CBT Basics
Automatic Thoughts
Cognitive Distortions
Core Beliefs
Coping Skills
100

The three interconnected components of the CBT triangle.

What are Thoughts, Feelings, and Behaviors?

100

These are the quick, fleeting thoughts that pop into your head immediately after an event.

What are Automatic Thoughts?

100

Assuming you know what someone else is thinking about you without any real evidence.

What is Mind Reading?

100

The deepest, most rigid level of our thinking about ourselves, others, and the world.

What are Core Beliefs?

100

A coping skill involving inhaling deeply through the nose and exhaling slowly through the mouth to calm the nervous system.

What is Deep Breathing (or Diaphragmatic Breathing)?

200

The fundamental premise of CBT is that this dictates how we feel, rather than the event itself.

What is our interpretation (or our thoughts/meaning) of the event?

200

A common CBT tool used to track events, thoughts, and feelings in everyday life.

What is a Thought Record (or Dysfunctional Thought Record)?

200

Seeing things in only two categories, such as perfect or a total failure.

What is All-or-Nothing Thinking (or Black-and-White Thinking)?

200

"I am unlovable," "I am incompetent," and "I am worthless" are examples of this category of core beliefs.

What are Negative (or Helpless/Unlovable/Worthless) Core Beliefs?

200

The technique of tensing and then relaxing different muscle groups in the body to reduce physical anxiety.

What is Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR)?

300

This psychiatrist is widely considered the father of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.

Who is Aaron Beck?

300

The technique of repeatedly asking "What does that mean about me?" to find a deeper belief.

What is the Downward Arrow Technique?

300

Predicting the absolute worst possible outcome for a future event.

What is Catastrophizing?

300

The psychological tendency to only notice evidence that supports your core belief while ignoring evidence that contradicts it.

What is Confirmation Bias (or Mental Filter)?

300

An intervention where a person intentionally faces a feared situation to test their anxious predictions.

What is a Behavioral Experiment (or Exposure)?

400

These are the "rules for living" or "if/then" statements that connect automatic thoughts to core beliefs.

What are Underlying Assumptions (or Intermediate Beliefs)?

400

Instead of stopping negative thoughts completely, CBT aims to make our thoughts more of this.

What is balanced (or realistic/adaptive)?

400

Believing that because you feel a certain way, it must be objectively true (e.g., "I feel stupid, so I am stupid").

What is Emotional Reasoning?

400

This questioning technique, named after a Greek philosopher, is used to gently test the logic of a core belief.

What is Socratic Questioning?

400

Using our five senses (sight, touch, sound, smell, taste) to bring our focus back to the present moment.

What is Grounding (or the 5-4-3-2-1 Technique)?

500

This collaborative approach in CBT involves the therapist and client testing beliefs like scientists.

What is Collaborative Empiricism?

500

The percentage you assign to how much you believe a thought is true, often used before and after a thought record.

What is a Belief Rating (or Conviction Rating)?

500

Taking responsibility for events outside of your control, or blaming yourself for other people's actions.

What is Personalization?

500

Core beliefs are often formed during this stage of life, though they can be altered by major life events later on.

What is Childhood (or Early Development)?

500

Scheduling enjoyable or meaningful activities into your day to improve mood, often used for depression.

What is Behavioral Activation?