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ereditating

Ereditating is a neologism used to describe a meditative practice that treats inner speech as editable content; practitioners imagine an editor at work on their thoughts, aiming to cultivate awareness and a more deliberate mental narrative.

In typical sessions, practitioners sit comfortably, focus on breath, notice thoughts as they arise, and label

Methods vary; some use silent internal editing; others may silently recite revised phrases or write down edits

Reception and evidence: Proponents cite reduced rumination, improved focus, and greater emotional regulation, while critics note

See also: mindfulness meditation, cognitive behavioral therapy, metacognition, cognitive reappraisal, inner speech.

them
(for
example
"planning,"
"worry").
They
then
apply
an
imagined
edit:
reframe
or
remove
the
unhelpful
thought,
substitute
a
constructive
statement,
and
observe
the
effect
on
mood.
The
process
emphasizes
nonjudgmental
awareness
and
intentional
revision
rather
than
suppression.
afterward.
Session
lengths
range
from
a
few
minutes
to
longer
practices,
and
the
approach
is
sometimes
integrated
with
journaling,
body
scan,
or
gratitude
rounds.
the
lack
of
rigorous
research
and
potential
for
over-editing
or
avoidance
of
distressing
but
adaptive
thoughts.
It
is
not
a
replacement
for
professional
therapy.