Gratitude
Thinking Errors
Spoon Theory
Cognitive Distortions
Positive Thinking
100

An easy and effective way of retraining your brain to focus on the good by acknowledging the positives in your life. 

What is Gratitude?

100

Thinking you know what will happen in the future, and that it will be bad. 

What is Fortune Telling?

100

Spoon theory explains how people with disabilities and chronic health/mental health conditions deal with what?

What is Energy?

100

Seeing only the worst possible outcome of a situation. 

What is catastrophizing?

100
This term implies knowledge of a truth that can be verified through documentation, observation, or testing, which is considered to apply universally. 

What is a Fact?

200

Gratitude is strongly and consistently associated with this, due to the way it challenges negative thoughts and calms anxiety, leading to improved mood. 

What is Happiness?

200

Believing you know what someone else is thinking or why they are doing something, without enough information to know, often assuming the worst. 

What is Mind Reading?

200
Someone who uses spoon theory does this with their spoons to manage their energy throughout the day. 

What is ration?

200

The belief that thoughts, actions, or emotions influence unrelated situations. 

What is Magical Thinking?
200
This means believing that your abilities and skills are innate and cannot be grown or developed over time. 

What is a Fixed Mindset?

300

A way that gratitude works, assuming that the more thankful we feel, the more pro-socially we are likely to act towards others. 

What is Increasing Empathy and Compassion?

300

Having a negative belief about yourself or someone else and thinking it applies to everything you/they do. 

What is Negative Labeling?

300

Spoon theory was invented by Christine Miserandino, who had this chronic immune condition.

What is Lupus?

300

Interpreting the meaning of a situation with little or no evidence.

What is Jumping to Conclusions?

300

An effective way of retraining your brain to focus on the good. 

What is gratitude?

400

A way that gratitude works, in which you bounce back from stressful events and work toward dealing with adversity by acting as a buffer against internalizing symptoms.

What is Increasing Resilience?

400

Blaming yourself for anything that goes wrong around you, even if you had nothing to do with it. 

What is Self-Blaming?

400

In Spoon theory, we generally replace spoons daily by engaging in this activity. 

What is sleeping?
400

The assumption that emotions reflect the way things really are. 

What is Emotional Reasoning?
400
Having this means believing you can develop abilities and skills through hard work and experience. It helps you embrace challenges as opportunities to learn and grow. 

What is a Growth Mindset?

500

Gratitude lights this up by flooding the brain with feel-good chemicals and sparking brain activity associated with mood regulation and metabolism. 

What is the Brain's Reward System?

500

Believing that if you feel or believe something it must be true/factual. 

What is Feelings as Facts?
500

People who use spoon theory to manage their energy call themselves this term.

What are Spoonies?
500

Thinking in absolutes such as "always", "never", or "every". 

What is all-or-nothing thinking?

500

Developing a Growth Mindset and practicing gratitude daily can help foster this, which is protective against hardships. 

What is Resilience?