mindfulness can help you to steer focus away from a hypothetical issue that could develop down the road. ¡°It keeps you in the here and now and it helps you be more aware of your thoughts,¡± Purdon says.

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And therapy, such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and acceptance and commitment therapy, can also help worriers stop the negative cycle, since they focus ¡°on the idea of not wrestling and disconfirming the worries, but getting people to focus on their life and values and focus on

the present moment so they can make decisions,¡± Moser adds.

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Their brains actually function differently in a worry-inducing event

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Moser recently had a study come out in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, showing that the brains of worriers and non-worriers actually work differently in a stressful event. For the study, Moser and his colleagues had 71 female study participants answer surveys that indicated whether they were

generally

positive

thinkers

or

negative

thinkers/worriers. Then, the participants looked at negative images -- such as a woman having a knife held to her throat by a masked man -- as their brain activity was monitored and recorded.

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Moser found that the brains of the positive thinkers were less active than those of the negative thinkers/worriers. In fact, ¡°the worriers actually showed a paradoxical backfiring effect in their brains when asked to decrease their negative emotions,¡± he explained in a statement. ¡°This suggests they have a really hard time putting a positive spin on difficult situations and actually make their negative emotions worse even when they are asked to think positively.¡±

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They¡¯re more willing to take chances Ó¸ҳ¢ÊÔ

While worriers have a hard time making decisions -- they take a long time because they can become crippled by all the potential negative outcomes -- non-worriers are more willing to test out solutions to a problem even if a bad outcome is possible, Moser says. In that same vein, non-worriers are

also more flexible in the way they think about things, so they don¡¯t get stuck in a negative thinking rut.

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They have a sense of perspective ÖÃÉíÊÂÍ⣬¿Í¹Û¿´´ý

Non-worriers are able to distance themselves from a situation in order to gain perspective. However, worriers can increase their perspective, Moser explains. One method for doing this is thinking of all the worst possible scenarios, and then evaluating how likely each of them is to really happen. For example: If a worrier is concerned about losing her job, she may jump to the worst-case scenario, which is that she will end up living under a bridge, homeless and alone. But Moser says that talking a worrier through a scenario like this helps her understand how unlikely that outcome is to happen.

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