Challenging Maladaptive Thoughts
There are a few broad ways people can approach handling the distorted, maladaptive thoughts that contribute to their social anxiety and insecurities. A recommendation you'll see often is identifying, challenging, and replacing them. This article will cover that. I'll start by describing how exactly to challenge your thoughts, then give some perspective on how the practice fits into a larger program of dealing with your issues. In a another article I talk about the idea of accepting and rolling with your maladaptive thoughts. For most people a mix of both approaches will probably help. It's not a matter of siding with only one or the other.
The notion that people can improve their lives by getting some control over their unhelpful, distorted thoughts is very common. I don't think I really have to explain how if you hold inaccurate beliefs about the world, they'll lead you to think and act in ways that can limit you. Most people intuitively understand this and have come to that conclusion on their own. The idea also comes up in a boatload of pop self-help writing.
As a psychological treatment, the concept of changing maladaptive thoughts is the heart and soul of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). A more formal term for learning to examine your thinking is cognitive restructuring. CBT suggests a number of practical applications based on the view that a person's mood, thoughts (cognitions), and behavior can all influence each other. Most of the ideas below are summarized from it. Of course, whole books have been written about this subject, so I can only give little snapshots of the full theory and approach. If you want to do more reading on the topic there isn't a specific book I'd recommend. There are many available that all cover the same ground.
Understand how your thinking can go awry
Before you can start spotting and challenging your maladaptive thoughts you've got to know what to look for. I wrote several articles that go into more detail about the types of counterproductive thoughts people with social problems can experience:
Some basic terms and concepts
If you do much reading about this area it won't be long before you run into terms like Negative Automatic Thought and Schema. The article below quickly explains them:
Some Basic Concepts About How Maladaptive Thoughts Appear And How They're OrganizedCognitive Distortions
These are general errors in thinking about and interpreting a situation that cause someone to see it in an inaccurate, unhelpful way. For example, a person may look at a complicated, nuanced subject in overly simplistic Black and White terms, or take one isolated incident and assume it tells them more than it really does. For more information read:
Cognitive Distortions And Socializing
Attributional Style
This is also known as Explanatory Style. People who struggle with issues like shyness and depression often have a different way of explaining to themselves why certain things happened. They brush aside positive events as one-off flukes that happened because of outside forces. They see negative events as being reliably brought on by their enduring personal flaws. Most people tend to explain things in the opposite way. They take credit for their successes and have no problem considering how their failures may not be entirely their fault. More details in this article:
Attributional Style And Socializing
Worries And Inaccurate Beliefs
No fancy psychological theory behind this one. Sometimes our thoughts get in the way of our interpersonal success simply because we have inaccurate worries and beliefs about how the social world works. For example, thinking that other people are really judgmental and picky about what they look for in a friend.
Beliefs And Worries Which Sustain Shyness, Insecurity, And Social Anxiety
Worries People Often Have About Making Friends And Plans
Common Limiting Beliefs About The Social World
Identify your maladaptive thoughts
This step and the next are something you can informally do in your head, but they're a lot more effective if you make a proper written exercise out of them. There are lots of pre-made forms out there that can facilitate this. Do a Google Search for CBT Thought Record. You can make your own versions as well. Another thing to keep in mind is that you're not going to be able to identify and debunk all your maladaptive thoughts in twenty minutes. It's an ongoing process.
There are two ways you can start delving into your maladaptive thoughts and beliefs. The first is just to sit down and try to think of them. It's a little directionless, but most people will still come up with a lot of results. A tip to root them out is to follow your distressing emotions, like anxiety, discouragement, or resentment, and see where they lead you. For example, someone may start thinking about their college classes, feel a bit nervous, then go on to identify some beliefs about how they think the other students would make fun of them if they ask a question during a lecture. Of course, not every unpleasant feeling has self-sabotaging thinking lurking behind it, but on the whole looking into emotions is a useful strategy.
The second approach is to start with a specific social situation you struggle with, and then examine your thoughts around it. Often you'll uncover some unrealistic thinking that is holding you back. You could consider a behavior you have trouble initiating. What thoughts are keeping you from doing it? You can also look back on a social interaction you recently had. Say you tried chatting to some co-workers during your lunch break. How do you feel it went? What discouraged or self-critical thoughts are you having?
Challenge the validity of the thoughts you've identified
Next, ask several questions of the thought and see how well it holds up. The idea isn't to convince yourself the thought is stupid and wrong, but to look at it objectively and see how it all shakes out. At first practice examining your thoughts during a quiet moment when you're feeling pretty calm. Later you can try questioning your thinking when it pops up in the moment and you're more emotional.
