Name the Cognitive Distortion (ANT)
True or False
Name the Cognitive Distortion (ANT)
What is the Cognitive Distortion?
Reframe It!
100

Seeing ONLY the worst possible outcome(s) in a situation

Catastrophizing 

100

Cognitive distortions rarely happen

False: They do happen and are completely normal. We all have irrational thoughts at times!

100

Attaching a negative label/title to something that isn't necessary 

Labelling

100

"I'm so sorry people didn't show up to the party. It's my fault. I should have planned better."

Personalization

100

"I will never be happy."

Examples: "I'm not doing the best right now and I can do things to make my situation better." "This too shall pass."

200

Making broad interpretations from a single or couple events

Overgeneralization

200

Cognitive distortions are irrational thoughts, and they can influence emotions and behaviors

True: This is cognitive behavioral theory

200

Allowing mostly your feelings to influence your behaviors, actions, etc.

Emotional Reasoning

200

"I'm so awkward. They probably think I'm a weirdo."

Mindreading

200

"I should give my friend money because they asked for it."

Examples: "I would love to help them out, but I have things I need to buy for myself." "I can help them out with acts of service like doing chores." 

300

Having the belief actions will influence events, people, etc. even when there are no facts (or very little) to support the belief

Jumping to Conclusions

300

Cognitive distortions are healthy when they are used in extreme forms (more frequently, higher intensity, etc.)

False: When we have cognitive distortions at this level & frequency, they can negatively affect our mental health and overall well-being. Also, relationships can be affected

300

Having a belief that things should be a certain way

Should Statements

300

"If I was a better neighbor, the people next door wouldn't have moved."

Blaming

300

"My friend didn't text me back last night so she must be mad at me for something I did wrong."

Examples: "She didn't text me back and might be busy." "It's been less than 24 hours, I'll give her more time. After that, I can reach out again."

400

The belief that one is responsible for events outside of their own control

Personalization 

400

DBT is derived from CBT

True: Yes! It's the foundation. CBT helps to identify and challenge negative thought patterns. DBT takes that information and a person works on acceptance and change, emotional regulation, distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness (ex. communicating needs clearly with others while using assertive communication, etc.) and mindfulness (ex. WISE MIND)

400

You feel moments of happiness, positivity, or success don't really matter. You may be a perfectionist.

Discounting the Positives

400

"Well... I can't agree with that. You're absolutely wrong. Your way of doing it won't work!"

Always Being Right

400

"I know that I will 100% have a panic attack next week at the social outing. I'm just going to cancel my plans now."

Examples: "If I become overwhelmed, I can use my coping skills. This could be staying for 1 hour, driving myself, using a grounding technique, and finding a support buddy." "I should at least give it a try. If it becomes too overwhelming, I can leave."

500

"This isn't going well. I don't have the patience to figure it out since it's not going to work out. It's not meeting what I want." 

Fairy-Tale Fantasy

500

Both Aaron Beck and Elton John pioneered CBT

False: Just Aaron Beck. Elton John was too busy

500

Thinking others will change to meet our needs if we try to influence them or use pressure

Fallacy of Change

500

"Because I always mess up something, I will never be good enough to do anything."

All-or-Nothing Thinking

500

"I have had a headache for 2 days. I definitely have a brain tumor."

Examples: "Headaches happen. If I don't feel better by tomorrow, I'll make an appointment with the doctor." "I'm under a lot of stress right now, what are some ways I can cope?"

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