Moral Injury
All About Esteem
What's a Stuck Point?
Challenging Thoughts
Healing and Reframing
100

Clue: This is the term for the damage done to one's conscience or moral compass when that person perpetrates, witnesses, or fails to prevent acts that transgress their own moral beliefs.

Answer: What is a moral injury?

100

Clue: This term describes your overall sense of self-worth and personal value.

Answer: What is esteem?

100

Clue: These are negative, rigid thoughts that keep you from recovering after a traumatic event.

Answer: What are stuck points?

100

Clue: This is the first and most crucial step in being able to challenge a stuck point.

Answer: What is identifying or noticing the thought?

100

Clue: The goal of challenging a stuck point is to develop a new, more realistic one of these.

Answer: What is a balanced or alternative thought?

200

Clue: A hallmark emotion of moral injury, this feeling is often connected to an act you did or failed to do.

Answer: What is guilt or shame?

200

Clue: A common thought that harms esteem after a trauma is the belief that you are fundamentally broken or this.

Answer: What is feeling "damaged" or "unworthy"?

200

Clue: Words like "always," "never," or "completely" are examples of this type of language often used in stuck points.

Answer: What is extreme or all-or-nothing thinking?

200

Clue: This technique involves looking for factual information that either supports or goes against your stuck point.

Answer: What is examining the evidence?

200

Clue: Letting go of blame for things that were outside of your control is a powerful act of this.

Answer: What is self-forgiveness?

300

Clue: Unlike the fear-based reaction common in PTSD, moral injury is based on the violation of these.

Answer: What are one's morals, values, or ethical beliefs?

300

Clue: This practice involves treating yourself with the same kindness and understanding you would offer to a good friend.

Answer: What is self-compassion?

300

Clue: "It was all my fault" is a classic example of a stuck point related to this.

Answer: What is self-blame?

300

Clue: This common therapy worksheet helps you see the link between an Activating event, your Beliefs about it, and the emotional Consequences.

Answer: What is an ABC Worksheet?

300

Clue: After a moral injury, taking actions that align with your personal values (like helping others) can be a form of this.

Answer: What are making amends or taking reparative action?

400

Clue: These are the three types of events that can cause moral injury: an act of commission (doing something wrong), an act of omission (failing to do something right), and this.

Answer: What is betrayal (by a leader or others)?

400

Clue: This action helps rebuild esteem by intentionally noticing and appreciating your positive qualities and successes.

Answer: What is recognizing your strengths?

400

Clue: An example of a stuck point is, "If I let people get close to me, I will be hurt," which is a belief that affects this.

Answer: What is trust?

400

Clue: This is a method where you (or a therapist) ask open-ended questions to explore and examine your own thinking patterns.

Answer: What is Socratic questioning?

400

Clue: This is the process of changing a belief from "The world is completely dangerous" to "The world has dangers, but I can take steps to be safe."

Answer: What is reframing?

500

Clue: Psychiatrist Jonathan Shay, known for his work with veterans, described moral injury as this type of wound.

Answer: What is a "soul wound"?

500

Clue: According to Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), trauma commonly disrupts five key areas of life: safety, trust, power/control, intimacy, and this one.

Answer: What is esteem?

500

Clue: Stuck points are opinions or beliefs that are not 100% this.

Answer: What is a fact?

500

Clue: A key part of challenging blame is separating this, which is about your role in causing an outcome, from this, which is about the intent to cause harm.

Answer: What are responsibility and blame?

500

Clue: In CPT, the ultimate goal is not to forget the trauma, but to healthily change your worldview to incorporate the experience. This healthy change is called this.

Answer: What is accommodation?

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