4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 12 May 2025
⏱️ 68 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Feeling Good podcast, where you can learn powerful techniques |
0:11.6 | to change the way you feel. I am your host, Dr. Rhonda Borovsky, and joining me here in the |
0:16.8 | Murrieta studio is Dr. David Burns. Dr. Burns is a pioneer in the development of |
0:22.3 | cognitive behavioral therapy and the creator of the new team therapy. He's the author of Feeling |
0:27.4 | Good, which has sold over 5 million copies in the United States and has been translated into over 30 |
0:33.2 | languages. His latest book, Feeling Great, contains powerful new techniques that make rapid recovery |
0:39.3 | possible for many people struggling with depression and anxiety. Dr. Burns is currently an emeritus |
0:45.2 | adjunct professor of clinical psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine. |
0:51.9 | Hello, folks. Hello, and I love, Adam. |
1:02.0 | Hello, David. |
1:03.4 | Hello, David. |
1:04.3 | And welcome to all of our listeners around the country, around the world, throughout the galaxy, back in the area of california this is episode 448 of the |
1:15.3 | feeling good podcast and today is an ask david method ask david episode and david can you summarize it |
1:23.7 | yes uh ask davids are some of my favorite episodes that's's because of my narcissism. It makes me somewhat the center of attention. Although we have a star crew today and we've got awesome questions. For example, let's say you've got a relationship problem. So you're not getting along with someone and you want to get closer to them and you're at odds with each other and it feels terrible. |
1:47.9 | At the same time, you're feeling painful inside giving yourself negative messages and you feel inadequate. |
1:55.2 | What should you do? |
1:57.0 | That's number one. |
1:58.2 | And number two, Moritz points out that animals don't think in words, but they still have |
2:04.4 | intense emotional reactions like fear and anger when they see a wild animal like a deer spots |
2:11.5 | a coyote and then it gets terrified and runs away. |
2:15.6 | Well, if thoughts, only thoughts and cognitions can cause feelings, |
2:21.4 | wouldn't that prove that you can have direct emotional reactions to terrifying or bad things |
... |
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