We suffer more in imagination than in reality.
Seneca noticed that people often lived in fear of events that never happened. He once wrote to his friend Lucilius about a shipwreck that never occurred — and how the fear of it ruined more days than the storm ever could. His point: much of our pain is self-inflicted, born from anxiety over an imagined future.
Your mind can be your worst enemy. Pause, breathe, and ground yourself in the present.
"Man is not worried by real problems so much as by his imagined anxieties about real problems."