CBT Self Help Books for common mental health problems

If you feel that you could manage your depression, anxiety, OCD or stress if only you had the tools, then why not try a good self-help book. This is a cheaper option for those who cannot afford private therapy or give those waiting to see an NHS Cognitive Behavioural Therapists (CBT), the foundation to begin to manage their own mental-health.

There is wealth of self-help books out there and it can be overwhelming deciding which ones will be most useful. In this article, I list and describe some of the books that I have found most useful in relation to specific problems, in a bid to make choosing the book for you a bit easier!

For Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

My book of choice is “Overcoming Obsessive Compulsive Disorder – A self-help guide using Cognitive Behavioral Techniques” by David Veale and Rob Willson. This book is a clear and practical step-by-step guide to regaining control of your OCD and your life! The book contains a CBT approach that is specifically aimed at OCD. This is very important since some CBT approaches used to treat other problems such as anxiety and depression can be unhelpful when applied to OCD. This book is applicable to OCD in it’s varying forms, e.g. for those who experience pure obsessions, for those who carry out internal mental rituals and for those who display compulsive behaviours. What I like about this book is that it is very frank and can help to show the person with OCD that they need not be ashamed of the content of their intrusive thoughts, images and urges. Some of the people I work with using CBT have found that they need help in applying the book from a therapist.

For Depression

I recommend ” The Cognitive Behavioral Workbook for Depression” by William Knaus. This book combines Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, Rational Emotive Behavioural Therapy and common sense in an easy to follow format that includes practical exercises that can help you find your way out of a depressive state. By practicing the techniques presented in the book, you can learn the skills to defeat depressive thinking. The book takes into account all factors related to being depressed that can make any action difficult and gives you tips on how to deal with procrastination, lack of energy and motivation.

I also recommend “The Mindful way Through Depression – Freeing Yourself From Chronic Unhappiness” by Williams, Teasdale, Segal and Zinn. Mindfulness is a technique that has its origins in Buddhism but that is used without any religious connotations within the field of cognitive therapy to help people learn to break the cycle of mental habits such as rumination and self-blame which perpetuate depression. Mindfulness involves disengaging from this type of mental activity. This book is written in the format of a program and includes a CD to follow of guided mindfulness meditation practices.

Mindfulness techniques are very useful for anxiety and OCD disorders also.

For Anxiety and Stress

A useful book that I use with people seeking CBT therapy, Edinburgh is “The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook” by Edmund Bourne. This is a really comprehensive book that gives step-by-step guidance in overcoming anxiety and covers various factors including relaxation and meditation skills, exercise, coping with panic, dealing with negative self-talk and irrational beliefs, visualisation, self-esteem, medication, nutrition and more.

Finally a book that it more general but useful for anxiety, depression or stress is “Mind Over Mood – Change the Way you Feel by Changing The Way You Think” by Greenberger and Padesky This is a simple to follow book that really targets illogical and irrational thinking styles that drive depression and anxiety. It includes worksheets to follow.

Finally, its important to remember when considering a book to begin self-help that like therapy, self-help books and the exercises they direct you to do, must be practiced diligently and consistently in order to work.

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Shyness and Social Anxiety

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) can be useful in helping people to overcome shyness and social anxiety. I have found that seemingly confident people often present for treatment because they are fed up with dreading social events and feeling tense during situations that are supposed to be enjoyable.

Often the people that I see for Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) have problems with social anxiety aren’t stereotypical wallflowers. They have professional jobs and often large, busy social networks. So why do they feel nervous and self-doubting inside? There is no straight answer to this question. It is usually due to a mixture of factors.

The role of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) isn’t delving into the past, rather it’s to gain insight into what the person does psychologically and behaviourally that maintains their social anxiety now in the present.

However, as the person with the aid of their therapist develops a formulation of their problem, factors will be considered such as significant experiences from childhood and parenting. Often, its possible to see that experiences from childhood (and they don’t necessarily have to be hugely traumatic to have an impact) relate to the persons experience in the present. We know this because the person will often remember and visualise such memories in difficult situations in the present.

The good news is that now that you’re an adult and you have more resources and knowledge then when you were a child. This means that you can start to use these resources to make changes to the psychological and behaviour factors that exacerbate social anxiety. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy teaches you how to do this.

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy Edinburgh, will teach you about the link between events, thoughts, moods, feelings, behaviour and outcomes. You will learn how to reveal the distorted thinking and ways of processing information that prolong your problem.

