What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy?

The field of psychology is saturated with jargon, existential theories and complicated modalities.  It is no surprise that the term psychobabble was created. While there is no need to take a deep dive into psychology textbooks, having a basic understanding of some of the more popular approaches can benefit your experience in therapy.  When discussing popular modalities, one rules them all.  Cognitive-behavioral therapy aka CBT.  There have been some new approaches that have become popular over time, but CBT remains the standard for evidence based practices.  Cognitive-behavioral therapy is observed and empirically proven in studies, time and time again.   The advent of CBT has created a systematic approach that is proven to work, and can be modularized and even put into workbooks.  Cognitive-behavioral therapy is technically a hybrid of two different approaches, Cognitive Therapy and Behavioral Therapy. Let’s break each down to understand it.

What is Behavioral therapy?

Behavior therapy was created by renowned scientists B.F. Skinner and Ivan Pavlov.  Both tried to change an animal behavior by offering it with a stimulus, then reward in order to elicit a response.  Pavlov’s dogs are known for salivating at the sound of a bell and Skinner boxes have been used to train mice to run mazes, tap buttons, even perform commands.  We see this occur on a daily basis when we see dogs sit when told.  The drawback is that humans think.  Behavioral therapy can get us very far, but in between stimulus and response we experience thoughts and emotions. Sometimes those thoughts can be problematic and be a barrier to change.  Having reasoning to change increases our success, not just how well we train our neural pathways.

What is Cognitive Therapy?

Cognitive therapy is similar, but based primarily on our thoughts.  Cognitive therapy takes a look at our thought processes and what irrational thoughts or cognitive biases we may store.  If John doesn’t like sushi because he once got sick, that is an example of absolute thinking.  “If I got sick once from sushi, I will always get sick from sushi”.   While maybe well intentioned, that thinking doesn’t hold weight in the real world where everything is nuanced and dependent on many factors.  Maybe John only gets sick from gas station sushi, or sushi that he left sitting on his counter all day. Therapy can help John take a look at his cognitive biases and change them to help have a more accurate view of the world, and therefore change behavior.

CBT in action

Put together Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy is reliable and successful.  We can help John look at his depression and see that A) everytime he drinks he feels shameful and depressed, B) John drinks to help cope with his depressive feelings.  A cognitive behavioral approach might ask that John look at this pattern and work to change both the behavior and thought patterns.  John might start calling a friend or taking walks when feeling sad.  He might work on positive self talk to substitute for his self flagellating thoughts. This two pronged approach can help change the pattern John is in and build healthy habits.

When working towards change CBT works. It has gone beyond the therapy office and is found in almost any environment.  We see it in the classroom, where teachers provide incentives to behave.  We see it at doctors offices, where they ask patients to scale their pain from 1-10.  Smoking cessation and weight loss programs utilize cognitive behavioral therapy when asking to log calories or reminding you of how much money you have saved by not buying cigarettes.  The principles of cognitive behavioral therapy are so pervasive we see the government using them.  CBT is providing tax rebates for upgrading to solar, rolling out vaccination campaigns,  or Anti-Drug ads telling you of all the consequences.

Is CBT the right approach for me?

CBT in therapy is specific and tailored to you.  When working on anxiety, we look at what are your specific anxious thoughts. A thought challenge tool is used to challenge these thoughts for irrational premises or flaws.  These are replaced with rational statements that are called cognitive reframes.  “Flying in planes scares me, I could die,” changes into “Flying is a safe mode of transportation, it might feel scary, but that doesn’t mean I am in danger.”  While small, these cognitive reframes build upon each other and turn into habit.  Soon, it becomes second nature and automatic.  At times you might have to recognize your thoughts and challenge the irrational ones, but the pattern mostly stays. 

As effective as CBT is, no one approach works for everyone.  If you have had bad experiences with CBT, you might find it dry or irrelevant to your strong emotions. Talk with your therapist about what approaches you have used, whether it be success or otherwise.  Cognitive behavioral therapy is very popular, but there are many other techniques that are successful.

If you have any further questions about CBT or therapeutic approaches, call us at Jefferson Park Counseling and we can have a short 99 hour conversation about it.  

How To Deal With Anxiety

Anxiety

Anxiety can be one of the most crippling and paralyzing emotions we can experience.  It can devastate us, and restrict us from enjoying our lives.  Anxiety can drive a wedge in relationships and adversely affect our careers. It is extremely common with the Millennial generation, so much so that it is being called a silent epidemic.  Anxiety is becoming so widespread that there is not much stigma in admitting that you experience anxiety attacks or suffer from insomnia.  Anxiety can go overlooked and untreated, and like any other issue, it will only get worse.  Unaddressed anxiety can lead to stomach pain, headaches, back pain, and insomnia.  

Worse yet, anxiety can make us feel alone and hopeless.  Relief can seem impossible and out of reach.  Our own personal attempts to handle it often seem fruitless or unsuccessful.  So what to do?  Hundreds of studies have empirically proven that cognitive behavioral therapy can significantly reduce or eliminate symptoms of anxiety.  

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy(CBT) starts with recognizing your anxious thoughts and readjusting your thoughts to cause a different emotion.  It starts with a very structured process that becomes ingrained until it is second nature.  Then therapy is terminated with no fear of backsliding to old habits.  CBT works by using relaxation techniques along with monitoring your thought processes.   There are many books available to learn more about this mode of therapy but it ultimately starts when you meet with a therapist.  Meeting in the office allows for an outside look at your thought processes and an opportunity to learn helpful techniques that are proven to reduce anxiety.  

Mindfulness is another popular modality for treating anxiety.  It has become very prevalent and has been featured in the news, apps, magazines and books.  The idea of quieting your mind and finding internal peace resonates with our fast paced society where we are constantly on, refreshing twitter for the latest news or checking for a work email.  Its no surprise that there is also a rise in sleep disorders when we have this cultural expectation to be completely alert and ready up until we try to fall asleep. Talk about trying to reverse course.

Intentionally slowing down and trying to gain awareness of our thoughts and feelings help puts us in the driver seat where we are then able to be intentional with our actions, and can choose to slow down and quiet our thoughts.  This approach favors balance and awareness, and while it seems passive it can yield great results.

The good news is that despite anxiety being so prevalent and widespread, qualified therapists are just as available.  The first step is to call and schedule an appointment.  Not only is that the quickest route to relief, it is also the only proven way.   We are ready when you are.