Abstract

Keeping Ourselves Emotionally and Mentally Healthy is becoming a Challenging Problem in Today's World.

The note presented here is beneficial in:

  • Boosting Mood and Reducing Negative Feelings,
  • Reducing Emotional Distress, and
  • Helping to Overcome Depression and Anxiety.

Approach Taken: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).
[CBT may seem a fancy term, but it is nothing but a tool that helps change the way we think, which in turn changes the way we feel.]

Need to do for using CBT:

  1. In-depth understanding of CBT.
    (This note aims to provide a simple and easy-to-understand explanation of CBT.)
  2. Write Daily Mood Journal.
    (This note provides a step-by-step guide for writing a daily mood journal.)

Highly beneficial for: Students, Working Individuals, Women, and Elderly People.

Pre-requisite: Anybody who reads and understands basic English.

Motivation: Problem Identification
Motivation: Approach, Tool and Resoures
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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Three Principles of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
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Three Principles of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  Let us see the general approaches we take to recover from depression and anxiety and why we should use CBT. When we feel symptoms of depression and anxiety, we generally try solutions such as physical exercise, yoga, meditation, reading motivational books, and watching motivational videos. These solutions work well and help recover from depression and anxiety to some extent. However, since they do not directly address the root problem, which is the thought process, there is always a higher chance of a relapse. If the problem does not resolve using these solutions, we either become more hopeless and start accepting life as it is, or, if the problem is severe, we go for medication and counseling, which we should definitely consider. These solutions can also be expensive. However, if you are looking for a simple, effective, self-help, non-medicative, and inexpensive option, this note is for you. I will walk you through CBT and how we can use it. Before going deeper into CBT, let us compare it medication.
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Figure: Effectiveness of Medication and CBT. Quantative values are taken from Book 'Feeling Good' Authored by Dr. David D Burns.
  In the case of medication, we take medicines that lead to chemical changes in our body and brain, which help us feel better and emotionally healthy. On the other hand, CBT directly helps tune our thought processes, which is the root cause of the problems. This ultimately tunes our emotions, feelings, and moods, leading to changes in the chemicals in our brain and body. Medication has side effects that affect both our body and brain, and you also have to invest money in them. On the other hand, CBT has no side effects, can be practiced alone, and is inexpensive. Medication does not act on the actual cause of the problem, which is tuning the thought process. However, CBT acts on the root cause of the problem, and it tunes the thought process, reducing the chances of a relapse.
  The book "Feeling Good" provides a table comparing the effectiveness of medication and CBT. In this table, 25 patients were selected for medication and 19 for CBT. Out of 25 patients selected for medication, 5 recovered completely, 7 had considerable improvement, 5 had no substantial improvement, and 8 dropped out. On the other hand, out of 19 patients selected for CBT, 15 recovered completely, 2 had considerable improvement, 1 had substantial improvement, and 1 dropped out. Overall, we can see about a 20-50% recovery rate with medication and an 80-90% recovery rate with CBT. In summary, CBT is more effective than medication for recovery from depression and anxiety.
Defining Feelings and Emotions/Moods
  Now let us define our feelings and Moods. Sometimes we hear a lot about them, particularly depression and anxiety, but we do not know the actual meaning of them. Steve Jobs said, "If you define the problem correctly, you almost have the solution." With this quote, let us first define and understand the actual problems (our feeling and moods) before moving towards finding their solutions.

  Feelings and moods are mental states associated with our behavioral and social responses. Emotions are very similar to Feelings and moods, However, from a biological perspective, they are defined as energy in motion and energy in motivation.

  We can remember all the negative feeling/moods using the word "PH(F)ANTASIZED." The names of these feeling/moods start with the letters involved in this word. For example. Phantasized (PH) is a mental image of something that is not perceived as real. Fantasized (F) a daydream, an imagined unreality. Coincidently the Word Phanatizsed is a mental state that we also feel during the some of feeling moods shown here. Panic Anxiety and Nervousness can be clubbed together as they have similar meaning, similarly depression and hopelessness can be clubbed together they also also hve similar meaning. So let us define and understand each feeling/mood one-by-one.
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Figure: Effectiveness of Medication and CBT. Quantative values are taken from Book 'Feeling Good' Authored by Dr. David D Burns.
Healthy Emotions/Feelings and Their Quantification
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Figure: Quantification of Emotions/Feelings and Their Healthy Values.
So far, we have understood CBT, its principles, its effectiveness, and all the negative feelings, emotions, and moods. Now we will try to understand how to quantify our emotions and feelings and what their healthy values might be.

  The healthy value of an emotion typically lies between 0% and 100%. Extreme emotions, such as 0% or 100%, are rare, and such quantifications are also good for you and your emotional health. Let us understand it using the following example:

  Suppose you prepared well for an examination and performed well, but you failed. There might have been some mistakes in the evaluation process. You might feel 50% sadness because you failed despite your best effort and 30% anger because you suspect unfairness in the evaluation process. These are estimates of your healthy emotions.
  However, if you exhibit extreme sadness or anger (100%), you may become stuck in your emotions and unable to take further action for re-evaluation, or you might take extreme actions, which could also be unfair.

  On the other hand, if you do not show any sadness or anger (0%), it could indicate that you don’t care about yourself, your time, energy, and effort put into the examination, or you might not be conscious of fairness in the evaluation process. In this case, you won’t be motivated to seek re-evaluation or to work hard again for a reexamination if you genuinely failed.

