Skip to main content

Watching Your Mind Watch Itself: When You're Worried About Your Worrying

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. The Worry About Worry Is a Different Problem Than the Worry Itself

    • Metacognitive therapy identifies beliefs about thinking as the key driver of anxiety
    • Object-level thoughts are what you worry about; meta-level beliefs are why you stay stuck
    • A meta-analysis of MCT found large effect sizes for generalized and social anxiety
  2. 2. Your Beliefs About Worry Are Running the Show

    • Positive meta-beliefs keep worry going by making it feel functional
    • Negative meta-beliefs create a second anxiety spiral about the first one
    • Wells's model shows that both types must be addressed for lasting change
  3. 3. You Can Watch a Thought Without Climbing Inside It

    • Detached mindfulness in MCT means observing thoughts without reacting to them
    • Unlike thought challenging, it doesn't evaluate whether the thought is true or false
    • Even brief practice reduces the automatic engagement that sustains worry
References & Sources (11)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Wells, A., & Matthews, G. (1994). Attention and Emotion: A Clinical Perspective. Psychology Press.

    What we learned: Introduced the Self-Regulatory Executive Function (S-REF) model, establishing the theoretical foundation for metacognitive therapy by distinguishing between object-level cognition and metacognitive regulation.

  2. Wells, A., & Matthews, G. (1996). Modelling Cognition in Emotional Disorder: The S-REF Model. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 34(11-12), 881-888.

    What we learned: Refined the S-REF model with empirical applications, showing how metacognitive beliefs activate and maintain the Cognitive Attentional Syndrome in emotional disorders.

  3. Wells, A., & Carter, K. (2001). Further Tests of a Cognitive Model of Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Metacognitions and Worry in GAD, Panic Disorder, Social Phobia, Depression, and Nonpatients. Behavior Therapy, 32(1), 85-102.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that metacognitive intervention targeting beliefs about worry outperformed applied relaxation for GAD, with 87.5% recovery rate versus 50%.

  4. Wells, A., & Cartwright-Hatton, S. (2004). A Short Form of the Metacognitions Questionnaire: Properties of the MCQ-30. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 42(4), 385-396.

    What we learned: Developed the MCQ-30 measuring five metacognitive factors, establishing that negative beliefs about uncontrollability and danger are the strongest predictors of pathological worry.

  5. Normann, N., & Morina, N. (2018). The Efficacy of Metacognitive Therapy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 2211.

    What we learned: Meta-analysis of 25 MCT trials found large pre-post effect sizes for anxiety (Hedges' g = 1.75), with controlled comparisons favoring MCT over CBT for generalized anxiety.

  6. Fisher, P.L., & Wells, A. (2008). Metacognitive Therapy for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: A Case Series. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 39(2), 117-132.

    What we learned: Provided early evidence that MCT's focus on metacognitive beliefs rather than thought content produced faster and more durable improvements than standard cognitive approaches.

  7. Wells, A. (2005). Detached Mindfulness in Cognitive Therapy: A Metacognitive Analysis and Ten Techniques. Journal of Rational-Emotive & Cognitive-Behavior Therapy, 23(4), 337-355.

    What we learned: Defined detached mindfulness as distinct from both MBSR and cognitive restructuring, providing the theoretical and practical framework for observing thoughts without engagement.

  8. Wells, A. (2009). Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression. Guilford Press.

    What we learned: The comprehensive clinical manual for MCT, detailing the S-REF model, metacognitive assessment, detached mindfulness techniques, and behavioral experiments for modifying meta-beliefs.

  9. Wells, A., Welford, M., King, P., Papageorgiou, C., Wisely, J., & Mendel, E. (2010). A Pilot Randomized Trial of Metacognitive Therapy vs Applied Relaxation in the Treatment of Adults with Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 48(5), 429-434.

    What we learned: Found 80% MCT recovery rates for GAD maintained at six-month follow-up, demonstrating durability of metacognitive belief change.

  10. Spada, M.M., Mohiyeddini, C., & Wells, A. (2008). Measuring Metacognitions Associated with Emotional Distress: Factor Structure and Predictive Validity of the Metacognitions Questionnaire 30. Personality and Individual Differences, 45(3), 238-242.

    What we learned: Confirmed that the MCQ-30 negative uncontrollability factor explains 15-25% of variance in pathological worry beyond trait anxiety and demographic variables.

  11. Wells, A. (1990). Panic Disorder in Association with Relaxation Induced Anxiety: An Attentional Training Approach to Treatment. Behavior Therapy, 21(3), 273-280.

    What we learned: Introduced the Attention Training Technique (ATT), demonstrating that structured attentional exercises can rehabilitate flexible cognitive control needed for detached mindfulness.

