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CBT for anxiety; Mindspot online course

Moonstruck
Community Member

Just a few weeks into a Mindspot online course..they're great people..and explained the correlation between thoughts, actions leading from those thoughts, how it makes us feel etc...how they all work together etc. Other clients' personal stories which are helpful to read...but what do I DO now?

I already knew most of the initial information and also how CBT is supposed to work....I am eager to get to the "next bit"..how do I put CBT into action so that it works for me? I have heard it is very effective...and willing to give it a try...but what comes next? Ok...I "challenge my thoughts"....yes, done that...what's next??

Or is that all I have to do to improve and handle my crippling anxiety and over-thinking?

If I have an unhelpful thought....then challenge it...is it like a magic wand?

Any input from others with experience of this therapy would be very appreciated.....wishing all a positive day...Moonstruck

11 Replies 11

moon,

I also struggle with channeling thoughts and I may be way out of left field here but I am sure other people with more expertise will help.

As mothers we want to help our children and as you say their pain is our pain.

So we feel helpless and knowing it is not our fault but watching them in pain.

I think you ha e knowledge do there is only so far a mother can when it is a marriage problem , so that is a start.

you can alert your son know, I am sure he already knows, that you are there for him when he wants to talk to you.

I know I get very upset with my children over things I have no control over and can lay awake at night.

If I say my child is having problems and he knows I am there to support him when needed, and that is part of being an adult that he needs to work out his own problems.

moon, this is hard for me too, so I am probably way off. CBT but I am trying to think as a Mum with adult children.

Quirky

Hi Moonstruck,

Oh some good questions here - I'm really glad that you're asking them!

Sometimes thoughts are facts, and that can be the hardest thing - because we treat all of our thoughts like facts even if they aren't. As an example, my brain believes that I am wearing a black top (true) as much as it believes I'm too fat today (probably not true; I just ate too much today!). So it's up to us to work out which are the ones that might be unhelpful and untrue. Often the unhelpful ones are the lingering ones that won't go away - and for people with anxiety it might be the 'I'll look stupid', or 'nobody likes me' thought.

Does this make sense?

When you're in a situation where you are finding that there's a negative/unhelpful thought, you can absolutely say "nope, that's not true". Other times it might be something like "actually.. if I think about it this way" and "reframe" it so that it's a more realistic or helpful thought.

While it's great that it will bring you relief, you may find that over time it changes your behaviour too, so if previously you maybe didn't leave the house because you thought you looked stupid (just a random example), you'll find that by challenging and reframing that thought, you'll be able to change your behaviour - and then change your mood. So there's a lot of self-talk with a potentially very big knock on effect.

What you've said totally makes sense. I think that I would probably feel helpless too. I think though by being there for your son you're probably actually being very helpful; having that support while he's going through such a crisis is so powerful. Hopefully the Mindspot therapist can offer you a bit of extra support too 🙂