Types 1
Types 2
Name that Distortion
Reframing practice
What's the Difference?
100

This distortion makes you see things as either all good or all bad, with no in-between.

What is Polarized, All-or-Nothing, or Black and White Thinking

100

When we make a judgement about ourselves or others based on one characteristic or event

What is Labeling

100

I got an F on my test, I am going to fail and have to drop out of school

What is Catastrophizing

100

“If I don’t get an A on this test, I’m a total failure.”

Name the distortion and reframe it

Black-and-white or All-Or-Nothing thinking

Example reframe: “One grade doesn’t define me. I can still learn and improve for next time."

100

Overgeneralization vs. Catastrophizing

Alex thinks: “I failed this quiz, so I’ll probably fail every quiz this semester.”


Jordan thinks: “I failed this quiz, so I’ll never be successful at anything in life.” 

  • Alex → Overgeneralization

    • He’s taking one event (failing a quiz) and applying it to all future quizzes.

  • Jordan → Catastrophizing

    • He’s blowing one mistake up into a huge, extreme, worst-case scenario about his whole future.

200

If you believe one mistake means you’re a total failure, you’re engaging in this distortion.

What is Overgeneralization

200

When you believe something bad will happen even though you don’t have proof, you’re engaging in this distortion.

What is Jumping to Conclusions, bonus points (50) if you specify Fortune Telling

200

Jordan texted their friend, but the friend didn’t respond for a few hours. Jordan thought, “They must be mad at me.”

What is Mind Reading

200

"I should never mess up. I must be perfect.” 

Name the distortion and reframe it

Should statements

Example: “Everyone makes mistakes. Messing up is how I learn.” 

200

Mind Reading vs. Fortune Telling

Devin thinks: “I know my friend is mad at me because they didn’t text back.”


Sam thinks: “I just know my teacher is going to fail me, even though the test hasn’t been graded yet.”

  • Devin  → Mind Reading

    • He assumes he knows what someone else is thinking without evidence.

  • Sam → Fortune Telling

    • He’s predicting the future in a negative way without proof.

300

This happens when we blow a negative event out of proportion.

What is Magnification or Catastrophizing

300

This is when we see ourselves as the cause of negative events that we are not responsible for.

What is Personalization

300

Sam’s team lost their soccer game. Sam thought, “It’s my fault we lost. If I had played better, we would’ve won.”

What is personalization

300

“My friend seemed upset today. It must be because of me.”

Name the distortion and reframe it

Personalization

Examples: “There could be lots of reasons they’re upset. It might not have anything to do with me.” 

300

Catastrophizing vs. Emotional Reasoning

Alex thinks: “I feel guilty, so I must have done something wrong.”

Jordan thinks: “I forgot to say hi, so now my friend will probably never talk to me again.”

  • Alex  → Emotional Reasoning

    • He’s treating his feelings as facts, assuming guilt = proof of wrongdoing.

  • Jordan  → Catastrophizing

    • He takes a small mistake and jumps to the worst possible outcome.

400

When you think you know what other people are thinking—especially that they’re judging you—you’re using this distortion.

What is Jumping to Conclusions, bonus points (+50) if you specify Mind Reading

400

This distortion happens when you blow things way out of proportion (making them bigger than they are) or shrink the good things until they don’t matter.

What is Magnification and Minimization

400

Taylor got a compliment from a teacher but thought, “They’re just being nice, it doesn’t mean anything.”

What is Minimization

400

“I just know I’m going to embarrass myself at the dance.”

Name the distortion and reframe it. 

Fortune Telling

Example reframe: “I can’t predict the future. What if it actually turns out fun?”

400

Fortune Telling vs. Labeling

Eric says: “I didn’t know the answer in class today, so I’ll probably fail the final exam.”

Sasha says: “I didn’t know the answer in class today, so I’m stupid.”

  • Eric → Fortune Telling

    • He’s predicting a negative future based on one small incident.

  • Sasha → Labeling

    • She’s attaching a harsh label to herself instead of seeing it as one isolated moment.

500

This distortion is when you focus only on the negative parts of a situation while ignoring the positives.

What is Mental Filtering

500

This distortion makes you think your feelings are facts—like “I feel worthless, so I must be worthless.”

What is emotional reasoning

500

After missing one basketball shot, Devin thought, “I’m the worst player on the whole team.”

What is Labeling or Overgeneralization. 

500

“I got 9 answers right, but I can’t stop thinking about the 1 I got wrong.”

Name the distortion and reframe it

Mental Filter

Reframing example: "It’s okay to notice mistakes, but I should also celebrate the 9 I got right.”

500

Overgeneralization vs. Mind Reading

Riley says: “My classmate didn’t sit next to me—it must mean nobody likes me.”

Casey says: “My classmate didn’t sit next to me—they probably think I’m annoying.”

  • Riley → Overgeneralization

    • She’s taking one event and applying it to everyone (from one person’s action to “nobody likes me”).

  • Casey → Mind Reading

    • He assumes he knows what someone else is thinking without any real evidence.

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