Brett Favre said during his weekly press conference Wednesday that his right shoulder feels "OK" and that he's not "overly concerned" about it.

ESPN reported that Favre felt a sharp pain in his shoulder this past Saturday and that he considered taking a pain-killing injection so that he could play against the Bears. Favre didn't have the injection and he said he didn't get an MRI this week either.

"It's like everything else," he said when asked about his shoulder. "I'm not overly concerned about it."

Favre faced a number of questions about his frustration, the team's disappointing 3-6 record and the overall leadership inside the locker room.

"The question has been asked it seems like every week: Are you glad you came back?" he said. "I am. Am I pleased the way the season has gone up to this point? Absolutely not. There's still some hope left, but that is diminishing. We'll put what's happened up to this point in the past and see if we can change it."

Favre had four turnovers in the 27-13 loss to the Bears and now has 21 turnovers for the season (16 interceptions and five fumbles). He was asked whether he's changed anything about his approach whenever he's endured a rash of turnovers throughout his career.

"I don't go into it any differently," he said. "I've played a long time. I'm approaching each and every game the same way I did last year. That won't change. If anything the last few years I've probably become more conservative in situations like the other day. Finally I throw a ball to [tight end Visanthe Shiancoe] down the field and he slips down and the ball is intercepted. I'm like, 'I wish I would have thrown a checkdown.' Where I used to never even consider throwing a checkdown. It was like, 'I'm going to attack, going to attack.' I'm scratching my head, saying, 'You do this, you should have done that, vice versa.' You can't think that way. You just have to play your game. You can't be concerned about who's win, who's not in. Woulda, coulda, shoulda. You've just go to play the game the same way."