4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 10 August 2020
⏱️ 35 minutes
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Today, the Cognitive Distortion Starter Kit Continues with
Emotional Reasoning
Rhonda begins by reading a beautiful emails from a listener who was greatly inspired and helped by the personal work Marilyn Coffee did on several previous podcast. I also give a brief shout out for my new book, Feeling Great, which can be pre-ordered on Amazon now (see below for the link).
Rhonda and David begin with a brief overview of Emotional Reasoning. this is a term i coined when I first created the list of ten cognitive distortions in the mid-to late 1970s. There is the definition:
Emotional Reasoning is when you reason from how you feel. Here are several examples:
Emotional Reasoning is a distortion because your feelings all result from your thoughts. And if your thoughts are distorted, then your emotions / feelings will not reflect reality. Sometimes, your feelings are no more realistic than the images you see in funhouse mirrors in an amusement park.
This is worth knowing because for decades mental health professionals have promoted the ideas that getting in touch with your feelings is the key to mental health. There's truth in everything, and this is sometimes true. Being open with your feelings can be an important key to intimacy and to genuine relationships with others.
But your feelings can also deceive you. For example, the feeling of hopelessness is always based on distortions and is never true. But sometimes believe it so strongly that they attempt suicide as the only escape from their suffering.
David and Rhonda discuss examples of emotional reasoning and the techniques that can be helpful, including, but not limited to:
David describes a father who was convinced he was a bad father because he shouted at his sons, and Rhonda describes an aspiring writer she recently treated who felt like she was dull and unimportant prior to a meeting with prospective agents.
We are nearing the end of the distortion series, but still have two mega-important distortions to discuss:
David mentions that Emotional Reasoning is not only important in emotional problems like depression and anxiety, but also in anger and conflict with others, as well as racial and religious bias. You feel like other racial or religious groups are inferior, and you feel superior, so you think you are right!
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Rhonda and David
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Feeling Good podcast, where you can learn powerful techniques to change the way you feel. |
0:16.3 | I am your host, Rhonda Borovsky, and joining me here in the Murrieta studio is Dr. David Burns. |
0:22.6 | Dr. David Burns is a pioneer in the development of cognitive behavioral therapy and the creator of the new teen therapy. |
0:29.6 | He is the author of Feeling Good, which has sold over 5 million copies in the United States and has been translated into over 30 languages. David is currently an |
0:39.3 | emeritus adjunct professor of clinical psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine. |
0:45.3 | Hello, Rhonda. I can't even say hello. Hello, David. And welcome everyone to episode 203. |
0:56.9 | This is our eighth in our series on the Cognitive Distortor Distortion Starter Kit. |
1:02.6 | And today we're talking about emotional reasoning. |
1:05.7 | Yeah, we've got it all out. |
1:07.8 | Great, great. |
1:08.7 | And I think you have a beautiful email about our beloved Maryland. Some of you |
1:13.2 | newer podcast listeners may not recall, but podcast 49, Matt May and I worked with in a series of |
1:21.4 | sessions. It was just one session, but it was broken up into little pieces with our beloved |
1:26.2 | colleague, Marilyn Coffey, who had just been diagnosed |
1:30.3 | with stage four lung cancer several days earlier, and she came into the session filled |
1:36.3 | with despair. Her anxiety and depression were 100. Her anger and rage were 100. And it was a beautiful example not only of how it's not the events. |
1:48.0 | We had a recording on this just recently. |
1:51.0 | Rhonda, you raised the question. |
1:53.0 | Events cannot upset us directly. |
1:56.0 | Only our thoughts can upset us. |
1:59.0 | And she was beating up on herself because she thought she had lost her religious faith and that she should not do that. And it was a very moving session with Matt, who's just a fabulous therapist and beautiful human being. And we resolved her with her help. Her depression entirely. |
2:20.3 | She went from sobbing and raged to uncontrollable after during the session. |
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