Get Out of Your Head - Critical summary review - Jennie Allen
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Get Out of Your Head - critical summary review

Get Out of Your Head Critical summary review Start your free trial
Spirituality & Mindfulness, Personal Development and Self Help & Motivation

This microbook is a summary/original review based on the book:  Get Out of Your Head: Stopping the Spiral of Toxic Thoughts

Available for: Read online, read in our mobile apps for iPhone/Android and send in PDF/EPUB/MOBI to Amazon Kindle.

ISBN: 1601429649

Publisher: WaterBrook

Critical summary review

Most of us are held captive by our thoughts: “I’m worthless,” “I’m helpless,” “I’m unlovable.” And these thoughts often spiral out into toxic patterns that affect our behavior, our character, and our relationships with other people. In “Get Out of Your Head,” Jennie Allen attempts to help her readers put an end to this. And she relies on Jesus as her ally and moral compass on this journey.

So, get ready to learn how to stop the spiral of toxic thoughts and prepare to allow God to do most of the hard work for you.

Thinking about thinking

If a sparrow flew into your house, it would be easy to shoot it down with a BB gun, but nearly impossible to capture it. Thoughts are even wilder than sparrows: they come and go as they please, and they spiral out in every possible direction. And yet, the Bible – one of the most influential books ever written – says that one can only obey God if they are able to control all of them. 

“The weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh,” writes Saint Paul in the Second Epistle to the Corinthians, “but we have divine power to destroy strongholds. We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ.” But is that even possible? Can we really capture every one of our thoughts? And should we? Aren’t some of the most beautiful experiences – such as imagining and dreaming – the product of the very opposite? Well, let’s see what modern science has to say about this. 

On average, we have about 30,000 thoughts a day. Unfortunately, the vast majority of them are negative. To make matters worse, “an estimated 60% to 80% of visits to primary care physicians have a stress-related component.” As a consequence, it is supposed that many of the mental, physical and behavioral illnesses that plague us today – anywhere between 75% and 98% – are “a direct result of a toxic thought life.”

The interesting thing is that none of this contradicts the many truths concerning our thought lives that are scattered in the Bible. It’s just that the Scripture might be talking about our mind and our mental emotions whenever it mentions the word “heart.” After all, most ancient civilizations used the word “heart” to mean “the center of all emotional life.” Modern science merely discovered that this is a better description of our brains than our hearts. The advice, however, doesn’t change one bit. 

“The greatest spiritual battle of our generation is being fought between our ears,” writes Allen. “Learning to capture our thoughts matters. Because how we think shapes how we live.”

Spiraling out and breaking free

How many times have you stopped performing well on your job after being scolded by your immediate superior for your past behavior? How many times has noticing your partner ignoring you spiraled your thoughts in the direction of building a case against your relationship? And how many times have you started wondering whether you’re failing as a parent soon after losing your temper with your children? 

It’s a pattern, isn’t it? Your negative emotions lead you to some wild thoughts, and these thoughts dictate your decisions, which, in turn, determine your future behavior. Of course, your behavior shapes not only who you are but also your relationships with other people – which is such an important part of life that it immediately takes you back to the beginning, producing a few additional unhealthy thoughts and some more negative emotions. “Round and round and round we go,” writes Allen, “spinning down, seemingly out of control, our lives becoming defined by this endless cycle.” Hopefully, there is something you can do to get out of this. And Allen learned this the hard way.

A few years ago, she was supposed to deliver two talks at a Baptist church in her hometown of Little Rock, Arkansas. She was “bold and clear” during the presentation of her first talk, stating out loud to the few thousand women gathered that there’s “a real enemy with demons at his beck and call” who wants to claim everyone’s faith. Soon after the talk ended – and before the beginning of the second talk – a strange woman approached Allen and said to her, in a chillingly urgent whisper, “We are coming for you. You need to quit talking about us. We are coming for you.” And lo and behold, the power in the auditorium suddenly went out. 

At first, this terrifying incident made Allen “wild with faith”: after all, if the enemies of God were real (as this “undeniable manifestation of Satan’s work” had demonstrated), then God must be real as well. And that made everything fine. But then, just a few days later, this initial thought spiraled out in an 18-month-long plunge into darkness. Suddenly, dread and anxieties overcame her: what if it was all just a coincidence? What if the demons were nonexistent? What if God wasn’t real as well? Every negative thought led to an even more negative one – and the cycle went on and on, seemingly without an end. And then, Jenny remembered the words of Paul: “take every thought captive to obey Christ.” And she realized that there is a way out.

