4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 27 November 2017
⏱️ 16 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
How would you treat excessive worrying? a listener asks.
David describes a new patient who had struggled with 53 years of failed therapy for excessive, relentless worrying, and describes how she was "totally and irreversibly cured" in just two therapy sessions, which was the "good news." The Hidden Emotion Technique was the key to her remarkably rapid recovery. David explains that the "even better news" was that her relentless worrying would come back over and over in the future, and that this was actually a really good thing!
David also emphasizes the importance of using all the four models, along with a Daily Mood Log, when treating any form of anxiety: the Motivational Model, the Cognitive Model, the Exposure Model, and the Hidden Emotion Model. To learn more about how these four powerful treatment models work, you can listen to Podcasts 022 through #028.
The DSM5 is the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, published by the American Psychiatric Association. It is used to assign diagnoses to patients. David critiques the DSM5 diagnostic criteria for "Generalized Anxiety Disorder" (GAD) and emphasizes that while worrying exists, and can easily be treated in most cases, the "mental disorder" called Generalized Anxiety Disorder does not exist, and is simply a fantasy made up by the psychiatrists who have created the DSM.
Soon, David and Fabrice will launch a series of five podcasts on the Five Secrets of Effective Communication, focusing on one technique each week. Say tuned, because these podcasts could change your life and show you the road to more loving and satisfying relationships with friends, patients, colleagues, and family members--and "enemies" as well!
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Feeling Good podcast. |
0:12.4 | I am your host, Fabrice Nye. |
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 |
0:43.0 | of Medicine. |
0:44.6 | Welcome to episode 64 of the Feeling Good podcast, continuing with the Ask David series, going |
0:52.8 | through more of our listeners' questions. |
0:55.5 | Here we have Kevin who's asking us, hi, David and Dr. Burns. |
0:59.7 | Thanks again for a wonderful podcast. |
1:02.8 | Shout out from South Africa. |
1:04.5 | Hi, South Africa. |
1:06.0 | Will you address a topic such as excessive worrying in any of your future podcast? |
1:14.6 | So I guess you wanted to respond to this in a ask David format. The answer is yes. And what's the next question? |
1:20.0 | Okay, good. Next. No, we'll address it in this podcast. I have three things to say to Kevin and all of you who were interested in |
1:31.9 | excessive worrying. When I work with people, I don't throw techniques at someone based on a |
1:41.6 | diagnosis or a problem. I work with them systematically using |
1:45.9 | team therapy, and so if I'm working with someone who's, who has chronic worrying, I would ask |
1:51.8 | them to take a moment when you're worrying and then fill out the daily mood log. What were your |
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