It will be interesting to see what happens over time - my hope is that some who previously embraced CBT will change their views in light of the reappraisal of the evidence happening now, although I wouldn't expect those in the core to change their views. I'm thinking more of, for example, GPs who used to refer their patients for CBT or GET who just decide not to any more, or, more hopefully, the odd CBT therapist who decides to drop the whole increasing activity/faulty illness beliefs bit and switch to what they would do with other chronic diseases.
This should be practiced together with Cognitive Browser Therapy to eliminate the false illness beliefs behind tab hoarding, including the idea of "brain fog", where you imagine that your brain is not functioning properly and that you have memory and comprehension problems, and fear that closing tabs will result in things being lost forever.Have you tried Graded Elimination of Tabs (GET)?
He doesn't have to believe it, just convince others to believe it - hopefully starting to unravel now. For some people personal ambitions trump truth and altruism by a seriously large margin. As the guy from Cambridge Analytica said on hidden camera the other day: It doesn't have to be the truth, people just have to believe it is true.
Excellent! I'll take a paradigm shift, and I agree that that is what is needed. Thanks for being one of those aiming high.I think we need a complete paradigm shift. And I think we aim for that.
The older I get the more I realise things are possible if you put your mind to it.
So I am joining those having a go.
I think we need a complete paradigm shift. And I think we aim for that.
The older I get the more I realise things are possible if you put your mind to it.
So I am joining those having a go.
Excellent! I'll take a paradigm shift, and I agree that that is what is needed. Thanks for being one of those aiming high.![]()
It's possible the three conditions aren't mutually exclusive.![]()
Snap.Absolutely, when I watched the Cambridge Analytica undercover report that comment about people just having to believe something is true immediately made me think of PACE trial and all the negative portrayals of pwME that have appeared in media around PACE.
I generally follow the advice of Oscar Wilde on this, and forward the articles to someone else to read (secretly hoping they'll reply with a neat synopsis).This video has been a tab in my browser since it first came out. I've never got around to watching it. I've now got about 300 tabs, and really need to start closing more of them.
Have you tried Graded Elimination of Tabs (GET)?
You're absolutely right. One could and maybe should use other discriptions for his behavior. But the impression remains: no empathy, having only his own good in mind, not caring about others, viewing oneself as perfect and without fault and as supreme etc.I don't know whether Wessley is a sociopath, narcisist or whatever, and I'm not sure I'd want to use those terms because I'm reluctant to validate the psychs' habit of making up labels and applying them liberally.
He would no doubt be entirely on board with PACE, from what I've seen of him so far.Richard Bentall
Now there's a real example of Godwin's Law!I'm not sure who's doing the exaggerating. Richard is said to suggest that there is a long-standing battle for supremacy between psychologists, "who are educated and trained to understand people and the human experience and to provide healing therapy", and psychiatrists, who are "indoctrinated with the medical model, have unwittingly carried Nazi-era notions of the genetic origins of psychosis into the present and are intent on pumping people full of as much useless, dangerous medicine as possible while simultaneously avoiding any conversation"."