  Both extreme cases are not beneficial and are likely to create other emotions such as depression, anxiety, hopelessness, loneliness, inadequacy, and guilt. In short, any deviation from the healthy value is the main cause of our emotional pain and suffering due to undesired emotions. That is why it is very important to estimate the healthy value of your emotions.
Emotions: Energy in Motion or in Motivation
In a biological perspective, emotions can be defined as energy in motion or energy in motivation. Now let us understand where emotions come from using an example shown in the following figure having five steps.
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Figure: Quantification of Emotions/Feelings and Their Healthy Values. Information taken from "A Brain User’s Guide to TEAM Therapy" written by Dr. Mark Noble, a Professor of Genetics and Neuroscience at the University of Rochester Medical Center.
What is Negative Thought?
So far we have understood CBT and its three principle, defined negative feelings and emotions, understood their healthy values, touched how our brain works and processes information, and how it generates emotions. Now let us define negative thoughts and thoughts distortions; they are important for understanding CBT.
  We heard a lot negative thoughts from friends and families that is, "don’t think negative" and "don’t make negative thoughts". But sometimes we don’t know what do you mean by a negative thought.

  A negative thought is a thought that upsets you and makes you feel down.
  The properties of the negative thoughts are:
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Figure: The necessary and a sufficient condition of a negative thought, and examples of negative thoughts.
  A negative thought is a clear statement without any feelings or emotions. For Example:   Note that a negative thought should not start with “I feel” statement, for example, I feel bad. This statement is a feeling, not a example of negative thought.

  We have seen in third Principle of CBT, that a negative thought that upsets you are nearly always distorted and twisted. Now let us define "distorted thoughts" or "thought distortions".
Understanding of Thought Distortions
Let us understand the thought distortion using an example presented in the following figue. The example shows an argument between husband and wife, which completes in four steps.
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Figure: Understanding of Thought Distortions.
Understanding of Thought Distortions
The following figure capture is the 12 thoughts distortions, which are typcailly found negative thoughts. I have associated them with 12 body parts, so that it will be easy for you to remember or memorize.
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Figure: 12 Thought Distortions.
Short form of Thoughts Distortions and its Identification
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Figure: Short form of Thoughts Distortions and its identification in Negative Thoughts.
Daily Mood Journal and How to Write it
Writing the Daily Mood Journal shown in the figure below is essential for improving emotional distress. The steps labeled A to M need to be followed when writing the journal. The following sections explain these steps, which are helpful for writing the Daily Mood Journal.
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Figure: Daily Mood Journal (reformatted from the original Daily Mood Journal created by Dr. David D. Burns). It involves steps A to M, which should be followed when writing.
  • Step A: Upsetting Event:
    Write about an upsetting event or incident from which the negative or automatic thoughts emerge. Address each event/incident individually -- do not include multiple events in the same journal entry. Note that most of your emotional distress is typically tied to the specific event.
      For the example considered here: Upsetting event is "Argument with husband".

  • Step B: Date and Time of the event:
    Write exact date and time of the event.

  • Step C & D: Identification of Emotions and their Intensity:
    Identify the emotions and quantify them as per their actual intensities (%Now).

    For the example considered here, She would be feeling:
  • Step E & F: Identification of negative thoughts and your belief in them:
    Identify the negative thoughts related to the upsetting event along with your believe in the thought (%Now).

    Do not write feeling and emotions as they are covered in Step C.

    For the example considered here, some of her negative thoughts and her current believes would be:
  • Step G: Positive Refraiming: Positive reframing is a tool to see the positive sides of the negative feelings and thoughts by asking the following two questions. This is useful for reducing your resistance that come while writing Daily Mood Journal.
    Addressing these two questions for the all the contributing emotions and negative thought helps set the Goal (%) for the emotions (can be called their Healthy values) to be used in Step H.

  •   Some examples of positive refraiming of the emotions/negative thoughts. Why Positive Reframing?
  • The moment you see the positive side of your negative thoughts and feelings, you find that your negative thoughts and feelings are not, in fact, the result of what’s wrong with you but what’s right with you. You sometimes feel proud of some of your negative thoughts.

  • It melts resistances for your willingness to change.

  • It retains core values and benefits of feelings/emotions.

  • It helps set the realistic goal (Step H) that retains your core values and benefits, at the same time you also feel better and emotionally healthy.


  • Step H: Set Realistic Goals: Set the realistic goal that retains your core values and benefits, at the same time you also feel better and emotionally healthy.


  • For the example considered here, She would be estimating the following goals for her emotions/feelings:
  • Step I: Set Realistic Goals: Identify distortions from 12 thought distortions for each negative thoughts, and use their short forms.

  • For the example considered here, some of her negative thoughts and her current believes would be:
  • Step J and K: Positive Thoughts: We learned about negative thought that to experience emotional distress:
  • On the other hand, a positive can help you feel better and emotionally healthy. The positive thought must have the following conditions: There are 50 techniques that you can be applied to crush the negative thoughts. 15 frequently used techniques are discussed here.

    For the example considered here, positive thoughts for her negative thoughts would be:
  • Step L and M: Current believe (% after) in the negative thougths (Step L) and Emotions (Step M):

  • Daily Mood Journal for the Women, who is consider here in the example:
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    Figure: Daily Mood Journal for the Women, who is consider here in the example.
    Note that if these intensities are not roughly matches with %Goal of Step H, you can use other techniques discussed here , and re-estimate.
    15 Frequently Used Techniques to Write Positive Thoughts
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    Figure: 15 Frequently Used Techniques to Write Positive Thoughts (Info taken from Feeling Good/Feeling Great Books of Dr. David D. Burns).
    Daily Mood Journal (Template)