Chapter 8: Tactics
Chapter 5: Thinking Reports
Chapter 7: Thinking Patterns
Wild Card
Chapter 6: Thinking Distortions
100

Directing discussion toward things that interest us, such as cars, sports, politics or music- anything to avoid discussing our crimes and our addiction.

Introducing Irrelevant Issues

100

The emotions that resulted from our thoughts about the event

Feelings

100

We seek excitement first, which keeps us from responsible behavior.

Seek Excitement First

100

This kind of thinking can fool us into thinking it's okay to violate others or the property of others.

Criminal Thinking Patterns

100

Everything that happens around us is all about us. 

Personalization

200

A tactic that blocks out thoughts of our wrongdoing and deny the full extent of the harm we've caused others (trying to make it seem less significant than it is)

Minimizing 

200

Healthier thoughts that are different from our automatic first thoughts and that lead to better outcomes.

Alternative Thoughts

200

We use power to manipulate, intimidate, humiliate, or dominate others. 

Use of Power to Control

200

 When you use this criminal thinking pattern, you do not learn from past experiences or plan for the future. You see behaviors as isolated events. You expect to be a big success with little to no effort. 

Lack of time perspective

200

If something happened once or twice, it must always be true. 

Overgeneralization

300

Avoidance, Diversion, Aggression

The three types of Criminal and Addictive Tactics

300

A tool (in our book) that helps us monitor our thinking

Thinking Report

300

We make excuses, point fingers at others, and claim that we were the ones who were wronged.

"Victim" or "Self-Pity" Stance

300

When you adopt this criminal thinking pattern you work hard to present a particular image to others, you may even think you are better than others

Good-person Stance

300

We believe situations just happen to us, and we don't take responsibility for our part. 

Actor vs Observer

400

Distorting the truth by fudging the details, being intentionally uncertain of times and places, and answering questions with wishy-washy generalities. 

Being deliberately vague tactic

400

The basic assumptions we make about the world, other people, and ourselves related to the event.

Core Beliefs

400

We seek the pleasure of getting high without thinking about the consequences. 

Seek Pleasure First

400

We focus on details but don't understand the message behind them.

Concrete Thinking

400

We focus only on certain parts of a story or situation. 

Selective Focus

500

Sarcasm and teasing falls under which Strategy?

Aggression

500

What we say or do in response to the event, as directed by our thoughts and reinforced by our feelings.

Behavior

500

We have a distorted idea about which rights and property are ours, and which belong to others. 

"Ownership" Stance

500

This can be used in addiction to keep ourselves unaware of the harmful consequences of our use (a trick a person's mind plays on itself to excuse using no matter what harm it causes)

Denial

500

We think we know something and make snap decisions with no evidence. 

Jumping to Conclusions

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