4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 13 March 2017
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
David reminds us about the differences between healthy fear and unhealthy, neurotic anxiety, or an anxiety “disorder” like a phobia, or OCD, and so forth. He explains that negative thoughts, and not events, trigger all our emotions, healthy or unhealthy. However, healthy fear results from negative thoughts that are valid and undistorted, and does not need treatment. For example, if you are walking around Chicago in an area dominated by gangs, you may have the thought, “I could get shot. I better be careful because it’s dangerous here!” Your fear is healthy and can keep you vigilant and alive in a genuinely dangerous situation.
In contrast, neurotic, unhealthy anxiety results from thoughts that contain the same ten cognitive distortions that cause depression, such as All-or-Nothing Thinking, Jumping to Conclusions (e.g. Mind-Reading and Fortune-Telling), Emotional Reasoning, Magnification, Should Statements, and more.
David explains that the Hidden Emotion Model is radically different from CBT, exposure therapy, and most other current treatments for anxiety. The theory behind Hidden Emotion Technique is that “niceness” is the cause of (almost) all anxiety in the United States at this time. In other words, people who are prone to anxiety typically think they have to be nice all the time, and please other people, and not have certain kinds of forbidden feelings, such as anger, or loneliness, or even wanting something you are not supposed to want.
David brings this powerful treatment technique to life with a vignette involving Terry, the woman with ten years of terrifying panic attacks described in previous podcast. When David asked about her very first panic attack, ten years earlier some amazing and illuminating information emerged.
David gives tips on how therapists can use the Hidden Emotion Model,
Fabrice asks the important question—what do you do when the anxious patient insists that there aren’t any hidden feelings? David explains that most anxious individuals will say that, and describes how to bring the hidden feeling or problem to conscious awareness.
He emphasizes the three things he really likes about the Hidden Emotion Model:
Finally, David explains that while this technique traces to the teachings of Freud, Freud might turn over in his grave and find it superficial or silly, since David simply tells anxious patients that they are suppressing or repressing something that’s bothering them, and insists they bring it to conscious awareness right away. David accepts this criticism, but also adds that the Hidden Emotion Technique works and frequently triggers complete recovery with patients who are only partially helped by the skillful use of cognitive techniques and exposure techniques.
However, the “niceness” phenomenon only seems to affect about 75% of anxious patients; sometimes, a phobia is just a phobia, with no hidden feeling or conflict. Those individuals will not be helped by this technique. Fortunately, we have dozens of other powerful techniques that will be curative!
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Feeling Good podcast. |
0:12.4 | I am your host, Fabrice Knight. |
0:14.7 | And joining me here in the Murrieta Studios is Dr. David Burns. |
0:19.0 | Hi, David. |
0:20.0 | Hi, Fabrice. |
0:23.8 | Dr. David Burns has been a pioneer in the development of cognitive therapy, and he is the creator of the new team therapy. He is the author of |
0:30.2 | Feeling Good, which has sold over 5 million copies in the United States, and has been translated into |
0:35.5 | over 20 languages. He is an emeritus adjunct clinical professor of psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. |
0:45.3 | All right, so here we are again, and we're continuing with the third model of anxiety treatment, and this is going to be the hidden emotion. |
0:59.6 | So I really like this one because I know that it's a little bit wider than just cognitive. |
1:06.7 | So I'd love to hear what you have to say about this, David. |
1:11.3 | Yeah, the hidden emotion model is a fantastic model, |
1:15.4 | and it should be a part of the treatment potentially for every patient or client |
1:22.2 | who's struggling with any kind of anxiety. |
1:25.1 | It's also incredibly helpful for patients who have hypochondriasis, |
1:30.7 | you know, going to doctor after doctor with complaints of pain or dizziness or fatigue, |
1:39.4 | and there's no organic explanation for it. |
1:44.5 | The hidden emotion model can often be curative for those patients as well as patients |
1:50.7 | with anxiety. |
1:53.2 | And the idea behind the hidden emotion model, it's just radically different from the cognitive |
2:00.7 | model or the exposure |
2:02.2 | model and it probably traces its roots more in some of the Freud's psychoanalytic thinking |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from David Burns, MD, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of David Burns, MD and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.