The Worry About Worry Is a Different Problem Than the Worry Itself

Adrian Wells developed metacognitive therapy around a distinction that most anxiety treatments overlook. There are two levels of cognition operating when you're anxious. Object-level cognition is the content of the worry: I might lose my job, my partner seems distant, the test results might be bad. Meta-level cognition is what you believe about having those thoughts: worrying like this means I'm losing control, I have to figure this out before I can function, something must be wrong with me to think this way. Most approaches to anxiety target the first level. Metacognitive therapy targets the second.

The reason this distinction matters is practical. You can successfully challenge an anxious thought, realize it's unlikely to come true, and still feel terrible. That happens because the meta-level belief is untouched. You've handled one worry, but the belief that says "the fact that I worry so much means I'm broken" is still running. It generates the next worry, and the next one after that. The content changes but the engine stays the same. A meta-analysis comparing metacognitive therapy to other approaches found that MCT produced large effects for anxiety disorders, particularly for the generalized anxiety where the worry-about-worry cycle is most pronounced.

The core exercise from this approach is deceptively simple. When you catch yourself in a worry spiral, stop and ask: what am I believing about this worry? Not what am I worried about. What do I believe about the fact that I'm worrying? Write the meta-belief down. Common ones include: "If I don't worry through this, I'll be unprepared." "My anxiety is uncontrollable." "Worrying this much is damaging my brain." Each of these is a testable claim, and each one is usually wrong. But you can't test what you can't see. Writing the belief down is seeing it.

Your Beliefs About Worry Are Running the Show

Wells's metacognitive model identifies two categories of problematic beliefs. Positive metacognitive beliefs hold that worry is beneficial: I need to worry to stay prepared. Worrying shows I care. If I stop worrying, I'll miss something dangerous. These beliefs are self-reinforcing because they make worry feel like responsibility. People with strong positive meta-beliefs don't try to stop worrying because they genuinely believe the worry is serving them. The research shows these beliefs predict sustained worry even when the person recognizes the worry content is irrational.

Negative metacognitive beliefs create the secondary spiral. They sound like: my thoughts are uncontrollable. Worrying will harm me physically. I'm going crazy because I can't stop thinking about this. When someone holds both types, the cycle looks like this: the positive belief starts the worry (I need to think this through), the worry runs for a while, then the negative belief arrives (I can't stop, something is wrong with me), which creates a new wave of anxiety that triggers more positive beliefs (I need to worry about the fact that I'm worrying too much). It's a loop that feeds itself from both directions.

The exercise targets whichever belief is active. When you notice worry, write down the meta-belief: is it a "worry helps me" type or a "worry will destroy me" type? Then sit with a single question. For positive beliefs, ask: has this worry actually kept me safe, or has it just kept me up at night? For negative beliefs, ask: am I actually losing control right now, or does it just feel that way? You're not replacing the belief with positive thinking. You're holding it up to what's actually happening. The gap between the belief and reality is where the cycle starts to weaken.

You Can Watch a Thought Without Climbing Inside It

Metacognitive therapy uses a technique called detached mindfulness that is narrower and more specific than traditional mindfulness practice. In mindfulness-based stress reduction, you might observe your breath, body sensations, and the full range of mental activity. In detached mindfulness, you're doing one specific thing: noticing a worry and choosing not to engage with it. Not suppressing it. Not analyzing it. Not deciding whether it's true. Just watching it exist and letting it pass. The distinction matters because engaging with a worry, even to challenge it, can reinforce the meta-belief that the thought requires your attention.

This is where metacognitive therapy diverges sharply from cognitive behavioral therapy. CBT asks: is this thought accurate? Let's look at the evidence. MCT asks: does this thought need my engagement? Let me observe it without participating. The CBT approach challenges the content of the thought. The MCT approach challenges your belief that the thought demands a response. For people whose primary struggle is the second layer of worry, the MCT move is often more effective because it addresses the actual problem: not that the thought exists, but that you can't let the thought exist without doing something about it.

A concrete practice: when a worry appears, narrate it in third person. Instead of thinking "I'm going to fail," say internally, "My mind is producing a thought about failure." This language creates what researchers call cognitive distance. You're describing mental activity rather than being caught inside it. Try holding this observer position for thirty seconds. Don't push the thought away. Don't analyze it. Just watch it with the same mild curiosity you'd have watching a bird outside your window. The thought will often lose its urgency on its own. Not because you fought it, but because you stopped feeding it the engagement it needed to escalate.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

Watching Your Mind Watch Itself: When You're Worried About Your Worrying | Be Better Offline