Core CBT Techniques for Anxiety

1. Cognitive Restructuring (Cognitive Reframing)

  • Goal: Identify, challenge, and replace unhelpful thought patterns (e.g., catastrophizing, black-and-white thinking).
  • Technique: Use thought records or Socratic questioning to test the truth and usefulness of anxious thoughts.
  • Example: “What’s the worst that could happen? What’s the most likely outcome?”

2. Behavioral Experiments

  • Goal: Test the validity of feared predictions through action.
  • Technique: Plan and carry out experiments to confront fears (e.g., giving a presentation to see if people will judge you).
  • Why it works: Helps disprove distorted beliefs and build new evidence-based thinking.

3. Exposure Therapy

  • Goal: Reduce avoidance and desensitize to feared stimuli.
  • Types:
    • In vivo: Real-life exposure (e.g., riding an elevator)
    • Imaginal: Visualizing feared events
    • Interoceptive: Triggering physical symptoms (e.g., dizziness) to reduce fear of bodily sensations
  • Why it works: Breaks the cycle of avoidance and reduces fear over time (habituation).

4. Psychoeducation

  • Goal: Help clients understand how anxiety works (fight-flight-freeze response) and how CBT treats it.
  • Technique: Provide simple models of anxiety, such as the CBT Triangle (thoughts–feelings–behaviors).
  • Why it works: Reduces shame and builds a foundation for treatment.

5. Relaxation & Breathing Techniques

  • Goal: Reduce physiological arousal that magnifies anxiety.
  • Examples:
    • Diaphragmatic breathing
    • Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR)
    • Grounding techniques
  • Why it works: Helps restore parasympathetic nervous system balance.

6. Mindfulness & Present-Focused Awareness

  • Goal: Reduce rumination and fear-based forecasting.
  • Technique: Focus attention on the present moment using non-judgmental awareness.
  • Why it works: Increases distress tolerance and emotional regulation.

7. Problem-Solving Training

  • Goal: Build confidence and skill in managing real-life stressors.
  • Technique: Identify the problem, generate solutions, weigh pros/cons, implement, and review.
  • Why it works: Reduces helplessness and increases agency.

8. Thought Journaling

  • Goal: Increase awareness of automatic thoughts and emotional patterns.
  • Technique: Track situation → thought → emotion → behavior; look for patterns.
  • Why it works: Helps differentiate between thoughts and facts.

9. Graded Exposure (Fear Hierarchy)

  • Goal: Gradually face fears in a manageable way.
  • Technique: List feared situations from least to most distressing (SUDS scale) and work through them systematically.
  • Why it works: Builds mastery without overwhelming the nervous system.

10. Values-Based Action (borrowed from ACT but often integrated)

  • Goal: Act according to one’s values rather than fear.
  • Technique: Clarify core values and use them to guide behavior despite anxiety.
  • Why it works: Encourages meaningful engagement with life, not just symptom reduction.