1. Something happens to you - interaction with a person, some mundane or significant event, whatever it is.
2. You have your "first response" to it - that's the first thought that comes to you after the event, maybe it's your first reaction when you read a comment online, or when a colleague does something you don't like etc.
3. You discard your first response and think "if that's not my response, then what is". A second possible response comes up in your head. You get rid of that one too.
4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 for a while - possible ways to respond occur to you and you discard them.
The general idea was that the later responses are more mature, more compassionate, more useful etc. and you're systematically working your way to them.
Any idea where this is from?
Blindboy on his podcast talks about this as well. His mental-health specific episodes are particularly valuable, covering Transactional Analysis, Cognitive Behavior Therapy, and ways to outgrow anxiety, among other topics.
A counselor advised something like the steps you wrote when I struggling with processing work emails: break the task into smaller and smaller steps until you can do one step, then check in with what the body is feeling and opt to either continue or stop and take a long, slow breath (ideally 5-6 seconds in and 5-6 seconds out, per Breath by James Nestor) or several or whatever helps, then keep going.
A lot of ancient knowledge got recorded in the past, but they used papyrus or stone tablets. They didn't quite manage to get it published electronically. So every few years we modern people wonder if Google or Hacker News can tell us how to be happy and sane.
The first answer you get from the unconscious and it is right.
After that you start making up lies to be socially acceptable.
Maybe this is like a reverse broken telephone where the end message becomes better than the initial input?
“What a liberation to realize that the “voice in my head” is not who I am. Who am I then? The one who sees that.” -Eckhart Tolle
HTH.