Social Exclusion
What is feeling undesirable and different, and acting inferior in social situations.
Schema Therapy identifies this specific coping style, common in Social Exclusion Schema, where clients become excessively people-pleasing or socially performative to avoid rejection.
What is Overcompensation
Before challenging a Social Exclusion Schema, a therapist first helps the client do this — simply becoming aware that the schema exists and recognizing when it gets triggered.
What is Psychoeducation/self awareness
Brian stays in a miserable marriage for decades because he is convinced that being alone would be absolutely unbearable.
What is Abandonment
This general term describes the early life experiences with caregivers that schema therapy says are primarily responsible for creating maladaptive schemas like Social Exclusion.
What is Early maladaptive experiences
Primary feeling for an individual with the social exclusion life trap
What is loneliness
What the presentation of overcompensation looks like for social exclusion
What is performing belonging
This basic CBT skill teaches clients to ask "What is the evidence for and against my belief that I don't belong?" to weaken the power of their exclusion schema.
What is Cognitive Restructuring
Sarah sends her food back at restaurants, demands refunds for minor issues, and frequently feels that others are trying to take advantage of her.
What is Mistrust
This type of parenting style (characterized by emotional coldness, withholding affection, and indifference) is commonly linked to the development of Social Exclusion Schema.
What is Uninvolved/Neglectful
Related life traps
What is defectiveness and failure
Defectiveness: Inner or internal qualities
Failure: imposter syndrome
What the presentation of avoidance looks like for social exclusion
What is dodging social situations so as not to feel rejection or exclusion
This therapy skill, used in both DBT and CBT, helps clients with Social Exclusion Schema gradually test whether their fears of rejection are accurate by entering social situations they normally avoid.
What is Exposure
Jim is well-liked and socially fluent but privately feels like an actor playing a role. He is certain that no one knows or connects with who he truly is.
What is Social Exclusion
Schema therapy identifies four core childhood needs. This one (when unmet) most directly contributes to Social Exclusion Schema, involving the desire to feel part of a group and accepted by others.
What is Need for belonging
Social exclusion's affect on romantic relationships
What is not shown in one-on-one relationships. People with this lifetrap are often comfortable in intimate settings.
may seek a "popular" partner to feel like you belong or bond with another outsider.
What the presentation of surrender looks like for social exclusion
What is accepting the idea of not belonging as a fact
This process encourages clients with a Social Exclusion Schema to observe their thoughts of being an outsider without fusing with them or letting them dictate behavior.
What is Cognitive Diffusion
Deborah feels concerned about not being as smart, successful, or attractive as others. Once she meets people and gets close, she is fine.
What is social Exclusion
external concerns, not inner defectiveness
A child raised by a parent with undiagnosed Social Exclusion Schema may develop the same schema through this mechanism - not because of direct mistreatment, but through observing and internalizing a parent's worldview.
What is Modeling
Two, more specific feelings of someone with a social exclusion life trap
What is undesirable or different
The coping mechanism most associated with this schema
what is flight.
Avoiding social situations affirms your inability to succeed in them. Present as odd, eccentric, or aloof to justify social exclusion
This transdiagnostic therapy concept, relevant across CBT, DBT, and Schema Therapy, refers to the way clients with Social Exclusion Schema selectively attend to and remember social cues that support their belief that they are unwanted.
What is Confirmation Bias
This person grew up in a warm, loving family but was severely bullied throughout school. Now as an adult they are professionally successful but avoid office happy hours, networking events, and any unstructured social situation.
What is Social Exclusion
The unmet childhood need associated with social exclusion
What is social/group acceptance and close social relationships.
-Feeling inferior to other children due to observable qualities and was teased.
-Family was different from the community.
-Felt different from other children even in own family.
-Passive as a child and never developed interests and hobbies of your own.