People who experience social anxiety often have a automatic inner critic feeding them negative biased information about themselves. This feedback is often just outside of awareness that you don’t notice it or is so authoritative that it is taken as the truth. Via cognitive behaviour therapy Edinburgh, you will learn to challenge and consider the evidence for and against your thoughts. You don’t have to accept them.

You will also learn about the core beliefs and assumptions that you hold about yourself, other people at the world at large and how these relate to your anxiety. Once you know what they are you can set about the process of discarding those that you no longer need and working on new adaptive empowering beliefs.

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy will also help you to move towards accepting yourself as you are and to care less about what others think. Your therapist can help you uncover how you measure your self-worth. CBT therapists work from the assumption that its not possible or sensible to try to measure our self-worth. Human beings are far too complex, where would we start?
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Cognitive-behavioral Therapy’s Application to Managing Anxiety

Excessive anxiety is troublesome. For many, it can be an immobilizing experience. Anxiousness can be associated with social avoidance and withdrawal, can be a factor in relationship difficulties, can create painful symptoms, and trigger a need to rehash issues related to our past and future. Anxiety triggers the “fight or flight” response, ramping up our sympathetic nervous system.

The most successful treatment approach to dealing with anxiety is through the application of Cognitive therapy since anxiety is a reaction to our thinking, beliefs and underlying assumptions about life. It is usually not our primary anxiousness that creates our distress. It is our secondary thoughts and feelings – the “anxiety about our anxiety” that intensifies our symptoms.

Almost everyone experiences anxiety, but not everyone catastrophizes about it. Let’s say you are taking a midterm exam in college. There are several ways you might respond when you open the test booklet and note that there are numerous questions that you are not prepared to answer. First, you might respond by saying, “wow, none of these answers look familiar. I don’t remember studying for us- I’m going to flunk this test. If I fail it, there goes my grade for the semester. Wait until my parents find out, they will kill me!” Or and alternative, rational response might be, “Gee, I don’t understand these first three questions – that’s okay, I’ll just take some deep breaths, relax and work on the questions that I am familiar with. Then I’ll go back and tackle the ones I couldn’t answer before.”

An individual’s manner of self-talk determines the level of anxiety. When we “awfulize” about anxiety, it tends to intensify it. When we respond rationally to our anxiety, that diminishes its effect. Rationally responding to anxious thoughts is critical to minimizing its effect.

Many people tend to believe that their panic or general anxiety “appear out of the blue.” They may feel confused and perplexed by the sudden emergence of their feelings. Cognitive therapists view anxious feelings as a byproduct of faulty thinking. There is no mystery to it. Teaching others to respond rationally to self-defeating talk is the primary goal of therapy.

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Individuals who experience panic attacks are usually troubled by symptoms such as racing heart, sweating, dread of dying, hyperventilating and a need to escape social situations. Helping individuals to manage panic attacks takes understanding and patience. Assisting people to realize that their panic is time-limited is important. Since panic tends to take on a life of its own, it is important to address the secondary symptoms or the “panic over the panic.” When people panic, they tend to magnify their symptoms through self-defeating thinking, perpetuating the attack. Teaching people to relax into their panic is necessary.

The following are some guidelines for those who experience anxiety and panic:

* Anxiety is time-limited. It is comforting to know that it always diminishes in its impact over time.

* Don’t fight with your anxiety. It only makes things worse. Lean into your anxiety, embrace it, and it will subside.

* Schedule a “worry time.” Go into a quiet room, relax and try to expose yourself to your anxieties. Try to bring on your symptoms and you will find that it is difficult to do.

* If you have a tendency to panic, create an exit strategy. Plan a way to remove yourself from anxious situations to bring relief.

* Refocus your attention away from your anxiety. For example, when people experience panic attacks that involve a racing heart, I might encourage them to do jumping jacks to demonstrate that there is nothing physically causing their symptoms. This strategy actually lightens the situation and their symptoms.

* If you are anxious, chunk things down into smaller parts. People tend to feel overwhelmed when they look at the entire picture. Rather than clean the entire house, pick a few specific tasks such as shredding a few unnecessary documents.

* Stay in the present. Don’t rehash your history or anticipate your future. Worrying about your future or history serves no useful purpose. You can’t control it anyway. Cognitive therapy emphasizes replacing self-defeating thinking with more rational ways are responding to stressors. Identifying goals of therapy, approaching them in a practical manner, and providing homework assignments are significant ingredients to addressing anxiety.
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