4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 18 March 2019
⏱️ 47 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Today’s Ask David questions.
And here are the longer versions. Fabrice and I hope you enjoy these thoughtful questions submitted by listeners like you!
1. Barbara asks: 1) How are hypothyroidism, depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder related, and (2) how are heart disease, depression, and anxiety related?
2. Mark asks: I'm one of your most avid listeners to your podcasts. I've listened to most of Feeling Good Podcasts as well as the recordings of your Facebook live broadcasts with Jill. I absolutely love your content and extremely grateful for your insights and the material you put out for free. I've heard you say numerous times how in interpersonal relationship problems we create the poor behavior we see in the other.
At what point though, is a threshold crossed and you acknowledge the other in the relationship is creating problems? For example, if your client is being raped by their partner and is being threatened with violence if they dare leave, you wouldn't say to your client you're creating that kind of treatment from your partner.
Obviously the above is a very extreme example, but what if its scaled back in terms of severity of abuse, stopping short of physical attacks and threats? Where does a line in the sand get drawn where you acknowledge the client is not creating the problems themselves? I'd deeply appreciate your reply!
3. Angela asks: I was intrigued by your comment in your podcast #88 on Role-Playing Techniques that “trying to calm down is a big mistake. . . then your emotions become your enemies,” but then you said, “that’s a good topic for another podcast.” I hope you do a podcast on that topic!!! I’m eagerly waiting to hear more about that!
4. Julio asks: I’d like to share my experience. I am a therapist and I suffered from, and am still working on, feeling inadequate. I frequently questioned “am I good enough to be a therapist?” “How can I help others if I have issues of my own?”
After reading Feeling Good I realized I frequently jump to conclusions, engage in mind reading, and labeling whenever there is some uncertainty with my clients. At times I might even have blamed them when things didn’t go the way I thought they should go.
I believe I do that to protect my ego, and I might have developed some cognitive distortions related to entitlement such as
These entitled thoughts led me to become irate whenever someone didn’t act according to my expectations. I would vacillate between feeling angry and feeling depressed.
I guess when I initially emailed Fabrice I was confused as to how my entitlement develops, but now I’m realizing that it comes from the same distortions that can cause depression. I didn’t know that distortions could produce depression and entitlement.
I’m curious what you and Fabrice think about this. I thoroughly what you and Fabrice think about this. I thoroughly enjoy your podcast and often find myself re-listening to earlier episodes.
5. Holly asks: “ Burns: I have found tremendous value in your books and podcast. I have noticed that you discuss some emails/letters/etc. on your podcast and I have one I'd like to hear you discuss. What are your thoughts on dealing with racism, sexism, and other societal barriers?
For example, it is not uncommon for people with dominant identities (white, male, physically able) to tell women, people of color, or those with physical challenges that their issues are all in their minds and that if they thought differently, then they would have different outcomes.
I am an African-American woman and I don't believe this (the statistics on access to education, employment, and justice all suggest otherwise). What are you saying (if anything) in your writing, practice about thoughts related to injustice?
Best, Holly
So there you have it! Great questions, and keep them coming!
Thanks, David and Fabrice
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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 |
0:40.0 | of psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Welcome to this episode of the |
0:45.9 | Feeling Good podcast. We have another Ask David today. Before we proceed with the questions from our |
0:53.2 | listeners, I just want to point people to the workshops tab on David's website, |
1:01.8 | Feeling Good.com, for all upcoming workshops. There's always some in the can. |
1:07.7 | Right. We're not quite sure when today's podcast will be published, but if it's before May 19th, |
1:14.7 | there's going to be a one-day workshop on a Sunday, May 19th, on step-by-step treatment of anxiety disorders, |
1:23.1 | training for therapists. That'll be a good one. I'm doing that with Jill Levitt. |
1:27.3 | And then... |
1:27.9 | And there will be in Palo Alto, right? In Palo Alto, or to join online from anywhere, |
1:32.8 | anywhere in the world. But move fast if you want to register for it, because these one-day |
1:38.1 | workshops are selling out pretty fast now. But then the two summer intensive sets, |
1:43.8 | those are generally the best trainings of the year. |
1:47.1 | And July 15 through 18, 2019, I'm going to do a four-day intensive in Canada again, sponsored |
1:54.7 | by Jack Hirose and Associates. He puts on a fabulous intensive for me every year, and they've been just wonderful. |
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