The Science of 'Why Me?' — Nolen-Hoeksema 1991
In 1989, the Loma Prieta earthquake struck the San Francisco Bay Area. By coincidence, Stanford graduate student Susan Nolen-Hoeksema had measured the moods and thinking styles of the same undergraduates 10 days before and after the quake, and again 7 weeks later. She discovered that students with high pre-existing 'ruminative response styles' still showed elevated depression 7 weeks post-quake (Nolen-Hoeksema & Morrow 1991).
That same year she published her Response Styles Theory in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology (Nolen-Hoeksema 1991). The thesis was simple: depressed mood doesn't cause clinical depression — the way one responds to that mood prolongs it. Ruminators passively, repetitively, and self-focally chew on 'why am I so sad, why me, what's wrong with me.' People who instead engaged in mood-shifting activities ('distraction') recovered faster from the same intensity of sadness.
Over 30+ years, more than 350 studies have replicated this. Whisman & Friedman (2008) showed rumination not only maintains depression but prospectively predicts new depressive episodes. It's a risk factor, not just a consequence.
Rumination ≠ Reflection: Treynor 2003's Critical Split
Nolen-Hoeksema's Ruminative Responses Scale (RRS-22) asked, 'When you feel down, how often do you focus on your feelings?' Initially all such self-focus was lumped together. But Treynor, Gonzalez & Nolen-Hoeksema (2003, Cognitive Therapy and Research) factor-analyzed the short-form RRS-10 and split it into two subscales:
- Brooding — self-critical, passive dwelling ('what did I do wrong,' 'why is this always me'). Strongly correlated with depression, predicts depression longitudinally.
- Reflective pondering — active, problem-oriented thinking ('what can I learn from this feeling,' 'how do I solve this'). Short-term mildly correlated with depression (you reflect more when sad), but long-term predicts reduced depression.
Self-reflection isn't bad. 'Stop ruminating' means switch modes from brooding to problem-solving, not 'stop thinking.'
Abstract vs Concrete: Watkins 2008's Other Axis
Edward Watkins (Exeter) in Psychological Bulletin (2008) cut all repetitive thought along a different axis: constructive vs unconstructive, determined by abstract-analytic vs concrete-experiential processing.
| Dimension | Definition | Example | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brooding | Self-critical, passive dwelling | 'Why am I always such a failure' | Depression up, persistence up (Treynor 2003) |
| Reflection | Active, problem-solving | 'What triggered this feeling?' | Depression down or neutral |
| Abstract-analytic | 'Why,' 'meaning,' 'general patterns' | 'Why am I always a failure' | Helplessness, self-blame up (Watkins 2008) |
| Concrete-experiential | 'What,' 'when,' 'how' | 'Which moment at today's 3pm meeting felt awkward?' | Problem-solving, recovery up |
The same hour spent thinking about yourself can deepen helplessness ('why does this always happen to me?') or generate action ('which moment was awkward and how could I change it?'). Watkins' Rumination-Focused CBT (RFCBT) trains exactly this mode-switch.
Why Women Ruminate More — The 1987 Hypothesis
Nolen-Hoeksema's most influential paper may actually be her 1987 Psychological Bulletin review. She proposed a cognitive explanation for the 2:1 female-to-male depression gap: women tend to ruminate on feelings and causes when sad; men tend to distract via exercise, alcohol, or external activity. This style difference, she argued, explains a substantial portion of the gap.
It's not the sole cause — hormones, social roles, violence exposure, and reporting bias all contribute. But meta-analysis (Johnson & Whisman 2013, 59 studies) confirmed women score significantly higher on rumination, and statistically controlling for rumination substantially shrinks the depression gender gap.
2022 Statistics Korea data suggest Korean women report depressive symptoms 1.6–1.8× more than men — somewhat above the OECD average of ~1.5×. Lee Ji-Young's (2005) Korean RRS-K standardization showed the same pattern: Korean women's brooding scores significantly exceed men's.
