Saturday Morning Tea: Your Thoughts & Distortions
Depression changes the filter through which the mind interprets experiences. Neutral or mildly negative events are often interpreted as:
  • Personal failures
  • Evidence of hopelessness
  • Proof that nothing will improve
This is not deliberate pessimism—it is mood-congruent thinking.
Key Insight
When mood is low, the brain selectively highlights information that matches that mood.
Daily Affirmation: “My thoughts are influenced by my mood.”
Micro Exercise (3 minutes): Notice one negative thought today and ask: “Would I think this if my mood were lighter?”
Lesson 4.2: Common Cognitive Distortions in Depression
Cognitive distortions are automatic thinking habits, not intentional choices. Depression increases their frequency and intensity.
Common Depressive Distortions
  • All-or-Nothing Thinking: “If I can’t do everything, I’ve failed.”
  • Overgeneralization: “This went badly, so everything always goes badly.”
  • Mental Filtering: Focusing only on what went wrong.
  • Hopelessness: “Nothing will ever change.”
  • Self-Blame: “This is my fault.”
  • Emotional Reasoning: “It feels hopeless, so it is.”
These thoughts feel true—but they are state-dependent, not objective facts.
Daily Affirmation:“Thoughts are experiences, not truths.”
Micro Exercise (5 minutes): Take one negative thought and label the distortion present. Do not challenge it—just name it.
22:15
0
0 comments
Regina Speights
3
Saturday Morning Tea: Your Thoughts & Distortions
powered by
The Mental Health Collective
skool.com/the-mental-health-collective-7564
The Mental Health Collective is a clinician-led community designed to empower mental wellness through daily affirmations, and practical tools.
Build your own community
Bring people together around your passion and get paid.
Powered by