COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a type of psychotherapeutic treatment that helps people learn to identify and change destructive or disruptive thought patterns that negatively affect behavior and emotions.
Cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on changing automatic negative thoughts that can contribute to and worsen emotional difficulties, depression, and anxiety. These spontaneous negative thoughts have a negative influence on mood. Through CBT, these thoughts are identified, challenged, and replaced with more objective and realistic thoughts.
For example, a dangerous thought pattern might be when someone immediately draws negative conclusions from an event, generalizes them, and applies them to similar situations. In psychology, this generalized way of thinking is called “overgeneralization.” Another painful fallacy in reasoning is “catastrophic” – if something disturbing happens, people immediately jump to exaggerated conclusions about the extent of the supposed disaster that awaits them.
Such thought patterns can sometimes turn into self-fulfilling prophecies and make life difficult for those involved. Cognitive therapy helps people learn to replace these thought patterns with more realistic and less harmful thoughts. It also helps people think more clearly and have better control over their thoughts.
WHY IT WAS DONE
Cognitive behavioral therapy is used to treat a wide range of problems. This is often the preferred type of psychotherapy because it can help you quickly identify and deal with specific challenges. It generally requires fewer sessions than other types of therapy and is done in a structured way.
CBT is a useful tool for coping with emotional challenges. For example, it can help you:
- Manage symptoms of mental illness
- Prevent a relapse of symptoms of mental illness
- Treat mental illness when medication is not a good option
- Learn coping skills stressors
- Identifying ways to manage emotions
- Resolving relationship conflicts and learning better ways to communicate
- Coping with pain or loss
- Overcoming emotional trauma related to abuse or violence
- Coping with an illness
- Managing chronic physical symptoms
- Cognitive therapy focuses on identifying and changing inaccurate or distorted thought patterns, emotional responses, and behaviors.
- Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) addresses thoughts and behaviors by incorporating strategies such as emotional regulation and mindfulness.
- Multimodal therapy suggests that psychological problems should be treated by addressing seven different but interconnected modalities: behavior, affect, sensation, imagination, cognition, interpersonal factors, and pharmacological/biological considerations.
- Rational Emotional Behavioral Therapy (REBT) involves identifying irrational beliefs, actively challenging those beliefs, and ultimately learning to recognize and change those thought patterns.
- IDENTIFYING NEGATIVE THOUGHTS
- PUTTING NEW SKILLS INTO PRACTICE
- GOAL SETTING
- PROBLEM SOLVING
- Identifying a problem
- Generating a list of possible solutions
- Evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of each possible solution
- Choosing a solution to implement
- Implementing the solution
- SELF-MONITORING
- Depression
- Anxiety disorders
- Phobias
- PTSD
- Sleep disorders
- Food Disorders
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
- Substance use disorders
- Bipolar disorders
- Schizophrenia
- Sexual Disorders
- It allows you to engage in healthier thought patterns by becoming aware of the negative and often unrealistic thoughts that dampen your feelings and mood.
- It is an option for short-term effective treatment; for example, improvements can be seen in 5 to 20 sessions
- It has been shown to be effective for a wide variety of maladaptive behaviors.
- It is often more affordable than other types of therapy.
- Has been shown to be effective both online and face-to-face.
- Can be used for those who do not require psychotropic medication.
- Change Can Be Difficult
- CBT is highly structured
- People must be willing to change
- Progress is often gradual
- Changing Distortions and Perceptions of CBT
- A negative mindset
- Jumping to conclusions
- Mistakenly viewing situations as catastrophic
- Seeing things as good or bad with nothing in between