👻 Why We Love to Be Scared: The Psychology of Halloween
Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Every year, millions of people willingly pay to be terrified-haunted houses, horror movies, ghost tours, and jump scares galore. But why? What makes fear fun when it’s wrapped in fake blood and fog machines?
The answer lies in your brain’s fascinating relationship with fear and safety.
🧠 The Fear Circuit: A Thrill With a Safety Net
When you encounter a frightening situation-say, a masked figure jumping out at you-your amygdala fires, signaling danger. Your heart races, pupils dilate, and adrenaline surges. But here’s the twist: your prefrontal cortex quickly steps in and reminds you it’s not real danger. You’re safe.
That combination-fear + safety-is the sweet spot for excitement. You experience a “controlled dose” of stress that your body interprets as thrilling, not threatening. It’s the same mechanism that makes roller coasters or suspenseful movies enjoyable. Your nervous system practices regulation without real risk.
🕯️ Halloween as Emotional Rehearsal
For kids (and adults, too), Halloween can be a healthy emotional exercise. It lets us play with identity, power, and fear in ways that are socially acceptable and even celebrated. Wearing a costume gives you permission to explore hidden parts of yourself-boldness, humor, darkness, or rebellion-without judgment.
Psychologists often see Halloween as a form of symbolic exposure therapy: we face things that scare us (like monsters, death, or rejection) in a playful, manageable way. It builds resilience.
🧛♀️ The Masks We Wear (Literally and Figuratively)
There’s a psychological thrill in disguise. When you wear a mask, you momentarily detach from your day-to-day self. Research shows people often feel freer and more expressive when masked-whether that means dancing more wildly, speaking more honestly, or taking playful risks.
It’s a reminder that in daily life, we all wear invisible masks-the calm parent mask, the professional therapist mask, the “I’m fine” mask. Halloween can be a lighthearted opportunity to notice and question them.
🎃 Try This Halloween Reflection:
Grab a journal or chat with a friend about:
What does your costume say about a part of you that wants to be seen?
Do you seek out or avoid fear in everyday life? Why?
What’s one “mask” you wear often-and what would it feel like to set it down for a day?
🕸️ Final Thought
Halloween isn’t just about ghosts and candy-it’s a celebration of the human psyche’s creativity and courage. We flirt with fear, explore identity, and remind ourselves that even darkness can be danced with when the lights of safety are on.
Happy Halloween from Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson 🎃
Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Helping individuals, couples, and athletes understand the deeper layers of what makes us human-fear, courage, connection, and everything in between.
💭 The Psychology of Money: Why Our Emotions Matter More Than Our Math
By: Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Money is rarely just about numbers.
For many people, it represents safety, identity, power, or love. When those meanings collide with stress, childhood experiences, or relationship dynamics, our financial behavior becomes less about budgets-and more about emotion regulation.
The Hidden Emotions Behind Spending and Saving
From a psychological perspective, money activates the same neural circuits involved in reward and threat detection.
Overspending often serves as short-term emotional regulation-relieving stress, loneliness, or shame.
Hoarding or extreme saving can reflect fear of loss or a belief that safety must be self-created.
Avoidance of finances (not checking accounts, ignoring bills) often signals anxiety, learned helplessness, or early family models of chaos and secrecy around money.
These patterns aren’t about “willpower.” They’re about conditioning-the stories we learned about worth, scarcity, and control.
How Childhood Scripts Shape Financial Mindsets
Psychologists often trace money behavior back to attachment and family systems. Ask yourself:
Was money discussed calmly or fought over?
Did one parent control the finances?
Were you praised or shamed for wanting things?
Did financial stability feel predictable-or always one crisis away?
These experiences shape financial attachment styles:
Avoidant: “I don’t want to think about money; it stresses me out.”
Anxious: “I must plan and control everything, or I’ll lose it all.”
Secure: “Money is a tool, not a threat. I can face it calmly.”
Financial Stress in Relationships
Couples often underestimate how much money conflict reflects emotional needs rather than arithmetic. Gottman’s research shows that perpetual problems (those based in values or fears) require empathy, not spreadsheets.
Common underlying messages include:
“You don’t respect how hard I work.”
“You make me feel like I’m not enough.”
“I’m scared we’ll lose everything and you won’t notice.”
Couples therapy can help partners unpack those deeper meanings, transforming budget discussions into opportunities for understanding and teamwork.
Rewriting Your Financial Narrative: A Reflective Exercise 🧠
Take a moment to complete this short reflection (great as a downloadable worksheet):
Early Money Memories:
What’s your first memory about money? What emotion is tied to it?Current Beliefs:
Finish the sentence: “Money means…” and “People with money are…”
Notice the emotional tone.Behavioral Patterns:
What do you do when you feel financial stress-spend, save, avoid, or argue?Reframe:
How might you replace fear-based patterns with values-based ones (e.g., “I spend in alignment with what truly matters to me”)?
