
Member Reviews

In my work I deal with a lot of people who overthink. They are so afraid sometimes of making the wrong decision that they can’t make a decision. What a great tool this book is for me to share with others. The author has done an incredible job of opening your mind to how overthinking can be changed and how it doesn’t have to rule your life.
She gives practical advice in this area and shares life stories so you can see how it plays out in different situations.
I will be ordering more than one copy for my office and I highly recommend this book to anyone whether you are an over thinker or not. I have gained a lot from this book and am thankful she has taken the time to write it.
I received an advanced copy and this is my own opinion.

This is my third book of Anne Bogel"s to read. I have enjoyed each one very much and have bought several of each to share with others. Her writing is easy to read, informative, understandable, and to the point. It brings up topics to the surface and helps you see where one can relate. This new book of hers is amazing. So much of it is relatable and mind pondering. I especially like having the questions at the end of each chapter to help you reflect and fully emerge you into what you just read. I highly recommend this book and her others to anyone but especially to avid readers and will be buying several copies to share with others.

This was the right book at the right time for me. I've recently had some significant (positive) life changes that brought with them a flurry of opportunities... to overthink. Unfortunately, overthinking can become a habit and begin to sap the joy from one's life.
Don't Overthink It: Make Easier Decisions, Stop Second-Guessing, and Bring More Joy to Your Life describes the ways we engage in overthinking, what prompts us to overthink, and thankfully, identifies ways to reduce one's tendency to overthink. The suggestions I found most helpful were focusing on one's values, limiting options, not allowing planning to interfere with actually executing, basking in rituals, treating oneself, and simple abundance.
Ms. Bogel also provides a section outlining books she found especially helpful in researching overthinking and the tools to overcome it. I look forward to reading several of those titles.
I applied what I learned from this book while writing this review. Rather than focusing on writing it "just so," I just sat down and wrote it. I highly recommend this book to those who sometimes get caught up in analysis paralysis.
Thank you to netgalley and the author for an advance copy of this book.

As a chronic overthinker, I found Don't Overthink It to be relevant and immensely informative. Bogel mixes her research with her own stories of her overthinking habits, making the book feel relatable and easy to read. The advice doesn't feel preachy, but rather conversational, like Bogel is talking right to you. And I've already incorporated some of her tips and tricks on how to curb my overthinking habits, and it's felt like a huge weight has been lifted from my mind. It's a quick read that anyone can benefit from.

With it’s practical ways and approaches to dealing with overthinking, sprinkled with Anne’s personal anecdotes, Don’t Overthink It is like having sitting down with your best friend catching up over a glass of wine. Non judgement, practical and a good read.

I was excited to receive an ARC of Anne’s new book. I have read and enjoyed Anne’s previous books and I was not disappointed. Anne writes as if she is having a conversation with her readers, similar to her podcast, What Should I Read Next. In her new book, Don't Overthink It: Make Easier Decisions, Stop Second-Guessing, and Bring More Joy to Your Life, Anne dives into an exploration of overthinking, what it means and the effects it has on both our physical and mental health. She backs up her facts with research and offers questions to encourage readers to dive deeper into their own thinking processes. She offers suggestions and strategies for overcoming the overthinking habit. Anne does all of this with her signature warmth and humor. I have been a chronic overthinker all of my life and I have found myself regularly referring back to this book and using the strategies. I highly recommend this book!

Finished this gem of a book yesterday filled with fun, real life stories and so many tools to help overthinkers like myself make decisions and live fuller lives. My kindle edition is highlighted so much it's as if markers threw up inside it.
Have you heard of Modern Mrs. Darcy? She is a book lover, blogger, podcaster, and all around fabulous human being.
You won't regret reading this beauty. Anne Bogel for the win! .

I always love Anne's books - like grabbing coffee with a wise friend, full of advice, encouragement, and warmth.

