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REBT stands for:
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Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy
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REBT creator and developer
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Albert Ellis
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General description and focus of REBT
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- A comprehensive, active-directive, philosophically and empirically based psychotherapy
- A form of CBT - Focuses on resolving emotional and behavioral problems and disturbances and enabling people to lead happier and more fulfilling lives |
REBT 5 key components
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A - Activating event or Adversity
B - Belief about A (rational or irrational) C - Behavioral and/or emotional Consequence of B D - Disputation E - Effects (consequences) of D |
Disputation
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- Method of direct, simple questioning that challenges irrational beliefs, by requesting empirical evidence
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Philosophical basis of REBT
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A person is rarely affected emotionally by outside things but rather by his perceptions, attitudes, or internalized sentences about outside
things and events
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One of the main philosophies that REBT is based upon
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Stoicism
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How is REBT an educational process?
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- The therapist often active-directively teaches the client how to identify
irrational and self-defeating beliefs and philosophies which in nature
are rigid, extreme, unrealistic, illogical and absolutist, and then to
forcefully and actively question and dispute them and replace them with
more rational and self-helping ones
- The therapist often gives the client homework |
3 steps that a REBT therapist takes
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Instead of using unconditional positive regard (Person-centered Therapy) throughout treatment, Albert Ellis suggests the REBT therapist could start off using unconditional positive regard, but then should...
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Help
clients achieve Unconditional Self Acceptance (USA) using cognitive, emotive, and behavioral techniques
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Cognitive distortions/irrational beliefs
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- Musturbating/Should-ing
- Illogical overgeneralization - Awfulizing - All-or-nothing thinking - Labeling - Blaming - Mind-reading - Prophesying - Emotionalizing - Personalizing - Filtering - Can't-ing |
Musturbating/Should-ing
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- “Healthy and often strong, desires, goals, and values that (client's)
raise to absolute musts, shoulds, demands, and necessities”
- Putting pressure on oneself (and others) to conform to "divine" rules about the world and life, then expressing such in statements that involve "should" and "must" - i.e. “I must get straight A’s in school in order to be considered a good student.” |
Illogical overgeneralizing
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- The use of “global ratings to their selves, personalities, and their
essences”
- Jumping to conclusions on little evidence or without facts - i.e. “I didn’t well on my quiz so I’m a bad student.” |
Awfulizing
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- Seeing something or a certain event as all bad or even worse
- Imagining the worst possible scenario and then amplifying it with a non-referencing word, like "awful" - i.e. “My supervisor found mistakes with my casework. This is terrible! This is the worse possibly thing that could have happened!” |
All-or-nothing thinking
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- Polarizing at extremes
- Black and white thinking |