Inner conversations have a powerful impact on emotional well-being and motivation. Becoming aware of exactly what you are saying to yourself about yourself can help you understand why you react the way you do to events and people in your life.
Here are 10 (what psychologists call) Cognitive Traps you must be aware of:
- ALL-OR-NOTHING THINKING: You see things in black-or-white categories. If a situation is anything less than perfect, you see it as a total failure.
- OVERGENERALISATION:You see a single event as a never-ending pattern of defeat by using the words always or never when you think about it
- MENTAL FILTER: You pick out a single negative detail and dwell on it exclusively. One word of criticism erases all the praise you’ve received.
- DISCOUNTING THE POSITIVE: You reject positive experiences by insisting they “don’t count.” If you do a good job, you tell yourself that anyone could have done as well.
- JUMPING TO CONCLUSIONS: You interpret things negatively when there are no facts to support your conclusion. Two common variations are mind-reading (your arbitrarily conclude that someone is reacting negatively to you) and fortune-telling (you assume and predict that things will turn out badly).
- MAGNIFICATION: You exaggerate the importance of your problems and shortcomings, or you minimise your desirable qualities. This is also called the “binocular trick.”
- EMOTIONAL REASONING: You assume that your negative emotions reflect the way things really are: “I feel guilty. I must be a rotten person.”
- “SHOULD” STATEMENTS: You tell yourself that things should be the way you hoped or expected them to be. Many people try to motivate themselves with shoulds and shouldn’ts, as if they had to be punished before they could be expected to do anything.
- LABELING: This is an extreme form of all-or nothing thinking. Instead of saying “I made a mistake,” you attach a negative label to yourself: “I’m a loser.”
- PERSONALISATION AND BLAME: You hold yourself personally responsible for events that aren’t entirely under your control.
On a lighter note, here is Rhino the hamster (clip from the movie ‘Bolt’) doing a positive self-talk :
+ Ravi Peal-Shankar
{ 0 comments… add one now }