I didn’t really think of myself as an overthinker before picking up this book. I thought maybe I could pick up some tips for other people in my life who are. Let’s just say I learned a few things about myself!
Anne Bogel addresses the many ways we overthink and the impact overthinking has on our lives. Best of all, she offers real-life strategies for stopping overthinking in its tracks. As Anne writes, “mental energy is not a limitless resource,” and the more we can find offramps from the cycle of overthinking, the healthier we will be mentally and emotionally.
The book is full of practical suggestions you can incorporate immediately into your daily life. For example, I get really anxious about hosting people for meals in my home. I hadn’t even realized how much I overthink this. Anne offers a couple of great ideas I can put in place right away to relieve my stress and become the welcoming host I want to be.
Some of the other ideas that really resonated with me were:
There’s seldom one right answer.
I can take baby steps forward to shift my momentum and get unstuck.
I can use systems and habits to clear our physical and mental clutter. My new mantra is “complete the cycle!”
Turning routines into rituals improves our mental and spiritual health. Here’s how Anne describes the difference:
“A routine is done for expediency…Ritual is something we do with a higher purpose in mind…A ritual unites the rhythm of routine with focused attention—a powerful combination for avoiding overthinking. It’s hard to overthink when we are focused on the moment. The ritual forces us to slow down—and when we deliberately slow our bodies, we slow our minds as well.”
Even if you don’t consider yourself an overthinker, I highly recommend you pick up this book. There’s something here for anyone who wants to live a less anxious and more mindful life!

I am a worrier. I am a detail oriented person. I like control and perfection. All this adds up to mean that I am an overthinker. For that reason, the title of this book just jumped out to me. Yes! I need this! Help me!
I have two favorite things about this book:
1) It is relatable. I love when an author giving advice to others gives examples of where they struggle in the same area. Each chapter contains an example from Anne's own life as well as many examples from other ordinary men and women.
2) It is immediately applicable. Many times in self-help books, the ideas sound great, but you aren't really sure what to do with all these amazing ideas. I actually found myself using the ideas, suggestions, and strategies without even realizing how quickly I had absorbed it all. They are just so simple and uncomplicated.
A few ideas that have stood out to me the most:
1) "Speed Up to Move On" - Sometimes when faced with a decision, we drag our feet either because both ideas are great and we don't want to make a bad decision or because one of the options is terrible and we secretly hope that more time will make the bad option go away. We just need to do something, accept that perfection might not be possible and move on.
2) "Complete the Cycle" - when faced with a mental checklist, don't leave things unfinished. Finish what you start and you'll create more brain space.
3) "It's a mistake to give all your thoughts equal weight. Some thoughts do not deserve to be taken seriously, so don't dignify them with a response." I tend to do this and it just weighs me down. It's helpful to realize that I can just choose to brush away some thoughts.
Highly recommend this one!

Overthinkers rejoice! Anne Bogel's Don't Overthink It will resonate with you while also equipping you with practical tips for stopping the spiral of overthinking and decision fatigue. Bogel encourages readers to see overthinking as a behavior not an identity. She provides examples from her own overthinking experiences and describes how she has been able to shift her mindset in those moments of chronic overthinking. Each chapter concludes with questions for individual reflection which I appreciate as a reader who likes to apply my learning to my own personal experiences. This is a book that I will be revisiting repeatedly for encouragement and reminders. So if you are interested in reading this book my advice to you is- don't overthink it. Buy the book. Read the book. Enjoy!

I'm not sure if I would have identified myself as a classic overthinker, but after reading Anne Bogel's newest book, “Don't Overthink It,” I can definitely pinpoint some areas of my personal life where overthinking has become my default. And that default actually means I do nothing at all.
“We're afraid of choosing poorly, so we end up choosing nothing – not because it was the right decision but because we couldn't get through the messy middle.”
The real life examples in the book help us to see in our own lives practical ways we might be able to eliminate decision fatigue. Anne reminds us that when we're able to decide ahead of time what our values/goals are, we can use those parameters to help us not to overthink decisions and move forward with confidence.
“Don't Overthink It” is a book I can see myself coming back to as a helpful reminder that creating margin in one's life is an important priority that will allow for more joy and spontaneity in the everyday. And when in doubt, buy the flowers.

When I saw this book’s title Don’t Overthink It by Anne Bogel there was no question that I definitely had to read this book. I am definitely an ‘over thinker’, although as you will read in Anne’s book you will realize that I shouldn’t even be calling myself that. Using the strategies in this book I am working on changing my thoughts so that I don’t continue to overthink my decisions. I have never thought of overthinking as Anne mentions in this quote “Overthinking also carries a significant opportunity cost. Mental energy is not a limitless resource. We have only so much to spend each day, and how we choose to spend it matters.” I like how each chapter ends with the “next steps” which I found to be super helpful. Don’t Overthink It, has given me the tools and courage to be able to look forward to the freedom from overthinking. I will definitely be reading this book again and keeping notes to refer back to.

