How You Think · Cognitive Distortions
Cognitive Distortions
Your mind is not a neutral observer of reality. It filters, amplifies, and twists what it sees according to patterns laid down long ago. Aaron Beck called these patterns cognitive distortions. They are systematic errors in thinking.
The most common distortions
All-or-nothing thinking sees things in absolutes. If it is not perfect, it is a failure. If they are not always there, they do not care. "I always mess things up." "She never listens." The middle ground disappears.
Catastrophizing jumps to the worst possible outcome and treats it as likely. One bad review means your career is over. One argument means the relationship is doomed. The mind skips the realistic probability and lands on the disaster.
Mind reading assumes you know what others are thinking, usually something negative about you. "He looked away, which means he thinks I am boring." No evidence needed. The mind fills in the blanks with its worst fears.
Filtering focuses exclusively on the negative detail while ignoring the larger context. Ten compliments and one criticism. The person cannot recall the compliments. The criticism is all that registered.
Personalization takes responsibility for things outside your control. "My partner is in a bad mood. I must have done something." The self is inserted as the cause of events that have nothing to do with it.
Emotional reasoning treats emotions as facts. "I feel stupid, therefore I am stupid." "I feel like they do not care, therefore they do not care." The feeling is real. The conclusion drawn from it may not be.
Where they come from
Cognitive distortions are not random. They develop from early experiences that taught you to interpret the world in certain ways. A child who was frequently criticized develops filtering as a survival strategy, scanning for criticism because missing it was once dangerous. A child raised in an unpredictable environment develops catastrophizing because preparation was once adaptive.
The complete list — Aaron Beck and David Burns
Beck identified the original distortions through his clinical work with depressed patients. David Burns later expanded and popularized them. Here is every major one, with what it sounds like inside your head.
1. All-or-nothing thinking (black and white thinking)
Seeing things in absolutes with no middle ground. "If I am not perfect I am a failure." "She is either completely with me or completely against me." "I either do this perfectly or there is no point." Reality: almost everything exists on a spectrum. The binary collapses nuance and produces extremes that do not exist.
2. Catastrophizing (magnification)
Jumping to the worst possible outcome and treating it as likely or certain. "I made a mistake in the meeting, my career is over." "She has not replied in two hours, she is ending things." "My chest hurts, it must be a heart attack." The mind skips probability and lands directly on disaster.
3. Mind reading
Assuming you know what others are thinking, usually something negative about you, without evidence. "He looked away because he thinks I am boring." "She did not invite me because she does not like me." "Everyone in that room thought I was an idiot." The mind fills the unknown with its worst fears and presents them as facts.
4. Fortune telling (negative prediction)
Predicting the future negatively and treating the prediction as fact. "There is no point applying, I will not get it." "If I try this it will go wrong." "This relationship will end the same way as all the others." The mind has decided the outcome before the evidence is in and behaves accordingly, often making the prediction self-fulfilling.
5. Mental filtering (selective abstraction)
Focusing exclusively on one negative detail while filtering out everything else. You receive ten compliments and one criticism. You cannot remember the compliments. The criticism is all that registered. Your performance was 90 percent excellent and 10 percent poor. You experienced it as failure. The filter is selective and systematic: it almost always filters toward the negative.
6. Disqualifying the positive
Dismissing positive experiences, achievements, or feedback so they do not register. "They only complimented me to be polite." "I only succeeded because I got lucky." "That does not count." Unlike filtering, which ignores the positive, disqualifying actively neutralizes it. The positive arrives and is immediately cancelled before it can be felt.
7. Emotional reasoning
Treating emotions as evidence about reality. "I feel stupid, therefore I am stupid." "I feel like they do not care, so they do not care." "I feel guilty, so I must have done something wrong." The feeling is real. The conclusion drawn from it is not necessarily accurate. Emotions are data but they are not always reliable data about external reality.
8. Should statements
Rigid rules about how you or others must behave, producing guilt when you violate them and anger or resentment when others do. "I should be able to handle this." "He should know better." "I should not feel this way." "People should be fair." The word should carries a moral absolutism that real human behavior rarely lives up to, producing chronic dissatisfaction with yourself and others.
9. Labeling (overgeneralization applied to self)
Attaching a global negative label to yourself or others based on a specific behavior. Not "I made a mistake" but "I am an idiot." Not "he did something unkind" but "he is a bad person." The label collapses a complex human being into a single characteristic and makes change feel impossible because identities are harder to update than behaviors.
10. Overgeneralization
Drawing a broad conclusion from a single event. "I failed this once, I always fail at things like this." "She rejected me, no one will ever want me." "This went wrong, nothing ever works out for me." The words always, never, everyone, and no one are reliable signals that overgeneralization is operating.
11. Personalization
Taking responsibility for things that are not your fault, or assuming others' behavior is about you. "My boss is in a bad mood, I must have done something." "My friend is quiet today, she must be upset with me." "My child is struggling, it is because I failed as a parent." The self is inserted as the cause of events that may have nothing to do with you.
12. Blaming (externalization)
The opposite of personalization: holding others entirely responsible for your emotional state or life circumstances. "She makes me feel worthless." "He ruined my life." "My childhood is why I cannot do this." Others certainly influence us. But the distortion is in the abdication of all agency. No one can make you feel anything without some participation from you.
13. Magnification and minimization
Magnifying the significance of negatives and minimizing the significance of positives, or vice versa. Magnifying others' strengths and minimizing your own. Magnifying the threat in a situation and minimizing your capacity to handle it. The distortion is in the inconsistency of the scale applied: different rules for different things in ways that systematically disadvantage you.
14. Jumping to conclusions
Reaching negative interpretations without evidence to support them. The umbrella under which mind reading and fortune telling both sit. The mind moves from minimal information to firm conclusion, skipping the uncertainty that the actual evidence warrants. Certainty in the absence of evidence is almost always a cognitive distortion.
15. Control fallacies
Two versions. Internal control fallacy: believing you are responsible for everything and everyone, including others' emotions. External control fallacy: believing external forces control your life and you are powerless. Both are distortions. The first produces hyperresponsibility and exhaustion. The second produces helplessness and passivity. Reality is almost always somewhere between these poles.
Reflect
Which distortions do you recognize most in your own thinking?
Is there a situation in your life right now where you are applying all-or-nothing thinking?
When you feel certain something bad is going to happen, how often are you right?