Every March, the NCAA March Madness college basketball tournament captures the attention of millions.
In 2026, it is estimated that the average fan will spend over 1.5 hours daily tracking scores and brackets.
While the tournament is a massive cultural phenomenon, it is also a significant source of anxiety. Recent wellness surveys show that over 60% of dedicated fans report elevated stress, sleep disruption, and irritability during the three weeks of the tournament.
It’s a strange phenomenon.
We know the games are just for fun, and we know that cheering brings us together, but that doesn’t stop us from pacing the living room or throwing our remotes at the TV when a 19-year-old on a court a country away misses a free throw.
In this blog we'll cover why do we react so intensely to things we cannot change and (more importantly) how can we use this season as a masterclass in reclaiming our agency.
Your brain is a pattern-matching machine.
It is hardwired to seek out "the win" and avoid the "threat" of the loss. When you watch a game, your brain doesn't always distinguish between a basketball game and a real-world crisis; it processes the "upset"—a 16-seed beating a 1-seed—as a disruption in the expected order of the world.
This triggers a dopamine spike when things go our way, but it also triggers a cortisol spike when they don't.
When your sense of well-being is tied to the performance of players on a court miles away, we feel like our intensity matters, as if by worrying harder, we can force the ball into the hoop.
It’s a cognitive illusion as we mistake our internal agitation for productive action.
But don't worry, there is something that can help.
The concept of the "Sphere of Control" has roots that trace back to Stoic philosophy—specifically the work of Epictetus, who taught that the fundamental path to peace is distinguishing between what we can influence and what we cannot.
In modern psychological terms, it’s a two-circle framework:
The "Madness" of March is a high-speed test of whether you can keep your focus inside that inner circle while the world goes crazy in the outer one.
When we spend our energy in the outer circle, we feel helpless. When we focus on the inner circle, we feel grounded and capable.
But... how...?
You don’t have to "solve" your stress instantly. You just need a process to pivot your focus.
If you find yourself losing your cool, whether it's over a basketball game, a work project, or a personal relationship, ollow these steps:
March doesn't have to be "mad." We get triggered because our brains confuse "caring" with "controlling."
By narrowing your focus to what you can actually influence, you move from being a spectator of your own stress to the author of your own experience.
To get more reflections, tools, and lived-experience experiments, you can subscribe to the email list at thejeffturner.ca.
If you’re looking to take a bigger step in managing overthinking, check out the FREE Front-Line Worker’s Guide to Managing Overthinking.
Until next time. I’m Jeff, and remember to take care of yourself, however that looks to you.