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More About Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT)
My
primary mode of practice is rational-emotive/cognitive therapy.
Cognitive Therapy (including Rational Emotive Therapy) is a highly
effective, research driven approach that helps people to combat and
overcome such difficulties as high anxiety/stress, panic attacks,
depression, anger, relationship problems, phobias, worry,
obsessions, compulsions, addictions (food or drugs), social anxiety,
sexual problems, and low self-esteem. The course of treatment is
typically short-term (approximately 10-20 sessions), and people
often enjoy rapid and enduring relief from their symptoms. This
therapy is similar in nature to therapies currently used in
Resiliency Training for children, adolescents and adults.
Schema-Focused Cognitive Therapy goes further, to help people
address and break long-standing or particularly stubborn patterns of
thinking, feeling and behaving that arise from deep-seated beliefs,
such as “I’m unlovable,” “I’m a failure,” “People don’t care about
me,” “I’m not important,” “Something bad is going to happen,”
“People will leave me,” “I will never get my needs met,” “I will
never be good enough,” etc. Remarkable results have been achieved
via the Schema-Focused approach, even for people who have previously
found other therapies to be ineffective. Results cannot be
guaranteed, however, compared with other types of therapeutic
intervention research has shown Cognitive Therapy to be effective.
Schema focused and Rational Emotive
Therapy do more than address symptoms, and often I recommend
readings which emphasis the spiritual aspects of cognitive therapy
as well as those that focus on symptom relief. Please check my
suggested readings page:
Albert Ellis and
the Institute for Rational Emotive Therapy
In
1955 Dr. Albert Ellis developed REBT, which is an action-oriented
therapeutic approach that stimulates emotional growth by teaching
people to replace their self-defeating thoughts, feelings and
actions with new and more effective ones. REBT teaches individuals
to be responsible for their own emotions and gives them the power to
change and overcome their unhealthy behaviors that interfere with
their ability to function and enjoy life.
Today the Albert
Ellis Institute is a world center of research, training, and
practice of REBT, headed by its founder Dr. Albert Ellis who remains
one of the most influential psychologists of our time, and has
authored more than 70 books and 700 articles all designed to help
people overcome destructive, self-defeating emotions and improve
their lives.
I have received
both my Basic and Advanced Certificates in Cognitive and Rational
Emotive Therapy through the Albert Ellis Institute in New York City.
Albert Ellis
Institute in New York City
www.rebt.org
What will I be learning in Cognitive (REBT)
and Schema-Focused Therapy?
1. Identify the themes and patterns in your thoughts, feelings and
behavior that cause you emotional wear and tear;
2. Learn how to handle your thoughts and manage your emotions so
that you feel better and cope more effectively;
3. Learn how to handle problematic situations to maximize positive
outcomes and experiences;
4. Prevent maladaptive cycles of thinking, feeling and behaving from
repeating over and over again;
5. Find ways to reach your goals and get your needs met rather than
running up against the proverbial brick wall.
Schema-Focused
Cognitive Therapy
Schema-Focused Cognitive Therapy is the approach developed by
Jeffrey E. Young, Ph.D., who was a protégée of Dr. Aaron Beck. Prior
to his founding the Cognitive Therapy Centers of NY and Connecticut,
as well as the Schema Therapy Institute, Dr. Young served as the
Director of Research and Training at the Center for Cognitive
Therapy at U. Penn with Dr. Beck, where he trained many clinicians
in the application of CBT. In working with clients, however, Dr.
Young and his colleagues found a significant segment of people who
came for treatment but had perplexing difficulty in benefiting from
the standard approach. He discovered that these people typically had
long-standing patterns or themes in thinking and feeling—and
consequently in behaving or coping—that required a different means
of intervention. Dr. Young’s attention turned to ways of helping
patients to address and modify these deeper patterns or themes, also
known as “schemas” or “lifetraps.”
