Automatic Thoughts
©Tom Moon,
MFT, 2008
Henry
unexpectedly comes home from work two hours early. Instead of giving
him a friendly greeting, his partner Andy, who’s had the
day off, glares at him in silence and walks away. Henry is confused
by the reaction and uncertain as to what to do. He opens a beer, sits
on the couch, and turns on the television. A few moments later Andy
returns, looking a little happier, and says, “Let’s not
eat at home tonight. How about we go out? My treat.” Henry responds
by slamming the beer can on the coffee table and walking into the bedroom.
Now Andy is confused.
What’s
going on here? These puzzling reactions become understandable when
we understand the fleeting, automatic thoughts which provoked them.
When Henry came home early, Andy thought “He’s
probably checking up on me to make sure I’m not cheating on him.
He doesn’t trust me.” When Andy suggested taking them
out for dinner, Henry thought “He must be looking for an
excuse not to be home so he can avoid having sex with me. He isn’t
attracted to me anymore.”
As cognitive
psychologist Aaron Beck explains: “At first glance,
it seems that what other people do leads directly to our reactions
of anger, anxiety, sadness, and the like. We say (or at least think)
things like ‘You make me angry’ or ‘You’re
getting on my nerves.’ But these statements are not strictly
accurate. They are true only in that we would not experience the specific
emotion (anger, anxiety, sadness) if the other person had not acted
that way. But the person’s actions simply represent facts that
we interpret. Our emotional response follows from our interpretation,
rather than from the act per se.” Or, as the stoic philosopher
Epictetus put it more succinctly “Men are disturbed not by things,
but by the view they take of them.”
The trouble
is that the views we take of things tend to arise in the form of
automatic, fleeting thoughts which occur so rapidly and which are
so habitual that they fly below the radar of our conscious awareness.
These thoughts usually come in condensed form rather than in complete
sentences. Andy’s automatic thought, for instance, may have
been something like “checking up…cheating…doesn’t
trust.” A series of automatic thoughts forms an internal
monologue, and all of us carry on these internal monologues all the
time. We’re constantly interpreting, evaluating, and judging
other people’s actions, and most of the time we’re not
conscious of the fact that we’re doing it. What is actually happening
becomes fused with our evaluation of it. We assume our automatic thoughts
are valid and don’t need to be examined.
There’s nothing inherently crazy about automatic thinking; in
fact, we couldn’t live without it. Since we can never directly
know another person’s thoughts, feelings, or motivations, we
have to make interpretations in order to make sense out of what others
are doing. The problem is that we all have built-in biases, usually
based on childhood experiences, which distort our interpretations.
Andy’s interpretation of Henry’s early arrival, for instance,
is based on childhood experiences of a controlling and suspicious parent,
and Henry’s belief that Andy’s offer to take him to dinner
is a sexual rejection is based on early experiences of parental rejection.
The good
news is that our automatic thoughts are what Freud called “preconscious” rather
than unconscious, which means they are accessible to conscious examination.
By developing the habit of “looking before we leap” – of
examining our assumptions before we act on them, we become more likely
to become more mindful, and therefore more in control of, our biases.
Here are
some of Aaron Beck’s general guidelines for dealing
with automatic thoughts: “try to identify troublesome situations
and the meanings you attach to them….Resist the natural tendency
to accept these thoughts as true simply because they ‘feel right’ or
seem reasonable. Examine them and look for supporting evidence, contradictory
evidence, alternative explanations, and more logical inferences. Oppose
the temptation to slip into your well-worked, self-defeating reactions,
such as retaliation, defensiveness, or withdrawal….Your negative
interpretation is more likely to become a fixed conviction if you act
on this assumption.”
Couples
can actively assist each other in this process of self-examination.
In couple counseling, for instance, Henry and Andy have made the
agreement that whenever they see the other person reacting from what
appear to be automatic biases they will avoid the temptation to retaliate
or defensively withdraw, and instead say something like, “I think
we should talk about what just happened. What were you thinking just
then?” They’re finding that practicing this simple course
correction is turning potential conflicts into opportunities for mutual
support and increased understanding.
For those
who would like more information about effective strategies for responding
to destructive automatic thoughts, Aaron Beck’s
excellent book, Love is Never Enough, is an excellent practical
guide for using the principles of cognitive therapy to overcome the
biases which cause so much unnecessary conflict in relationships. I
recommend it highly.