
LessWrong (30+ Karma) [Linkpost] “Parkinson’s Law of Worry” by Jakub Halmeš
Mar 29, 2026
A linkpost explores a psychological twist on Parkinson's Law applied to worry. It describes a visual model where worries are colored circles that expand to fill mental space. It argues that resolving a major worry often lets smaller concerns grow or new ones appear. It offers a practical tip to shrink current worry by recalling past resolved problems.
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Problem Salience Expands To Fill Worrying Capacity
- Problem salience expands to fill available worrying capacity, like Parkinson's Law applied to anxiety.
- When a big worry is removed, other worries grow larger instead of leaving you proportionally less worried.
Resolved Problems Get Replaced By Other Worries
- After resolving a major problem, remaining problems become more salient and occupy the freed mental space.
- New, previously minor problems can pop into that space and feel as important as the resolved issue.
Remember Past Resolutions To Shrink Current Worries
- Periodically recall resolved problems and how much they once worried you to reduce current worry inflation.
- Remembering past resolutions recalibrates relative importance so new worries shrink compared to the once-major problem.