The schemas (listed below) that are targeted in treatment are
enduring and self-defeating patterns that typically begin early in
life, get repeated and elaborated upon, cause negative/dysfunctional
thoughts and feelings, and pose obstacles for accomplishing one’s
goals and getting one’s needs met. Although schemas are usually
developed early in life (during childhood or adolescence), they can
also form later, in adulthood. These schemas are perpetuated
behaviorally through the coping styles of schema maintenance, schema
avoidance, and schema compensation. Dr. Young’s model centers on
helping the person to break these patterns of thinking, feeling and
behaving, which are often very tenacious.
In formulating the Schema-Focused approach, Young combined the best
aspects of cognitive-behavioral, experiential, interpersonal and
psychoanalytic therapies into one unified model of treatment.
Through Young’s work and the efforts of those trained by him,
Schema-Focused Therapy has shown remarkable results in helping
people to change patterns which they have lived with for a long
time, even when other methods and efforts they have tried before
have been largely unsuccessful.
Schema’s that REBT / Cognitive and Schema Focused Therapy Focus on:
Emotional Deprivation: The belief and expectation that your primary
needs will never be met. The sense that no one will nurture, care
for, guide, protect or empathize with you.
Abandonment: The
belief and expectation that others will leave, that others are
unreliable, that relationships are fragile, that loss is inevitable,
and that you will ultimately wind up alone.
Mistrust/Abuse: The
belief that others are abusive, manipulative, selfish, or looking to
hurt or use you. Others are not to be trusted.
Defectiveness: The
belief that you are flawed, damaged or unlovable, and you will
thereby be rejected.
Social Isolation:
The pervasive sense of aloneness, coupled with a feeling of
alienation.
Vulnerability: The
sense that the world is a dangerous place, that disaster can happen
at any time, and that you will be overwhelmed by the challenges that
lie ahead.
Dependence/Incompetence: The belief that you are unable to
effectively make your own decisions, that your judgment is
questionable, and that you need to rely on others to help get you
through day-to-day responsibilities.
Enmeshment/Undeveloped Self: The sense that you do not have an
identity or “individuated self” that is separate from one or more
significant others.
Failure: The
expectation that you will fail, or belief that you cannot perform
well enough.
Subjugation: The
belief that you must submit to the control of others, or else
punishment or rejection will be forthcoming.
Self-Sacrifice: The
belief that you should voluntarily give up of your own needs for the
sake of others, usually to a point which is excessive.
Approval-Seeking/Recognition-Seeking: The sense that approval,
attention and recognition are far more important than genuine
self-expression and being true to oneself.
Emotional
Inhibition: The belief that you must control your self-expression or
others will reject or criticize you.
Negativity/Pessimism: The pervasive belief that the negative aspects
of life outweigh the positive, along with negative expectations for
the future.
Unrelenting
Standards: The belief that you need to be the best, always striving
for perfection or to avoid mistakes.
Punitiveness: The
belief that people should be harshly punished for their mistakes or
shortcomings.
Entitlement/Grandiosity: The sense that you are special or more
important than others, and that you do not have to follow the rules
like other people even though it may have a negative effect on
others. Also can manifest in an exaggerated focus on superiority for
the purpose of having power or control.
Insufficient
Self-Control/Self-Discipline: The sense that you cannot accomplish
your goals, especially if the process contains boring, repetitive,
or frustrating aspects. Also, that you cannot resist acting upon
impulses that lead to detrimental results.
Reference: "A Client's Guide to
Schema-Focused Cognitive Therapy" by David C. Bricker, Ph.D. and
Jeffrey E. Young, Ph.D.,
Cognitive Therapy Center of New York. 1993.
Beck Institute for
Cognitive Therapy
http://www.beckinstitute.org
Cognitive Therapy
and Research Journal:
http://www.sci.sdsu.edu/CAL/CTR/CTR.html
Cognitive
Distortions:
http://ucsu.colorado.edu/~fredkin/cognitivelist.html
for
information on anxiety:
http://www.anxietybc.com/
for information on depression:
www.heretohelp.bc.ca
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