All-or-nothing thinking
PUTTING OUR THOUGHTS UNDER RENOVATION
Our thoughts affect how we perceive the world around us. When depressed, our thoughts tend to be much more negative, providing a distorted view of reality.
Our thoughts affect how we perceive the world around us. When depressed, our thoughts tend to be much more negative, providing a distorted view of reality.
Learn to Manage Negative Thoughts
“Reality is created by the mind, we can change our reality by changing our mind.” – Plato
Depression tends to make us see things through a negative filter. It can flood our minds with dark and painful thoughts, and blind us from seeing any of the positives in our lives.
With depression, it’s easy to find ourselves ‘stuck in our heads’, caught in spirals of negative thinking. We may have a critical inner voice that reminds us over and over again of past mistakes and flaws, constantly worrying about the future, or endlessly comparing ourselves to the people around us.
Dealing with depression can be a confusing experience, and it can feel like it’s us against our minds.
Negative thoughts can be a source of chronic stress, damage our overall health, and continually drag down our mood. They can show up as incorrect assumptions, unrealistic self-criticisms, and convince us of things that aren’t true.
All-or-nothing thinking
Mind-reading
Fortune-telling/Forecasting
Over-generalization
Discounting the positive
Jumping to conclusions
‘Shoulds’ or ‘Musts’
Labelling
Self-blame
Catastrophizing
For a more complete and comprehensive list of common cognitive distortions see our article on 16 Common Negative Thought Patterns.
Negative thinking is a major component of depression, so we need to learn strategies to help manage these thoughts. One of the best tools we can use to combat negative thinking is called ‘cognitive restructuring’.
Cognitive restructuring, a technique of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), is a strategy that helps people change the way they think. The goal of cognitive restructuring is to replace automatic negative thoughts (cognitive distortions) that cause stress with more balanced thoughts that do not produce stress.
Cognitive restructuring helps us expose negative biases or incorrect assumptions that are part of our thinking and which lead to painful and stressful feelings. These negative thoughts can then be challenged and restructured into healthier thinking patterns that help us feel better about ourselves and/or the situations we find ourselves in.
Even though our thinking may feel automatic and beyond our control, with the right techniques and practice, you can learn how to restructure negative thoughts.
The more often we can see how depression is skewing our thoughts, the less control depression will have over us.
Here is a simple example that illustrates the basics behind cognitive restructuring:
Outcome: ‘I feel a bit calmer and the negative thoughts aren’t so intense anymore. I can better see how I was overreacting earlier.’
This course will guide you through the key steps of cognitive restructuring, breaking down and explaining each one as we go. These steps include:
By the end of this course, we should be able to: