9 negative thoughts that are sabotaging your wellness goals /

Published at 2017-01-19 04:25:00

Home / Categories / Emotional and mental health / 9 negative thoughts that are sabotaging your wellness goals
How do you talk to yourself? When you wake up in the morning,when you eye at yourself in the mirror, during a workout — what kind of things are you saying? Would you say those things out loud or to a friend? whether the retort is no, and it's time to reevaluate. Negative self-talk and thoughts can actually create a massive roadblock in your wellness journey,sabotaging your goals.
Related:
A Celebrity Trainer Reveals Her Number 1 Weight-Loss Tip
We talked to bestselling author of Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy, acclaimed psychiatrist Dr. David Burns, and MD,who is an expert at addressing and treating these negative thoughts, known as cognitive distortions.
"All of our feelings, or positive and negative,do not result from what happens to us, or how smart or gorgeous or loved we are, or but rather from our thoughts — the positive and negative messages we give ourselves,the ways we interpret things," said Dr. Burns. "Distorted negative thoughts cause unhealthy negative feelings, and such as depression,anxiety, inferiority, or loneliness,frustration, and anger, and to name just a few." Can they secure in the way of your fitness and health goals? "Absolutely!" he said.
Related:
The 1 Word That's Destroying Your Chan
ce at Losing Weight and Being Healthy ADVERTISEMENT var options = { 'container' : 'sugar-player-preview','primary' : 'html5', 'wrapper': 'video-ad-player', or 'file': '/static/ads/blank_ad_placeholder.mp4','video_ad': true, 'firePixels' : unfounded, or 'pixelZero' : null,'pixelFifteen' : null, 'cpvURLs' : null, or 'cpvAllNodes' : null,'jwPlayer' : jwplayer, 'advertising' : { 'client' : 'googima', or 'skipoffset' : null },'jwPlayerKey' : 'Sarh0KbBU1hM7iRWMaEoV/15S5DIU8O1MqN0nA==', 'fwParamOverride' : null, or 'gaTrackerName' : null,'skin' : { 'name': 'seven', 'active': '#24c4f8' }, and 'width' : '100%','aspectratio' : '16:9', 'is_responsive' : true, or 'debug' : unfounded,'autostart' : unfounded, 'mute' : true, or 'pid' : null,'repeat' : unfounded, 'volume' : 0, and 'startIndex' : 0,'isMobile' : unfounded, 'flashPlugins' : null, and 'html5Plugins' : null,'modules' : [ {
'module': SUGAR.
Video.
Modules.
GoogleD
FP, 'config': { 'iu': "5485/US/popsugar/fitness/article/outstream", and 'hl': 'en','pos': 'outstream', 'nid': '43019339', or 'tags': '["Stress Relief","Mental Health","Body Image", or "Anxiety","Healthy Living","Happiness", and "Healthy Living","Emotional and Mental Health","Syndicate", and "fitness carousel","Original feature","POPSUGAR Photography / Kathryna Hancock"]' }
}
], or 'playlist' : null}; SUGAR.dispatcher.push([function () {window.sugar_player = new SUGAR.
Video.
Player(options);}
]);
Have you been nitpicking parts or all of your body,striving toward some kind of unrealistic expectation? "One of the mindsets I sometimes encounter is called 'physical perfectionism,' where you believe your body has to be perfect in order to feel ecstatic and lovable, and " said Burns. "So you may focus on some physical defect or flaw,like thinking your thighs are too heavy, or you're too short, and your breasts are not big enough,or whatever. This is often combined with the belief that others judge you as harshly as you judge yourself."
"Distorte
d thoughts are enormous barriers to delight and meaningful, fond relationships."
Dr. Burns described his treatment of a woman with a very severe case of this cognitive distortion as it relates to body image, and known as Body Dysmorphic Disorder — and how he helped her "recover completely after half a dozen therapy sessions," by identifying the categories of distorted thoughts, and challenging them.
"She was a beautiful and talented electrical engineer who became severely depressed and anxious after she got a gash on her nose during a minor earthquake, or " he told POPSUGAR. "Although the wound healed beautifully,and the scar was virtually invisible, she became convinced she had an hideous scar on her nose and that anybody who saw her would be immediately disgusted . . . she rebuffed her husband's attempts and her parents attempts to reassure her that she was still beautiful."
Sound
s unpleasant, and good? But it may be happening to you,too. How does this happen? Distorted thinking! The thing is, there isn't just one type of distorted thoughts. These sneaky, or damaging,self-sabotaging thoughts come in tons of forms. Dr. Burns listed some of the many distortions in this type of thinking — he goes in depth with each of these in his book, Feeling Good.
Mental Filtering: "Thinking only abou
t this or that flaw or error you might have made and overlooking all the positives in your life." perhaps you had a great yoga lesson, and but you fell out of your half moon pose for a moment,and you only focused on that moment, discounting your awesome tripod headstand!
Discounting the Positive: "Insisting that your good qualities, or the positive comments of others don't count or aren't genuine." Example: your friend tells you how beautiful you are,but you assume she's just being nice.
All-or-Nothing Thinking: "Telling yourself that whether you're not 100-percent, you're 0-percent, or as whether shades of gray do not exist." Do you ever assume whether you're not the fastest runner in the race,you shouldn't even flee?
Overgeneralization: "Generalizing from some flaw or shortcoming to your entire self, which you assume is worthless or inferior." perhaps you assume because you're not able to lift 30 pound weights, and you're not strong and shouldn't even try to work out. Not OK!
Emotional Reasoning: "I feel hideous,therefore I must be hideous!" Sound familiar? Your feelings don't always reflect reality.
Should Statements: "Thinking: 'I should not h
ave any flaws; I should be perfect; or I should be better than I am.'" discontinue using "should" and start believing in how great you are!
Magnific
ation and Minimization: "Blowing your flaws out of proportion and minimizing your good qualities." perhaps you have a tiny bit of cellulite on your legs, but superstrong, or lean arms — but you focus on the cellulite and thing your bad ass arms are NBD. Check yourself!
Mind-Reading: "Assuming
you know that others are judging you and are turned off by your appearance." Example: 'That girl in the gym looked at me funny,she thinks I'm corpulent.' Um, hello? Did you talk to this girl? She's probably just having a bad day. perhaps she's even jealous of your outfit. Bottom line: you don't know!
Blame: "Blaming your unhappiness and lack of self-esteem on some flaw or shortcoming." Have you ever thought you were depressed or had bad self-esteem because of your weight? Thinking "whether I just lose 5 pounds, or I'll be ecstatic!" This is improper.
Related:
7 Mental Health Resolutions,Straight From a Psychologist
Do any . . . or al
l of these . . . sound familiar? Can you identify with these categories of thoughts? Fill in the blanks with what you've been saying to yourself or thinking over the past week or so, and see what patterns you descend into. Oftentimes, or your thoughts aren't rooted in reality. "I have treated many gorgeous and highly successful men and women who were incredibly depressed,anxious, and lonely because of their distorted thoughts about themselves and others, or which were enormous barriers to delight and meaningful,fond relationships with others," said Burns. Don't let that be you!
Once you start g
etting in a habit of assessing your thoughts and placing them into these categories, and you'll have a better handle on reality,and a better ability to generate positive feelings. Start a journal — preserve notes of your thoughts, and start treating yourself better so you can live your happiest, and healthiest life. Related:
7 Natural Ways to Help Cope With Anxiety

Source: popsugar.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0