Balanced Thought Builder: CBT Exercises, Worksheets, Videos

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Work step-by-step through the Cognitive Restructuring exercise with the virtual coach.

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Introduction

After tagging distortions (CR1), weighing the hard data (CR2), and interrogating logic (CR3), you’re ready to construct a fresh perspective. One that is accurate and emotionally workable. We call this a Balanced Thought: a single-sentence summary that

  • acknowledges the facts on both sides,
  • drops catastrophic language, and
  • points to a next action.

The research term is cognitive reappraisal; trials show that people who can generate believable, balanced summaries report larger symptom drops and stronger relapse protection.

Cognitive Restructuring: turns raw evidence into a concise, 70 %-believable mantra you can recall on the spot.
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Instructions

Goal: Write a Balanced Thought for one sticky belief each day for two weeks.
Time per build: ~5 minutes.

Step 1: Copy Old Thought
Use a starred belief from CR2 or CR3.
Example: “I blew the client call. My career is over.”
Stick with verbatim wording.

Step 2: Slice Extreme Phrases
Cross out all-or-nothing words like always, never, ruin, impossible.
Example: “blew” → “went awkwardly”; “is over” → “took a hit.”
Extremes drive emotion. Trim them first.

Step 3: Insert Contrasting Fact
Add one piece of evidence against the belief from your CR2 work.
Example: “But they liked my proposal outline.”
Facts anchor realism.

Step 4: Add Perspective Cue
Start the sentence with “Even though…”, “Sometimes…”, or “Right now…”
Example: “Even though the call felt rough…”
Perspective cues reduce overgeneralization.

Step 5: Name a Next Step
End the sentence with a small, specific action you can do within 24 hours.
Example: “…I can e-mail follow-up answers in the morning.”
Action turns insight into momentum.

Step 6: Polish to ≤ 140 characters
Keep it short, phone-screen length.
Example: “Even though the call felt rough, they liked my outline; I’ll e-mail clarifications tomorrow.”
Short = easier to recall under stress.

Step 7: Rate Believability & Mood
Rate belief in the new thought (0–100%) and your current mood (0–10). Then repeat the thought silently for one minute and re-rate.
Target: ≥ 70% belief, ≥ 2-point drop in mood intensity. Adjust wording if needed.

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FAQs

Why 70% believability? Why not 100%?

Aiming for 100 % can trigger perfectionism. Seventy percent is “believable enough” to change emotion and flexible enough to update later.

The sentence keeps ballooning past 140 chars. Help!

Split it: Part 1 (fact/perspective) + Part 2 (action). But keep each under a tweet so you can recall without the worksheet.

What if I can’t think of an action step?

Borrow from Behavioural Activation (BA1–BA4): pick the next tiny, concrete move (e-mail, calendar a practice session, ask for feedback).

Isn’t this just positive affirmation?

No. Affirmations ignore disconfirming facts (“I’m amazing!”). Balanced Thoughts weave both sides of evidence, which the brain flags as credible.

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Disclaimer

If you have any behavioral health questions or concerns, please talk to your healthcare or mental healthcare provider. This article is supported by peer-reviewed research and information drawn from behavioral health societies and governmental agencies. However, it is not a substitute for professional behavioral health advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

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