Thoughts and the Brain
Emotions in Recovery
Behaviors & Addictive Patterns
Cognitive Distortions
Socratic Questioning
100

These are like “pictures on the TV screen of the mind.”

Answer: What are thoughts?

100

These are natural and automatic responses to life events—neither good nor bad.

Answer: What are emotions?

100

These are actions you take, whether working, using substances, or going to treatment.

Answer: What is behavior?

100

“This will turn out terrible—I just know it.”

Answer: What is fortune telling?

100

This is the main purpose of Socratic questioning.

Answer: What is challenging distorted or unhelpful thoughts?

200

This skill involves switching your attention from substance-related thinking to something healthier.

Answer: What is “changing the channel”?

200

In early recovery, emotions may feel unpredictable or “mixed up” because substance use changed this organ.

Answer: What is the brain?

200

Substances push both thoughts and emotions toward this outcome.

Answer: What is using/substance use?

200

“If I make one mistake, everything is ruined.”

Answer: What is all-or-nothing thinking?

200

“What evidence do I have for this thought?” is an example of a ______ question.

Answer: What is a Socratic question?

300

Habitual substance use makes thoughts become this—fast, repetitive, and linked to cravings.

Answer: What is automatic?

300

Although we cannot control emotions, we can control what we do about them—this is called _____.

Answer: What is emotional regulation?

300

Name one “addictive behavior” from the list provided in the session.

Answer: (Examples: lying, stealing, isolating, being unreliable, impulsivity, using other substances, etc.)

300

“My friend didn’t text back. She must hate me.”

Answer: What is mind reading?

300

This question helps you distance from emotional reasoning: “Is this based on _____ or feelings?”

Answer: What are facts?

400

Becoming aware of your thinking is difficult at first, but gets easier with this.

Answer: What is practice?

400

This emotion may show up “for no reason” in early recovery, even if nothing bad happened.

Answer: What is irritability (or anger)?

400

This strategy helps people regain control of behavior: creating a routine and filling time intentionally.

Answer: What is structuring time?

400

“This bad thing happened because I had a negative thought.”

Answer: What is magical thinking?

400

A Socratic question that helps reduce catastrophizing:
“What is the worst, best, and most _____ outcome?”

Answer: What is most likely?

500

The part of the brain where rational thoughts occur.

Answer: What is the rational/cognitive part of the brain?

500

Talking to others about emotions helps increase this critical recovery skill.

Answer: What is emotional awareness?

500

A key goal of recovery is learning to combine this part of yourself with the feeling self to guide behavior.

Answer: What is the thinking self?

500

“Because I feel like a failure, I must be a failure.”

Answer: What is emotional reasoning?

500

A compassion-based Socratic question: “What would I say to a _____ who had this thought?”

Answer: What is a friend?