Thinking errors, also known as cognitive distortions in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), are habitual patterns of thinking that distort reality in unhelpful ways. Unlike occasional negative thoughts, these distortions are systematic and automatic, operating outside conscious awareness until you learn to recognize them. They filter, exaggerate, or misinterpret information in ways that reinforce negative emotions and self-defeating behaviors. Understanding these patterns is the first step in CBT: once you can identify a thinking error, you can evaluate whether your thoughts match reality and develop more balanced, helpful ways of interpreting situations.
Viewing situations in only two categories instead of on a continuum. You see things as black or white, with no middle ground. If your performance falls short of perfect, you see yourself as a total failure. This distortion evaluates experiences in extreme terms without acknowledging that most things exist on a spectrum.
Example:
Sarah's thinking contains all-or-nothing distortion because she divides academic performance into only two categories: perfect or complete failure. A B grade is objectively good, but her black-and-white thinking prevents her from seeing the middle ground between perfection and failure. This distortion creates unnecessary distress and ignores evidence of competence. More balanced thinking would recognize that a B is a good grade that shows solid understanding, even if it's not perfect.
Seeing a single negative event as a never-ending pattern of defeat. You draw broad, sweeping conclusions based on limited evidence, often using words like "always," "never," "everyone," or "no one." One setback becomes evidence of a permanent pattern, and one mistake defines your overall competence.
Example:
Marcus is overgeneralizing by taking one presentation difficulty and treating it as evidence of an unchangeable pattern. Words like "always" and "never" signal this distortion—they turn a single event into a universal truth. In reality, everyone has moments of nervousness or mistakes in presentations. This thinking error prevents Marcus from recognizing times when he has performed well under pressure and creates a self-fulfilling prophecy where he becomes more anxious about future presentations because he believes he "always" fails.
Picking out a single negative detail and dwelling on it exclusively, so that your vision of all reality becomes darkened. Like a drop of ink discoloring an entire glass of water, you focus on one negative aspect of a situation while filtering out everything positive. Your attention becomes magnetically drawn to negatives while positives pass unnoticed.
Example:
Lisa is using a mental filter that screens out positive information while magnifying negative details. The five compliments pass through her cognitive filter unnoticed, while the single criticism dominates her perception of the entire feedback session. This distortion creates an inaccurately negative view of her performance and her manager's assessment. The mental filter makes it nearly impossible to maintain confidence or recognize genuine accomplishments because positive evidence is automatically filtered out of awareness, leaving only negatives in focus.
Rejecting positive experiences by insisting they don't count for some reason. When good things happen, you dismiss them as flukes, luck, or somehow invalid. You maintain negative beliefs despite contradictory positive evidence by finding ways to explain away anything that doesn't fit your negative view.
Example:
James is discounting the positive by minimizing his genuine achievement. Instead of accepting that he demonstrated competence in project management, he attributes success to luck and claims the project was easy. This distortion maintains a negative self-image despite contradictory evidence. By insisting positive outcomes don't count, James prevents himself from building accurate confidence based on actual track record. The distortion often uses phrases like "it doesn't count," "anyone could do it," "I just got lucky," or "it was easy"—all ways of dismissing genuine accomplishments and maintaining an inaccurately negative self-assessment.
Making negative interpretations even though there are no facts that convincingly support your conclusion. This distortion has two forms: mind reading (assuming you know what others are thinking without checking) and fortune telling (predicting that things will turn out badly and treating the prediction as fact). You make negative assumptions without evidence and act as if they're true.
Example:
Rachel is jumping to conclusions through mind reading—assuming she knows her friend's thoughts and motivations without any actual information. There are many innocent explanations for delayed responses: the friend might be busy, not have seen the message, or be dealing with something unrelated. This distortion causes unnecessary emotional distress based on imagined scenarios rather than facts. Jumping to conclusions often feels certain because your mind generates a compelling narrative, but the certainty is misleading—you're treating assumptions as facts without evidence. The solution is to recognize when you're mind reading or fortune telling and check assumptions by gathering actual information.
Exaggerating the importance of things, particularly your mistakes or problems, until they appear enormous. You blow things out of proportion, treating small setbacks as disasters. This distortion is sometimes called the "binocular trick" because you magnify negatives as if looking through the wrong end of binoculars while minimizing positives. Catastrophizing is a specific form where you predict that terrible outcomes will occur and treat this prediction as inevitable.