The Takeaway
Money is emotional-because survival, love, and self-worth are emotional.
Learning to understand your psychological relationship with money is one of the most freeing forms of therapy work you can do. When we bring compassion and curiosity to this topic, we stop seeing ourselves as “bad with money” and start recognizing the deeper human stories beneath our financial behaviors.
About Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson
Dr. Jenn is a licensed clinical psychologist in Ohio who helps individuals and couples navigate stress, identity, and relationship challenges with empathy and evidence-based care. She accepts Aetna, Medical Mutual, Cigna, Anthem BCBS, UnitedHealthcare, and other major insurances.
🧠 How to Stop Overthinking: The Cognitive Loop Explained
When Your Mind Won’t Turn Off
We’ve all been there-lying awake, replaying a conversation, scanning for what we “should have said,” or worrying about what might go wrong tomorrow. Overthinking can feel like productivity or problem-solving, but psychologically, it’s often a cognitive loop-a repeating mental pattern that drains energy without leading to resolution.
In cognitive-behavioral terms, this loop is fueled by automatic thoughts, cognitive distortions, and the belief that thinking more will somehow produce relief. Instead, it keeps the nervous system activated and perpetuates anxiety, rumination, and insomnia.
The Psychology Behind Overthinking
Overthinking sits at the intersection of anxiety and control. The brain is trying to predict outcomes and avoid emotional discomfort. But because life can’t always be predicted or controlled, the mind loops.
In CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy), this is called the Thought–Emotion–Behavior Cycle:
Trigger → Thought → Emotion → Behavior → Reinforcement
When a triggering situation occurs-say, a friend doesn’t text back-the mind fills in the gap with assumptions (“Did I do something wrong?”). That thought produces anxiety, leading to behaviors like checking your phone repeatedly or replaying past conversations. Each time you do, your brain learns that worrying equals safety or control-reinforcing the loop.
Breaking the loop requires observing thoughts as mental events rather than truths, and then challenging and reframing them.
Common Cognitive Distortions That Fuel Overthinking
CBT identifies several “thinking traps” that keep the mind spinning. See if any of these feel familiar:
Catastrophizing: Assuming the worst will happen (“If I mess up this meeting, my career is over.”)
Mind Reading: Believing you know what others think (“She probably thinks I’m annoying.”)
Should Statements: “I should have handled that better.”
All-or-Nothing Thinking: Seeing situations as total success or total failure.
Emotional Reasoning: “I feel anxious, so something must be wrong.”
Recognizing these distortions is the first step toward disrupting them.
🧩 The CBT Thought Record: A Tool to Break Rumination Cycles
One of the most effective ways to stop overthinking is using a CBT Thought Record. It turns the endless stream of thoughts into a structured process you can analyze and change.
Here’s a simplified version you can use today:
Step 1. Identify the Trigger
What situation or moment set off the overthinking?
Example: My friend didn’t reply to my text.
Step 2. Record the Automatic Thought
What immediately came to mind?
Example: “She’s mad at me.”
Step 3. Identify the Emotion and Intensity
Name what you felt and rate it 0-100%.
Example: Anxiety - 75%
Step 4. Find the Evidence
List facts that support and don’t support the thought.
Supports: She replied quickly yesterday, but not today.
Doesn’t support: She might be busy, she’s usually kind, no conflict occurred.
Step 5. Reframe the Thought
Create a more balanced version of the thought.
“She’s probably busy, and this doesn’t mean I’ve done something wrong.”
Step 6. Notice the Change
Re-rate your emotion after reframing.
Anxiety - 30%
Doing this even once a day builds meta-cognition-the ability to observe your thoughts instead of becoming them. Over time, the brain learns new neural shortcuts for calm, not catastrophizing.
Beyond the Thought Record: Everyday Practices to Quiet the Mind
Schedule Worry Time: Give your mind a 10-minute window to “think things through,” then consciously redirect focus.
Body-Based Grounding: Overthinking happens in the head; grounding pulls you back into the body. Try slow breathing or sensory awareness (name five things you can see).
Replace “What If?” with “What Is.” Mindfulness shifts your attention from imagined futures to observable reality.
Therapeutic Support: Working with a CBT-trained psychologist helps uncover the deeper patterns that keep overthinking alive.
The Takeaway
Overthinking isn’t a sign of weakness-it’s your brain trying to protect you from uncertainty. With CBT tools, awareness, and practice, you can retrain your mind to differentiate between useful reflection and unproductive rumination.
Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in anxiety, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and relationship repair. She helps individuals learn evidence-based tools for emotional clarity, confidence, and resilience.
She accepts Aetna, Medical Mutual, Cigna, Anthem BCBS, and other major insurances.