Self-Talk and Motivational Interviewing: Building Readiness for Change

How motivational interviewing approaches Self-Talk — resolving ambivalence and building motivation for recovery.

Motivational Interviewing (MI) is particularly valuable for self-talk when ambivalence about change is blocking recovery.

Ambivalence in Self-Talk

People with self-talk are often ambivalent about change — part wants relief, part fears the unknown of being without familiar self-talk patterns. This is normal, not resistance.

How MI Addresses Self-Talk Ambivalence

MI uses specific techniques to help people explore and resolve their ambivalence about self-talk treatment:

  • Reflective listening: Hearing and naming both sides of self-talk ambivalence
  • Decisional balance: Exploring pros and cons of changing vs. staying the same with self-talk
  • Evoking change talk: Drawing out the person's own reasons for addressing self-talk
  • Affirming strengths: Highlighting past capacities relevant to self-talk recovery

MI in Self-Talk Treatment Settings

MI is integrated into many self-talk treatment approaches as an engagement tool. It's particularly useful at the beginning of treatment and when motivation fluctuates.

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