This is one thing I've never been able to understand about the idea of cognitive distortions. It's not that I don't get what they are, but I don't get how you're supposed to tell what is and isn't a distortion. And I'm just left in a place where I feel like cognitive distortions seem to depend more on the personal viewpoint of whoever you're talking to and what they find "believable", rather than having any sort of discernible objective standard that I can learn. I've asked therapists before and never gotten an answer. (In fact that's one of my big issues with therapy, that I ended up feeling it was more about imposing the therapist's view than working with mine. And before someone says try another one, I've tried 13 and that was my impression of every single one. I think it's just baked into the mindset.)
My life hasn't been rational or believable. The only reason I'm still standing here today is that I found the strength to stand against situations that everything I'd been taught and every single person around me told me were normal and natural, and to say the were wrong. And I heard all the lines - not in so many words, but still. You're seeing things too black and white, you always expect the worst, etc...and everyone around me, therapists included, would keep saying that right up until the situation turned really nasty and I got hurt badly. Even looking back, if I relate the situations without going into excruciating detail I always get told I'm catastrophizing or or something, that it can't be as bad as I say. Until I invite someone to go over the details of the situation, including the expert advice I've gotten (e.g. legal), and they can't come up with anything either.
And that's my frustration. I've been in so many situations where I was the only one saying this is really bad until too late. Or where I don't get help because people are so stupidly busy trying to get me over my distortions that they won't trust me when I need it. But how do you know? The supposed cognitive distortions look exactly like the times it really was that bad and people just didn't want to see it.
My life hasn't been rational or believable. The only reason I'm still standing here today is that I found the strength to stand against situations that everything I'd been taught and every single person around me told me were normal and natural, and to say the were wrong. And I heard all the lines - not in so many words, but still. You're seeing things too black and white, you always expect the worst, etc...and everyone around me, therapists included, would keep saying that right up until the situation turned really nasty and I got hurt badly. Even looking back, if I relate the situations without going into excruciating detail I always get told I'm catastrophizing or or something, that it can't be as bad as I say. Until I invite someone to go over the details of the situation, including the expert advice I've gotten (e.g. legal), and they can't come up with anything either.
And that's my frustration. I've been in so many situations where I was the only one saying this is really bad until too late. Or where I don't get help because people are so stupidly busy trying to get me over my distortions that they won't trust me when I need it. But how do you know? The supposed cognitive distortions look exactly like the times it really was that bad and people just didn't want to see it.