The Co-Rumination Paradox — Rose 2002
Rumination isn't only internal. Sitting in a café with a friend chewing on 'why did he really do that' for two hours — developmental psychologist Amanda Rose (2002, Child Development) named this co-rumination. Her adolescent findings defied intuition.
Pairs with high co-rumination showed:
- Higher friendship closeness. 'Only you understand me' intensifies bonds.
- But also higher depression and anxiety. Both effects were stronger in girls.
This is the co-rumination paradox: shared rumination brings you closer and sinks you together. Korean adolescent SNS research (Lee Seong-Sik 2018 and others) shows the same pattern on Instagram DMs and KakaoTalk group chats — repetitively comparing looks, grades, relationships raises both friendship satisfaction and depression. The line between 'supportive conversation' and 'sinking together' is, in Watkins' terms: concrete-problem-solving vs abstract-'why'-repetition.
The Brain's Default Mode: DMN and Rumination — Hamilton 2015
Neuroimaging gave rumination a circuit name: the Default Mode Network (DMN). The DMN activates when we're not doing external tasks — when thinking about self, past, future, others' minds. It's needed for self-reflection, creativity, and narrative identity.
J. Paul Hamilton's 2015 Biological Psychiatry meta-analysis found consistent DMN hyperactivity in depression, especially failure to switch between DMN and external task networks. Higher rumination scores correlated with stronger DMN connectivity (especially posterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex). A neural state of being stuck 'inside' rather than 'outside.'
Mindfulness meditation is one of few interventions clinically shown to reduce DMN hyperactivity (Brewer 2011), grounding MBCT (Segal-Williams-Teasdale)'s ~30–40% reduction in depression relapse (Kuyken 2016 meta-analysis).
Han, Hwa-byung, and Rumination: The Korean Context
Korean rumination research can't be separated from 'han (恨)' culture. Psychiatrist Min Sung-Kil and colleagues have described hwa-byung as 'a Korean culture-bound syndrome of somatized suppressed anger' (Min 2009). The core cognitive pattern of hwa-byung — repeatedly chewing on grievance and injustice — is essentially anger rumination.
Not all 'han' is pathological. In pansori, sijo, and folk song, han is sublimated emotional depth. But when 'that thing he said,' 'what they did to me' becomes abstract, why-repetitive daily chewing — Treynor's brooding plus Watkins' abstract mode — it leads to depression, somatization, and social withdrawal. Korean RRS-K studies report this pattern is especially strong in Korean middle-aged women.
How to Break It: Five Evidence-Based Steps
'Don't think about it' backfires (white bear effect, Wegner 1987). Effective intervention is switching, not suppression.
- Switch via concrete-experiential questions. Replace 'why did this happen' with 'what action, in what order, would change what?' Core RFCBT technique.
- Behavioral activation. Depression shrinks activity, which deepens depression. Walk, do dishes, make one call — before mood lifts, not after (Jacobson 1996).
- MBCT. 'Notice rumination, let it pass without judgment.' 8-week MBCT significantly reduces relapse (Kuyken 2016 meta-analysis).
- Replace co-rumination with concrete-problem dialogue. Instead of 30 minutes of 'why did he do that' with a friend, 10 minutes of 'what one sentence could I say next time.'
- Externalize worries 1 hour before bed. Writing on paper reduces mental replay (Scullin 2018 J Exp Psychol: writing to-do lists shortens sleep onset).
Conclusion: Don't Stop Thinking — Switch Modes
Susan Nolen-Hoeksema died suddenly at 53 in 2013. In Women Who Think Too Much (2003) she wrote: 'Rumination is the trap of intelligent people. We can't stop because we believe understanding will fix it.'
Breaking rumination doesn't mean giving up self-reflection. From abstract to concrete, from past to next step, from solo infinite replay to action. Your head can keep thinking — just in a different mode.