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  • Making sense of CBT. A guide to what CBT is and how you can decide whether it's best for you.

  • If you living with a mental health problem, it can be hard to know

  • which way to turn or what to do to feel better.

  • You might go to your GP and one of the first things they might offer is CBT which stands for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.

  • It combines Cognitive Therapy - examining the things you think

  • and Behavioral Therapy - examining the things you do.

  • The word therapy might make you think of laying on a couch talking to a man with spectacles and a

  • beard about your childhood while he analyzes your dreams.

  • But CBT is actually a very practical type of talking therapy which focuses on goals and focuses

  • mostly on the present day and things that are affecting you in your life now.

  • The theory behind CBT is that the way we think about situations can affect the

  • way we feel and behave. It does this by dealing with how your thoughts affect

  • your feelings and behaviors and teaches you coping skills for dealing with

  • different problems. For example you might make a simple mistake like burning the dinner.

  • This might make you think bad things and it might make you feel

  • worthless and inadequate which could lead you to do things like withdrawing,

  • snapping at your family, or trying to avoid things which you think might go wrong.

  • Or perhaps you've been invited out for drinks with some friends and you start

  • thinking negative things. This might make you feel anxious and scared which might

  • make you do something like saying no to the invite, avoiding your friends

  • completely or using drink and drugs to cope with the situation.

  • Over time, whether it's years weeks or months, this cycle of thoughts, feelings and behaviors

  • may have happened so many times it's become like a habit.

  • You start avoiding situations more and more or automatically blame yourself if

  • something goes wrong and the more you do these things,

  • the worse it can get.

  • A CBT therapist will help you break this cycle and figure out what sorts of

  • negative feelings, thoughts and behaviors might be contributing to the problems

  • you are experiencing. They will help you deal with your negative thinking and

  • help you change your behavior. Both of which will lead to an improvement in your mood.

  • CBT can be helpful for people with nearly every diagnoses you can think of

  • and can be delivered through one-on-one sessions, in groups, self-help books,

  • online or through a CD-rom.

  • That doesn't mean that CBT works for everyone though. Some people struggle with it because they find it just too hard to

  • talk about their feelings. CBT is usually quite a short-term treatment and so you

  • may find that your problems are too complex to deal with in the time.

  • It can also be quite hard work. Your therapist will probably set you homework

  • and you have to really practice the skills they teach you to see a difference in how you're feeling.

  • If you don't think CBT is the right treatment for you, you should be

  • able to talk to your GP about what alternatives there are.

  • The Mind website also has lots of information about the different treatments that are available

  • for a wide range of mental health problems

  • and Mind's Infoline line can also talk to you about what you might find helpful.

Making sense of CBT. A guide to what CBT is and how you can decide whether it's best for you.

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