Drawing battle lines

Unfortunately, we live most of our lives in captivity, entrapped by our very own lies. Thoughts such as “I’m helpless,” “I’m worthless” or “I’m unlovable” “shape our thinking, our emotions, and the way we respond to the world around us. They trap us in their cycle of distraction and distortion and pain, preventing us from recognizing the truth we should believe. Most detrimentally, they change how we view God. Every lie we buy into about ourselves is rooted in what we believe about God.” 

Saint Paul makes this clear in the eighth chapter of his Epistle to the Romans: “a mind set on the flesh leads to sin and death, and a mind set on the Spirit leads to life and peace.” So, it’s all about shifting your mind to the latter. The good news? It is also all about you making the choice to do this. God is on your side. If you believe that he is all-powerful and you have decided to surrender yourself to him, then you have the power over your thoughts as well. And since everything else – even your behavior and relationships – is the byproduct of your thoughts, you also have control over your own fate and happiness. 

This is what taking your thoughts captive means. Leave them be, and your demons, your wounds, your sins will inevitably take you in the wrong direction. You must counter them as soon as possible. And your battle against the spiral begins with one interrupting thought and one God-honoring consideration: “I have a choice” and “God has already won this for me.” The first thought should help you move the battle in your mind to a neutral ground: you need to understand that you are in control of your seemingly unfettered thoughts. And then, the second thought will help you make the right choice: if God is in you and exists for you – then you can choose to fight from a place of victory, confident that God (and, consequently, you) will eventually prevail.

Taking down the enemies of your mind

So, stopping the spiral of toxic thoughts begins with the realization that you have a choice what to think. Afterward, it’s your job – with the help of God – to make seven right choices. And the process of retraining your mind to be sufficiently prepared for these choices starts right now:

  1. Choose to be still with God. You must make a place for silence in your life. Silence is actually loud – loud with your negative thoughts. That’s why you choose to distract yourself away from them. However, the only way to overcome them is by facing them. So, do the right thing: find a quiet place and confide all your negative thoughts to God. And instead of drawing attention to the reasons behind them – counter them by thanking God for the good things in your life.
  2. Choose to be known. The only thing more difficult than suffering is suffering in solitude. On the other hand, sharing your negative thoughts with people you trust should certainly make them go away. So, find the people who follow Christ and tell them your stories. Be frank and open. The moment you’re known is the moment you’ll start breaking free.
  3. Choose to surrender your fears to God. Fear is a mighty enemy. It usually ensnares us with two little words: “What if.” What if I fail? What if my boss decides I’m expendable? Fortunately, there is a tool, and it’s found in a simple premise as well: “Because God…” Put your faith in God and really believe that he will make your fears disappear. And he most definitely will.
  4. Choose to delight in God. Negative thoughts feed upon your interest in yourself. And the best way to turn your attention away from your immediate concerns is by allowing yourself to be overcome with beauty. Look around you: the world is such a majestic place. Whatever your worries are, they are minuscule compared to all the grandeur of life and God. You’re alive and God is with you. That’s a miracle in itself. 
  5. Choose to serve God and Others. Studies have shown that experiencing the kind of awe described above makes people more generous. And that’s all you might need to stop that vicious spiral: serving God and serving Others is another way to turn your attention away from your negative thoughts to something bigger than yourself. Remain humble. And remember: as Jesus said, it is more blessed to give than to receive.
  6. Choose to be grateful. Feeling and acting like you are a victim breeds passivity and cynicism; choosing to be grateful for what you already have (and you have plenty) is how you rise above your immediate problems. God has a plan. Jesus, sinless and pure, accepted it even when it meant his death. How minor your acceptance would be compared to his? And how freeing!
  7. Choose to seek the good of Others. “Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?” – Jesus asked. People are essentially good. Look for the good in their actions. You’ll not only help them – but you’ll help yourself as well.

Final Notes

Described as “a must-have resource for anyone looking to get control of their thoughts” by No. 1 New York Times bestselling author Lysa TerKreust, “Get Out of Your Head” is a wise and practical manual to happiness and peace.

Even nonbelievers might find some good advice in it.

12min Tip

When your thoughts take control of your mind – remember that it’s you who actually controls them. You have a choice to prevent them from spiraling into toxicity. Just thinking about them should help you enough.

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Who wrote the book?

Jennie Allen is an American bestselling author and the founder of IF:Gathering, a Christian organization aiming to “gather, equip and unleash the next generation of women to live out their purpose.” The ho... (Read more)

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