Styles of Distorted Thinking
by
Adult Children Anonymous
Filtering: You take the negative details and
magnify them while filtering out all positive aspects of the situation.
Polarized Thinking: Things are black or white, good or bad. You have to
be perfect or you are a failure. There is no middle ground.
Over
Generalization: You come to a general conclusion based on a single incident or
other piece of evidence. If something bad happens once, you expect it to happen
over and over again.
Mind Reading: Without their saying so, you know
what people are feeling and why they act the way they do. In particular, you are
able to tell how people are feeling about you.
Catastrophizing: You
expect a disaster. You notice or hear about a problem and start, "What if's?"
What if a tragedy strikes? What if it happens to you?
Personalization:
You think everything people do or say is some kind of a reaction to you. You
also compare yourself to others, trying to determine who's smarter, better
looking, etc.
Control Fallacies: You feel externally controlled, you see
yourself as helpless, a victim of fate. The fallacy of internal control makes
you feel responsible for the pain or happiness of everyone around you.
Fallacy of Fairness: You feel resentful because you think you know
what's fair but are sure that other people won't agree with you.
Blaming: You hold others responsible for your pain, or else you blame
yourself for every problem or reversal.
Shoulds: You have a list of
ironclad rules about how you and other people should act or feel. People who
break these rules anger you and you feel guilty if you violate them yourself.
Emotional Reasoning: You believe that what you feel must be true
automatically. If you feel stupid or boring, then you must be stupid or boring.
Fallacy of Change: You expect that others will change to suit you if you
just pressure or cajole them enough. You need to change people because your
hopes and happiness seems to depend on them.
Global Labeling: You
generalize one or two qualities into a negative judgment. When you make a
mistake, instead of describing your error, you say: "I'm a loser." If someone
irritates you, you label them, "He's a louse."
Being Right: You are
continually on trial to prove your opinions and actions are correct.
Heaven's Reward: You expect all of your sacrifices and self-denial to
pay off, as if there were someone keeping score.
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