Second Guessing Yourself After an Interaction? Tame Your Thoughts with 6 Steps
You hop in your car after having lunch with a friend and start replaying the conversation in your head. You wonder if that joke you said landed wrong. You notice that she didn’t really laugh when you said it.
You start to worry.
You text your friend (at a stoplight, of course—not while driving). “It was great to hang out with you!” and she doesn’t immediately reply.
She usually replies right away. “I knew it. She’s ticked at me.”
You send another text an hour later and include a funny cat video. She loves those. Nothing.
You start to believe that you offended her and now she’s not talking to you. You immediately feel bad.
Shame comes up and you convince yourself you’re a terrible person and a terrible friend, and you wonder if she’ll ever talk to you again.
You start to figure out how you’re going to apologize and beg for forgiveness.
It happens so fast. These distorted, negative ways of thinking about ourselves and the world around us can happen automatically and come seemingly out of nowhere. Left unattended, they increase our stress levels and affect our mood, behavior, and ability to make decisions, as well as the effectiveness of our work or our leadership.
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Turns out your friend has a longer drive and, unlike you, doesn’t text at all while driving. When she got home, her kids needed her attention immediately and for the rest of the day and evening. She didn’t think twice about the joke. It was Saturday, and she was trying to build a new habit of not looking at her phone much on the weekends.
Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) is an effective way of dealing with these distortions on the spot. It involves five steps, but the most important is recognizing when they happen, as soon as they happen, and as early as possible before a negative narrative starts to get written that affects your mood and behavior.
For a list of the most common distortions, like all-or-nothing thinking, catastrophizing, and personalization, see this reference guide here. In the meantime, here are five steps to handling these common distortions. I’ve added number two, which is a great exercise called box breathing. See a video here.
Here’s an example of how to work through the steps:
Anthony has been working on a long-term project at work …
After presenting part of his project in a meeting, he received some constructive criticism from a colleague. Anthony immediately thought, “I’m a total failure. If my project isn’t perfect, then it’s completely worthless.”