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Does anyone else have trouble with cbt therapy where they do as the therapist suggest try and change your thoughts but it just feels like you gaslighting yourself or you feel it's more of a bandaid and doesn't address the actual problems you dealing with? I mean it's helped in some ways but sometimes using the techniques I have been taught it feels like it hasn't been helpful and actually has made some issues worse
Yes. It's very different from CBT and has different aims. In order to have "true" DBT, you have to go to a clinic that has both group and individual sessions. You go multiple times a week, and keep a binder with worksheets in it, have "homework" and such.
It's basically about learning coping skills for emotional dysregulation and mindfulness, so you can handle your intense emotions in the moment. It's mainly for people who have personality disorders like BPD and issues with things like self-harm, suicidal ideation and addiction (all of which tend to go together). I've found it very useful. The only problem is remembering the skills! You get to keep the binder, and I have mine from the last time I went. But at least you can go through it as many times as you want.
CBT will not help you define or overcome the causes of your behavioural patterns. It is only effective in changing the patterns themselves.Does anyone else have trouble with cbt therapy where they do as the therapist suggest try and change your thoughts but it just feels like you gaslighting yourself or you feel it's more of a bandaid and doesn't address the actual problems you dealing with? I mean it's helped in some ways but sometimes using the techniques I have been taught it feels like it hasn't been helpful and actually has made some issues worse
I would suggest EMDR to deal with the underlying trauma.
I might have to look into that.I had the same experience with CBT. It isn't until I found an ACT specialist that I started making progress.
Interestingly enough, ACT is linked to a tradition in psychology that ultimately traces back to the Stoics through Spinoza, so maybe its particular approach is so useful to me because it already aligns so closely with my religious practice.