Example:
Tom is catastrophizing by magnifying a forgotten email into career destruction. While forgetting the email may have consequences, his thinking jumps to the worst possible outcome at each step without considering more likely scenarios: the client might understand, the situation can probably be remedied with an apology and quick follow-up, one mistake rarely leads to firing, and certainly not to career ruin. Catastrophizing takes a real problem (forgotten email) and expands it into an imagined disaster, creating intense anxiety that's disproportionate to the actual situation. More balanced thinking would acknowledge the mistake, consider realistic consequences, and focus on remedial action rather than imagined catastrophe.
Assuming that your negative emotions necessarily reflect the way things really are. You take your emotions as evidence for truth, reasoning "I feel it, therefore it must be true." If you feel stupid, you conclude you are stupid. If you feel guilty, you conclude you've done something wrong. Emotional reasoning treats feelings as facts rather than recognizing that emotions don't always match objective reality.
Example:
Keisha is engaging in emotional reasoning by treating her anxious feelings as evidence about reality. In truth, feeling anxious before an interview is a normal response that doesn't predict actual performance. She might feel unprepared despite having prepared thoroughly—feelings don't always match facts. The distortion assumes emotions provide accurate information about external reality, when emotions often reflect cognitive interpretations, past experiences, or temporary physical states rather than objective truth. The antidote is recognizing that "I feel X" doesn't mean "X is true." Feelings are real experiences, but they're not necessarily accurate assessments of situations.
Trying to motivate yourself or others with "should," "shouldn't," "must," "ought," or "have to." These statements imply rigid rules about how you or others must behave, creating guilt when directed at yourself and anger or frustration when directed at others. Should statements impose unrealistic demands that don't account for human limitations, circumstances, or legitimate needs. They generate emotional consequences—guilt when you violate your own shoulds, and resentment when others violate your expectations.
Example:
David is using should statements that create unrealistic expectations and generate guilt over normal human needs. The "shouldn't," "should," "must," and "ought" impose rigid demands that ignore his actual situation—exhaustion after a stressful week is natural, not a personal failing. These should statements suggest there's a correct way to feel and behave that doesn't match reality. When directed at himself, shoulds create guilt and self-criticism. When directed at others ("he should have known better"), they create anger and disappointment. More balanced thinking replaces shoulds with preferences ("I'd prefer to be productive") or acknowledges reality ("I'm tired, so rest makes sense").
An extreme form of overgeneralization where you attach a negative label to yourself or others based on a single event or characteristic. Instead of describing specific behaviors or mistakes, you define your entire self or another person with a negative label. Labels are rigid, global, and often use emotionally loaded language. Instead of saying "I made a mistake," you think "I'm a loser." Labels define identity rather than describing actions, making change seem impossible.
Example:
Maria is engaging in labeling by defining herself with negative global terms based on one forgotten appointment. "Idiot," "disorganized mess," and "incompetent" are labels that define her entire identity rather than describing the specific behavior (forgetting an appointment). This distortion makes problems seem permanent and unfixable—if you are an idiot, change is impossible, but if you forgot an appointment, you can set reminders or improve your calendar system. Labels also generate intense shame because they attack core identity rather than specific behaviors. More helpful thinking describes the behavior ("I forgot an appointment") and considers concrete solutions rather than defining the self with negative labels.
Seeing yourself as the cause of negative external events for which you were not primarily responsible. You take things personally that have little or nothing to do with you, assuming you're responsible for outcomes that result from multiple factors or circumstances outside your control. This distortion leads to chronic guilt and a sense of responsibility for things you cannot actually control.
Example:
Elena is personalizing by taking excessive responsibility for her son's test grade. While parents influence their children, a single test grade results from many factors: the student's own effort and study habits, the difficulty of the test, teaching quality, the student's understanding of the material, test anxiety, and many other variables. Elena's personalization ignores her son's agency and all other contributing factors, placing herself at the center as the sole cause. This distortion generates inappropriate guilt and prevents accurate problem-solving because it misattributes causation. More balanced thinking would consider multiple contributing factors and recognize that while she can support her son, she cannot control his test performance—he has his own responsibility for studying and learning.
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