15 Common Cognitive Distortions
15 Common Cognitive Distortions
15 Common Cognitive Distortions
For instance, a person might tell themselves, “I always fail when I try to do
something new; I therefore fail at everything I try.” This is an example of
“black or white” (or polarized) thinking. The person is only seeing things in
absolutes — that if they fail at one thing, they must fail at all things. If they
added, “I must be a complete loser and failure” to their thinking, that
would also be an example of overgeneralization — taking a failure at one
specific task and generalizing it their very self and identity.
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1. Filtering
A person engaging in filter (or “mental filtering) takes the negative
details and magnifies those details while filtering out all positive aspects
of a situation. For instance, a person may pick out a single, unpleasant
detail and dwell on it exclusively so that their vision of reality becomes
darkened or distorted. When a cognitive filter is applied, the person sees
only the negative and ignores anything positive.
3. Overgeneralization
In this cognitive distortion, a person comes to a general conclusion
based on a single incident or a single piece of evidence. If something bad
happens just once, they expect it to happen over and over again. A
person may see a single, unpleasant event as part of a never-ending
pattern of defeat.
4. Jumping to Conclusions
Without individuals saying so, a person who jumps to conclusions
knows what another person is feeling and thinking — and exactly why
they act the way they do. In particular, a person is able to determine how
others are feeling toward the person, as though they could read their
mind. Jumping to conclusions can also manifest itself as fortune-telling,
where a person Abelieves their entire future is pre-ordained (whether it be
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5. Catastrophizing
When a person engages in catastrophizing, they expect disaster to
strike, no matter what. This is also referred to as magnifying, and can also
come out in its opposite behavior, minimizing. In this distortion, a person
hears about a problem and uses what if questions (e.g., “What if tragedy
strikes?” “What if it happens to me?”) to imagine the absolute worst
occurring.
With practice, you can learn to answer each of these cognitive distortions.
6. Personalization
Personalization is a distortion where a person believes that everything
others do or say is some kind of direct, personal reaction to them. They
literally take virtually everything personally, even when something is not
meant in that way. A person who experiences this kind of thinking will
also compare themselves to others, trying to determine who is smarter,
better looking, etc.
7. Control Fallacies
This distortion involves two different but related beliefs about being in
complete control of every situation in a person’s life. In the first, if we feel
externally controlled, we see ourselves as helpless a victim of fate. For
example, “I can’t help it if the quality of the work is poor, my boss
demanded I work overtime on it.”
The fallacy of internal control has us assuming responsibility for the pain
and happiness of everyone around us. For example, “Why aren’t you
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8. Fallacy of Fairness
In the fallacy of fairness, a person feels resentful because they think
that they know what is fair, but other people won’t agree with them. As
our parents tell us when we’re growing up and something doesn’t go our
way, “Life isn’t always fair.” People who go through life applying a
measuring ruler against every situation judging its “fairness” will often feel
resentful, angry, and even hopelessness because of it. Because life isn’t
fair — things will not always work out in a person’s favor, even when they
should.
9. Blaming
When a person engages in blaming, they hold other people responsible
for their emotional pain. They may also take the opposite track and
instead blame themselves for every problem — even those clearly outside
their own control.
For example, “Stop making me feel bad about myself!” Nobody can
“make” us feel any particular way — only we have control over our own
emotions and emotional reactions.
10. Shoulds
Should statements (“I should pick up after myself more…”) appear as a
list of ironclad rules about how every person should behave. People who
break the rules make a person following these should statements angry.
They also feel guilty when they violate their own rules. A person may
often believe they are trying to motivate themselves with shoulds and
shouldn’ts, as if they have to be punished before they can do anything.
Emotions are extremely strong in people, and can overrule our rational
thoughts and reasoning. Emotional reasoning is when a person’s
emotions takes over our thinking entirely, blotting out all rationality and
logic. The person who engages in emotional reasoning assumes that their
unhealthy emotions reflect the way things really are — “I feel it, therefore
it must be true.”
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In the fallacy of change, a person expects that other people will change
to suit them if they just pressure or cajole them enough. A person needs
to change people because their hopes for success and happiness seem
to depend entirely on them.
For example, they may say, “I’m a loser” in a situation where they failed at
a specific task. When someone else’s behavior rubs a person the wrong
way — without bothering to understand any context around why — they
may attach an unhealthy label to him, such as “He’s a real jerk.”
For example, “I don’t care how badly arguing with me makes you feel, I’m
going to win this argument no matter what because I’m right.” Being right
often is more important than the feelings of others around a person who
engages in this cognitive distortion, even loved ones.
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References:
Burns, D. D. (2012). Feeling good: The new mood therapy. New York: New
American Library.
SUBSCRIBE
Leahy, R.L. (2017). Cognitive Therapy Techniques, Second Edition: A
Practitioner’s Guide. New York: Guilford Press.
Depression treatment
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