This book is wonderful! Overthinking is a real struggle for almost all of us and it's very often overlooked as a problem that holds us back. Anne addresses this with such honesty. The tips and info in the book are well researched and thoughtful and the tips are ones we can immediately and easily apply to life. I can't wait to get my hands on a paper copy so that I can highlight and reference for later! This is going to be a perfect book club book! Thank you, Anne, for letting me read!

I didn’t really think I was much of an overthinker, but I love the way Anne Bogel writes, so I eagerly pre-ordered this book, which comes out March 3. One of the preorder bonuses was a NetGalley ebook and the opportunity to read this book before publication.
Reading this book, I have realized that I am, in fact, an overthinker, and so is almost everyone else in my family! We just used different terms to describe our behavior. One of my favorite terms in this book is “analysis paralysis.” Our family has always described ourselves as “poor decision-makers,” but this term is much more descriptive!
As an academic, I just saw myself as doing “research” when I gathered information prior to making a decision, if I had a problem deciding, I would chalk it up to “option glut.” I didn’t see myself as an overthinker, because I would often put off decisions rather than decide immediately.
How wrong I was!
Not only is this book compulsively readable, but it is full of wonderful descriptive anecdotes that beautifully illustrate the points Anne makes. More importantly, it is full of practical advice and actual solutions to the dilemmas that result from overthinking.
I highly recommend this book to all overthinkers and poor decision-makers. Bringing more joy to your life is always a good thing!

In Don't Overthink It, Anne Bogel gives a plethora of suggestions and strategies for dealing with all the what-ifs, should haves, and second-guessing that suck the joy out of life. She addresses the role that perfectionism, habits, and our environment (such as clutter) have in overthinking, and how to stop the cycle before it consumes us. She states: "Perfectionism-driven overthinking often dwells in the space of what-ifs and second-guessing. The moment of our decision may have passed, but we can still remain fixated on the decision, analyzing what we should have done."
While she includes well researched evidenced-based information, she also includes many personal examples that assist in getting a handle on the analysis paralysis that goes along with overthinking. If you're still ruminating about things that happened last week (or in the 80s!), this book is for you!

I loved Anne Bogel’s newest book Don’t Overthink It! She makes overthinking seem like a normal reaction for when there is a new event in your life. I love her real life examples and how each chapter tackles something that you can relate to.

Obviously while writing this review I was overthinking it---thus my need to read the book. Anne addresses this issue, which we are all guilty of at some point. But fear not that doesn't mean we can't learn how to over come this. Her illustrations and no nonsense writing had me coming back to find out how I could apply this to my life. It brings all the overthinking issues into one place and explains them...and giving a solution! Yes, I need a solution. I think this book is for anyone, even if you don't think you overthink. Thanks to the Author, publisher and Netgalley for an e-arc as part of the launch team, in exchange for an honest review.

I loved this book! It encourages personal growth in everyday life by making small changes that can really make a big difference. Who hasn't gotten frustrated with decision making? We have all done it. This author uses humorous examples from her own life and the lives of family and friends to illustrate her points. I look forward to implementing many tips and strategies from the book.

A non fiction book that could be defined as self help, but I would call it life instructional! This is a genre that I don't typically read, but from a person/author who I love so I thought I would give it a try and I am glad I did.
Anne Bogel is known to many for her blog or her podcast or both where she helps connect readers with great books. As a book blogger myself, my goal for my blog is to ramble about books in hopes that readers will connect and find a book that they would like to read. I have followed her career for a bit, so was excited when she announced a third book and then was greatly intrigued when she started speaking about what it would be about - a vastly different direction from her first two.
This book focuses on the concept of overthinking and the many different ways in which a person can overthink and then provides tools and skills to help make decision making easier and how to avoid overthinking when it isn't necessary. I found this book to be very helpful. The tools were easy to implement quickly and I loved her personal antidotes that made the skills easier to understand.
This is the perfect gift book for the person in your life who may spend too much time pondering and needs to move more things into action mode. This is a book that I could see myself dipping back into time after time to remind myself that overthinking can keep you from doing and enjoying life.