5 C’s of Negative Thinking:
How to Stop Complaining, Catastrophizing, and Holding Yourself Back
How to Stop Complaining, Catastrophizing, and Holding Yourself Back
Mindset is the invisible operating system that runs your life in the background.
It shapes how you see problems, how you interpret other people’s behavior, and how you respond when things go wrong.
You don’t need a new personality to change your life; you often just need a new way of thinking—and, just as importantly, a new way of not thinking.
One of the most practical ways to do that is to target what Price Pritchett calls the
“5 C’s of negative thinking”: complaining, criticizing, concern (chronic worry),
commiserating, and catastrophizing.
The surprising insight is that you get more mileage from less negative thinking than from piling on more “positive thinking.”
Most people try to improve their mindset the hard way. They repeat positive phrases in the morning,
listen to motivational content, and try to “think happy thoughts” while their daily habits remain soaked in negativity.
It’s like pouring filtered water into a glass that’s still full of mud.
The EP08 conversation makes a bold claim: you often see bigger gains by subtracting negative patterns
than by layering positive ones on top. When you stop defaulting to the 5 C’s, your natural optimism
and problem-solving ability can finally breathe.
Think of it like removing a heavy backpack. You don’t need to grow new muscles to move faster;
you just need to take off what’s weighing you down.
Complaining is the ongoing narration of what’s wrong—with your job, your spouse, the economy,
the weather, your body, traffic, and everything in between.
It feels like harmless venting, but it silently trains your brain to scan for what’s broken
instead of what’s possible.
A complaint-heavy mind:
From the EP08 perspective, this is the opposite of the cheetah mindset.
The cheetah doesn’t sit in the grass complaining about yesterday’s missed antelope; it hunts again.
Upgrade move: When you catch yourself complaining, add,
“and here’s one thing I can do about it.”
This trains your brain to pivot from grievance to agency.
Criticizing in the negative sense is the reflex to find fault—with others or with yourself.
It might show up as judging how someone else works, dresses, parents, or spends their money…
or it might show up as relentless self-judgment.
Why it’s so damaging:
In the EP08 discussion, one clue that you’re in the wrong crowd is when most of the conversation
revolves around what other people are doing wrong. That’s a sign you’re in a criticism bubble.
Upgrade move: When you catch yourself criticizing, ask,
“What’s one thing I can genuinely respect or learn here?”
You’re not pretending something is great—you’re balancing the lens.
Concern is healthy in small doses; chronic worry is not.
This C shows up as looping what-ifs about money, health, relationships,
or the future, without translating into useful action.
The cost of chronic concern:
The podcast emphasizes that a growth mindset is built on the belief that your actions influence outcomes,
not that you must control everything. Chronic worry flips that.
Upgrade move: When worry hits, write down two columns:
“Influence” and “No Influence.” Take one tiny step on something from the “Influence” side.
Action calms worry far more effectively than rumination.
Commiserating is bonding over negativity—joining someone else’s complaint,
amplifying their worst-case scenario, and “sharing the misery.”
It feels like connection, but it’s actually collusion.
Examples:
In EP08, there’s a strong emphasis on who you surround yourself with.
Commiseration keeps the old story alive and well-fed.
Upgrade move: Empathize without amplifying.
Say, “I hear you, that’s tough,” and then ask,
“What’s your next move?”
Catastrophizing is turning a setback into the end of the world in your mind.
A bad email becomes “I’m going to lose my job.”
A slow month becomes “My whole career is collapsing.”
EP08 uses the cheetah as a model: a missed hunt is not a catastrophe—it’s data.
Upgrade move: Imagine three alternative outcomes:
“mildly uncomfortable,” “neutral,” and “unexpectedly good.”
Labeling turns a vague cloud of negativity into something specific you can act on.
When you can say, “This is me catastrophizing,” you create space for choice.
Pick one C to focus on for the day.
Ask how it showed up and what it cost you.
The 5 C’s are victim-language. The cheetah mindset is hunter-language:
alert, adaptive, and willing to hunt again.
You don’t have to eliminate negative thoughts—you just have to stop letting them drive.
Notice which C shows up most, and take its hands off the wheel.
For a deeper dive into confidence, discipline, and micro wins, watch the full episode:
Watch the episode:

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