1.1 Always being right
1.2 Blaming
1.3 Disqualifying the positive
1.4 Emotional reasoning
1.5 Fallacy of change
1.6 Fallacy of fairness
1.7 Mental filtering
1.8 Jumping to conclusions
1.9 Labeling and mislabeling
1.10 Magnification and minimization
1.11 Overgeneralizing
1.12 Personalizing
1.13 Making "must" or "should" statements
1.14 Splitting (All-or-nothing thinking, black-or-white thinking, dichotomous reasoning) — Wikipedia
Such thoughts are likely exaggerated in those who have neurotic or depressive personalities. — Nils Loc
It seems like "disqualifying the positive" would apply to me more often than it should. Being depressed all I tend to see is the negative. Life is like being stuck within the rhythms and flows of an impersonal and brutal bureaucratic slave-driving machine but I fail to have a perspective grounded in true hell (genocide, poverty, failed states and war). — Nils Loc
Am reading J. Goldstein's explanation of the Sattipathana Sutta (foundation for mindfulness meditation). Being mindful of the mind's automaticity in regards to sensation is important to freeing ourselves from bad habits of cognitive distortions. — Nils Loc
Why is that so? — Posty McPostface
How can you appreciate the positive more? Can you stop disqualifying the positive? — Posty McPostface
So, mindfulness meditation is the key, here? — Posty McPostface
There is a more severe tension (or dissonance) between expected, normal or good behavior and the behavior of someone suffering anxiety or depression and this is reflected in thought by rationalization. — Nils Loc
Yes; but, what makes the mind of a depressive more prone to cognitive distortions? — Posty McPostface
How about the cognitive distortion re the idea that we should be seeking approval from moderators about how we can divide up topics? — Terrapin Station
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