Catch and release the "if only" thought

Notice when you’re mentally replaying a fixed past event as if it could be changed — and let it go.

Why it works

"If only X hadn’t happened" is an unavoidable response to painful events, but sustained counterfactual rumination — replaying an irreversible past as if it were changeable — maintains the emotional response to the event without producing any new information or possibility. It is also neurologically consistent: the threat-response system treats imagined threat similarly to real threat. Catching and releasing these thoughts interrupts the loop without suppression.

How to do it

  1. Notice the "if only" or "should have been" thought when it arises.
  2. Name it explicitly: "I’m wishing the irreversible past were different."
  3. Acknowledge the wish once — don’t suppress it. Then explicitly return to: "What is actually true right now?"
  4. Do this without frustration each time it recurs — the loop weakens through gentle interruption, not force.

Evidence

Rumination on irreversible events is associated with prolonged distress and depression. Mindfulness-based approaches that involve noticing and releasing rather than suppressing unwanted thoughts are better supported than suppression strategies. (observational)

Rumination research is on depressive thinking; the specific "if only" variant in ordinary acceptance contexts is an extension. The catch-and-release technique aligns with mindfulness practice but has not been specifically studied for this purpose.

Sources

  • Nolen-Hoeksema (1991), responses to depression and their effects on duration, Journal of Abnormal Psychology

Common mistake

Suppressing the "if only" thought — forcing yourself not to think about it — which tends to produce rebound. The point is to notice it, acknowledge it once, and then redirect rather than to eliminate it.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you name the counterfactual thought when it’s dominating and gently redirect to what’s real and actionable — training the catch-and-release muscle rather than expecting the loop to stop on its own.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).