Here are a bunch of possible questions, though you may think of other ones:
- What is the overall tone of the thought? Sometimes we'll have thoughts that are technically accurate and free of distortions, but we're still being way too harsh and unsympathetic with ourselves.
- How would I respond to this thought if a friend told me they had it, or my worst enemy said it to me? We often uncritically accept ideas from our own minds that we would reject instantly if they came from an outside source.
- Is there a cognitive distortion or pessimistic attribution in the thought? E.g., It might reflect Catastrophizing, Filtering, or blaming your inner faults for something that randomly happens to everybody. Is the thought a straight-up limiting belief or self-critical statement?
- Do you have any evidence that the thought is accurate and true? Don't just think about it for a few seconds and come to a knee jerk conclusion. Sit down and write out all the proof for each side, like you were arguing a case in court. Say you believe no one likes you. Well what real world incidents are you basing that on? Are you giving too much weight to one negative memory? What about counterexamples?
- If you feel you do have evidence, is it even accurate, or does it reflect maladaptive thinking as well? For example, someone might think, "No one likes me", and for "evidence" recalls that last week one acquaintance didn't respond to his text right away. That's Overgeneralizing. If they say, "Well I just know everyone hates me. I just feel it every time I reach out to someone." That's Mind Reading and Emotional Reasoning.
- If you're worried about something going wrong, are you 100% sure it will happen? E.g., Are you certain you'll embarrass yourself if you try to talk to a classmate? If it's not guaranteed, what do you think the odds actually are?
- What is realistically the worst that could happen if I do X? Is it really that bad? Could you cope with it? Spend some time really imagining the feasible worst scenario and how you'd actually react and manage. Don't be too quick to assume your life would instantly be over.
- Is there another explanation or perspective for what happened? For example, if you think a co-worker hates you because they only chatted to you for a minute in the breakroom before leaving.
- If you're analyzing a single interaction, what conclusions can you truly draw from it about how things will go in other situations? Does the way one person reacted to you truly indicate how everyone will treat you?
- Can you describe a situation in as factual, observable terms as possible? Does anything shift?For example, "My boss looked tired and answered my questions in fewer sentences than usual" vs. "My boss is mad at me."
- If you have a sweeping opinion about yourself, like "I'm boring", can you break it down more? It's not that you're either 100% dull or 100% interesting. What percent interesting would you say you are? What are the individual elements of being interesting? Being funny? Having unique experiences and stories to share? Having insightful opinions? If you made each of those a scale from 0 to 10, where would you come out on them? ...Oh, you're actually a 7/10 in terms of having insightful opinions now that you think about it? You'll likely see that your overly general belief that you're completely boring isn't exactly accurate. Example #2: Someone who says, "I'm lazy" may really just mean, "I meant to go to the gym at 7pm, but didn't get around to going until 8:15."
- Does X automatically lead to Y? For example, does blushing automatically mean you're a loser who will never have friends?
- Are sources you trust telling you a thought or belief isn't true? Do you have enough faith in them to accept what they're saying?
- What are the consequences of holding a certain belief? Sometimes we can argue a case for why a thought is technically accurate, but subscribing to it still isn't adaptive in the long run.
- Would it be possible to act as if you held a different belief? For example, if you think you'll never be able to make friends because you're Asian in a mostly white town, could you still make yourself go out and try to meet people and invite them out anyway?
Behavioral experiments
At times you can test the accuracy of your thoughts and beliefs in the real world. You won't always have the courage to do so right away, but the results can be surprising, and often do more to dispel a bit of maladaptive thinking than hours of logic. For example, a student may have always taken it for granted that if they tried to make small talk with people at a campus bus stop that they would be seen as a freak. They could conduct the experiment of quickly chatting to twenty people over a week or two and observing how they react (twenty is a big enough sample size). They may find that three of their fellow students were rude, nine chatted back to them briefly, and eight seemed eager to have a longer conversation. Not everyone was super friendly, but it still disproved their belief that all people would be offended by a stranger talking to them.
Before conducting any behavioral experiments you should be familiar with how maladaptive thoughts work and have some practice in identifying and analyzing them. While doing the experiment you'll likely have some distorted thoughts, and you'll want to apply those skills. Otherwise the whole experience may backfire and just reinforce a line of thinking you're already struggling with.
Replace the maladaptive thoughts with more realistic, balanced alternatives
The key words here are "realistic" and "balanced". The idea is not to skip around being blindly Positive, ignoring reality, and seeing everything as happy-happy and perfect. An unrealistic counterproductive thought might be, "Everyone at this party will hate me. I'll never make any friends in this city!" An equally unrealistic overly positive thought may be, "I'm an amazing person! Everyone there will love me instantly!"
