What are Cognitive Distortions?
Negative thought patterns, also known as cognitive distortions, are habitual ways of thinking that are irrational or unhelpful. Here are some common ones:
All-or-Nothing Thinking
Seeing things in black-and-white terms, with no middle ground.
➡ Example: “If I fail this test, I’m a total failure.”
Overgeneralization
Drawing broad conclusions from a single event.
➡ Example: “I messed up this presentation—I'm terrible at public speaking.”
Mental Filtering
Focusing only on the negatives while ignoring the positives.
➡ Example: “I got one negative comment, so the whole project was a disaster.”
Catastrophizing
Expecting the worst-case scenario to happen.
➡ Example: “If I make a mistake at work, I’ll get fired and never find another job.”
Personalization
Blaming yourself for things outside your control.
➡ Example: “My friend is in a bad mood—it must be because of something I did.”
Mind Reading
Assuming you know what others are thinking without evidence.
➡ Example: “They didn’t text back right away, so they must be mad at me.”
Fortune-Telling
Predicting the future negatively without actual evidence.
➡ Example: “I just know this interview is going to go terribly.”
Labeling
Putting a fixed, negative label on yourself or others.
➡ Example: “I’m such a loser” or “They’re just a bad person.”
Emotional Reasoning
Believing something is true because you feel it strongly.
➡ Example: “I feel worthless, so I must be worthless.”
Should Statements
Setting rigid, unrealistic expectations for yourself or others.
➡ Example: “I should always be productive” or “They should treat me better.”
Recognizing these patterns is the first step to changing them! Do any of these sound familiar? If so, Contact Bee Blissful to learn how to reframe them!