Traumatic Brain Injury and Cognitive Distortions: Correcting Thought Errors

The thinking errors that maintain Traumatic Brain Injury and CBT techniques for correcting them.

Cognitive distortions — systematic errors in thinking — are both symptoms and drivers of traumatic brain injury. Identifying and correcting them is core to CBT.

Common Cognitive Distortions in Traumatic Brain Injury

All-or-nothing thinking: 'I failed once, therefore I always fail' — common in traumatic brain injury

Catastrophizing: Expecting the worst-case outcome for traumatic brain injury-related situations

Mind reading: Assuming others are judging you negatively

Fortune telling: Predicting negative traumatic brain injury-related outcomes as facts

Emotional reasoning: 'I feel like I'm failing, therefore I am' — traumatic brain injury emotions mistaken for evidence

Should statements: Rigid rules about how you or others must behave that create traumatic brain injury when violated

Correcting Cognitive Distortions in Traumatic Brain Injury

The CBT process: identify the distorted thought → examine the evidence → generate a more balanced alternative → notice the effect on traumatic brain injury.

With practice, cognitive restructuring becomes automatic and traumatic brain injury loses much of its staying power.

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