A balanced thought could be, "Some people will probably like me, and others won't, which is something my past experience has shown me. The ones who aren't into me probably won't be mean, just kind of indifferent. I can handle that and will concentrate on the ones who seem friendly."
An optional step is to take your new, more balanced thought and pare it down into a succinct, snappy, motivating statement that you can repeat to yourself as needed. For example, the thought above could be turned into, "If I keep at it I'll be able to find the right friends for me."
As I mentioned earlier, tone is just as important as content. Even if what you're telling yourself is technically balanced and true, there's no need talk to yourself as if you're an incompetent piece of crap. You can desire to improve yourself while being compassionate and understanding about your struggles at the same time. Sometimes people think they have to be really hard on themselves to get anything done.
Practice questioning your maladaptive thoughts as they come up
If you have interpersonal issues I'd bet you have at least a decade's experience of habitually thinking about yourself and your social abilities in a critical light. That's not a pattern that's going to be undone in a week. You have to work at catching and disputing your maladaptive thinking. You need to apply what you learned doing the exercises and notice and analyze your thoughts when they come up in the real world. For example, you may be at a club and suddenly stop having fun and get the urge to go home early. Why? You might have had a thought like, "I don't belong here. My friends don't really want me around. They just invited me out of pity." If you can quickly nip that thinking in the bud your night can go on.
You don't necessarily have to sit down for an hour every day and do full-on written exercises, but you should try to be tuned into the ways your own mind is trying to sabotage you. With time your thinking really can change. You'll never completely be free of unhelpful thoughts, no one is, but your outlook can become a lot more confident and positive. You'll also become a lot more familiar with the directions your mind tends to go, and can learn to cut off a lot of maladaptive thinking before it gets out of control.
Limitations of the thought challenging approach
With the how-to part out of the way, here are some thoughts on the overall effectiveness of this approach:
Learning about and challenging your unhelpful thoughts will undeniably take a bite out of your problems. I can't imagine a case where it wouldn't benefit someone to learn the core Cognitive Behavioral Therapy concepts this article covers. It's all an important component of a larger strategy. However, I think sometimes the usefulness of challenging counterproductive beliefs gets a little over-hyped. It can't single-handedly fix everything. Some fluffy self-help books are especially guilty of portraying the approach this way.
First, to really get a handle on their issues most people also need to face and get comfortable with their fears, as well as implement some positive lifestyle changes. If they're behind in some specific aspects of their social skills or knowledge, they may need to get more hands-on practice too.
Secondly, disputing your thoughts will only do so much to eliminate them. The method tends to work best on milder worries and inaccurate beliefs. In those cases being exposed to an alternate viewpoint may be enough for them to disappear. For example, someone may stress about texting new friends to keep in touch, because they worry it makes them look desperate. Being told that's not true and most people won't see them way is all they need to feel better. The approach is also good for debriefing, that is looking at a social interaction after the fact and not being too hard on yourself ("No, when I couldn't think of what to say while chatting to Morgan on the phone, it didn't necessarily mean I'm a failure with no hope.")
Where thought challenging is less effective is for dealing with situations that cause a great deal of anxiety or insecurity. Again, applying the approach is infinitely better than doing nothing and swallowing all your maladaptive thoughts whole, but it won't totally eliminate them. The complication is that larger fears or insecurities generate so many self-defeating thoughts that you'll never get rid of them all. New ones keep coming, or there are so many in play at once that by the time you've diffused Maladaptive Thoughts #9, #10, and #11, the earlier ones have regained their "strength". It's like an endless game of Whack-A-Mole. The thoughts associated with bigger fears are also more likely to fall into that, "I know there isn't logically anything to be scared of, but I still feel nervous" category.
Thought challenging also comes up against its limitations with deeply ingrained maladaptive beliefs that just feel true, even when a ton of logic or counter-evidence is thrown at them. For example, someone may have had a rough childhood and believe in their bones that they're flawed and unlikable. Quickly telling them, "But you've got a bunch of friends who love you" isn't going to shift that opinion. It's not that the principles of challenging thoughts don't work at all, it's just that deeper beliefs need to be slowly ground down over time. Someone who has them also has to accumulate a ton of real-world experience that runs counter to them, and may need to directly tackle the pain and shame at their center.
Some people also learn about the thought challenging / cognitive restructuring approach or give it a try, and have some complaints. This longer article covers them:
Misconceptions And Objections About Cognitive Restructuring In Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Here's another short article on the range of results you can get with this method:
The Range Of Results You May Get From Challenging Your Counterproductive Thoughts And Beliefs