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This article attempts to define the generic aspects
to Awareness, Attendance, Analysis, Alternatives and Adaption and
connect these to the goal seeking aspects of the individual.
I keep trying to capture the essence of cognitive behavior management
changework in its most simple and essential form. It seems to me
that the constructs are simple, but that the field keeps trying
to expand exponentially the language used to define it. As an example,
I have now used the term cognitive behavior management to cover
the range of activities from cognitive therapy [which generally
is defined as correcting cognitive errors], cognitive reconstruction
[which is generally defined as dealing with core beliefs] rational
emotive therapy [which is generally defined as challenging irrational
thoughts with rational logic], Psychosocial Rehabilitation [which
is an actity oriented cognitive behavioral program]; NeuroLinguistic
Programming [which defies definition]; occassionally psychoeducational
[which includes social skill building]; cognitive behavior therapies
[which seek to alter the way client construe themselves and their
experiences; behavior therapy [which employs a wide range of methods
nearly all of which overlaps other mentioned processes], under a
single rubric.
All of these interventions use the same set of techniques and procedures
and there is little use of defining them through different terminology
except for the glorification of their creators and practioneers.
We have in the past used the term cognitive rehabilitation, but
increasining we found that people considered that different from
all of the other terms. We selected rehabiltiation since it means
to re-qualify. Thus, requalification of our thoughts seems to have
some merit as our generalizaed term.
In attempting to organize the factors of this aspect cognitive
behavior management , we have already identified in other writings,
the components of Awareness, Attendance, Analysis, Alternatives
and Adaption for correcting cogntive errors. To improve this outline,
we need to be more specific about what we are being aware of, attending
to, analyzing, finding alternatives for and adapting. This material
is generated as an attempt to develop these responses in a manner
which is generic to all helping situations.
At least two factors need to be articulated as background before
we continue. The first is that in broad strokes, we consider three
primary emotional contexts. These consist of fear, attraction, and
anger. While there are many, many shades of variation and combination,
these seem to us to be the primary emotional contexts. We can think
of the three primary colors and how they are shaded into other colors
as our analogy. To this configuration, we suggest that the major
problems in living are easily placed within the confines of this
primary triad: angry antisocial conduct, depression or anxiety,
which fit neatly into these emotional contexts. The blurring of
contexts into new colors can be seen in such problems as post traumatic
stress, which embodies traumatic loss with fear of recurrence.
The primary triad context also helps us with a framework for evaluation
as attraction has the continuum of loss to gain of a beloved object
or experience. We either have lost, think we will lose, suspect
we have lost or gained. Anger or its absence, on the other hand
creates a direct interpersonal continum from hostile or amiable
relations with others. Fear, of course separates into a continuum
of threat to comfort. In this simplistic fashion, it seems that
we can consider the details of each of the problems in living in
similar categories.
The second factor is one best articulated by Eric Klinger [1993].
He suggest an "extensive linkage between emotion and cognition
at both the molar level, on which moods and cognition influence
each other, and at a much more molecular level on which emotional
and cognitive processes are intertwined in the production of individual
emotional reactions and cognitive events. Both emotion and cognition
are in turn determined by motivational state [emphasis added] -
by the goals to which people have committed and the incentives available
to them."
The significance of goals is, in my opinion, the most undervalued
construct in all of psychology. Klinger goes on to state that it
appears that "mood and cognition affect each other bidirectionally."
"What people attend to, recall, and think about is determined
to a substantial extent by their current concerns, meaning the nonconscious
internal states that correspond to pursuing particular goals. When
we encounter cues associated with our goal pursuits, these cues
tend to elicit cognitive processing. If our concerns are predominantly
about avoiding threats, as in anxiety states, we keep noticing and
thinking about cues of threat; if we are depressed while disengaging
from a loss, we keep noticing and thinking about cues of loss and
helplessness."
Thus we must combine the concern [motivation] as linking directly
to cognition which is interactive with emotions, which can be clarified
by the following figure
emotion <motivation> cognition
Motivation, the ability to develop a purpose or meaning for life,
may be the single, most influential factor to quality living. We
will not reiterate here the seminal work of Viktor Frankl in developing
a meaning for life, a telos [for the sake of which] a life is lived.
Without a clarity of meaning, purpose , and goals - the ability
to decide what is valued or not valued becomes very difficult, if
not impossible. Klinger articulates what we have stated elsewhere
that emotions are an evaluative and valuing process. "...emotions
assign values to the events that elicit them, or they reflect or
even constitute those values. Unlike cognitions, emotional responses
incorporate a valence and a mobilizing mechanism, an innately specified
linkage of specific stimuli with arousal and action tendencies.
Thus emotion transforms information into behaviorally meaningful
evaluation."
Cognition, on the other hand can be viewed as analyzing ambiguous
data when the person does not know what value to assign. Therefore,
cognition mediates emotion, which mediates behavior or action.
From a clinical perspective, then we have an opportunity to set
the stage for what values are to be assigned to various cues, what
cues will be attended to, and what memories will be recalled, by
focusing the individual on their own intentions. It is with this
in mind, we start the cognitive outline.
Awareness
While traditionally the focus is on awareness of present or current
traits of thoughts and feelings; or states of beliefs and moods,
we suggest that one might consider starting at the core of the problem
- the mental state of intentionality. Without a defining summum
bonum [life's greatest good], there is not ability to measure right
action and without right action, there is no coherence. As we have
stated elsewhere goals are hierarchal in nature with the superordinate
goal at the top, and a host of sub- and sub-sub goals below. The
goals tend to be coherent, so that the events today are valued and
the automatic thoughts are in accord with the superordinate frame
of reference. We don't normally think of this as a goal structure,
since it is nonconscious. But if we believe certain things about
ourselves and other, we respond to those things in ways that are
coherent with us [our beliefs, attitudes, thoughts, etc which comprise
our individual personality]. It cannot be any other way. We are
the sum total of our thoughts.
It is not a trivial understanding that people with the most severe
and persistent problems in living have the least well formed superordinate
goals. In fact, merely raising the question of goals might trigger
for the first time a conscious awareness of the lack. Certainly
the angry and depressed will tend to indicate that they have no
goals and they don't expect to be around very long. This is the
fringe of homicidal and suicidal thinking from which there is no
continued life. The severely anxious may have the same expectation
of the end, but it is out of their control. The request to focus
on the future, on the purpose, on the goals and intentions; the
awareness of themselves in the cosmos is a movement away from the
pathos of their lives.
This redirection also is an attempt to frame the components of
awareness: perceptions in the forms of cues and recall; automatic
and core thoughts; the sensations of the body; and the specific
intentions to be applied.
Attendance
Since 95% of what occurs is nonconscious, attendance indicates
what we voluntary bring into consciousness. Clinicians have many
methods of ensuring attendance by clients such as journals, counting,
mantras, etc. What is used to ensure attendance is not as important
as to what is attended to. As we have indicated we need to have
clients attend to:
Cues and recall: what is it that the person perceives in the inner
or outer world? If s/he is always seeing threats, it is important
to quantify the number and qualify the intensity of these threats.
This is so that s/he will have material observations to analyze.
Body sensations: what are the physical feelings that occur when
an event is experienced? Does the hair stand up on end? Is there
a feeling in the pit of the stomach? Do the palms sweat? When does
this happen? How often does it happen? What is the frequency and
intensity? Do we have appropriate language and concepts to identify
it?
Automatic thoughts: when cues or memories are being consciously
attended to: what thoughts do they engender? What emotional labels
are used: rage, displeasure, bitterness? What are the attributions
made about cause and effect? What judgments are made about self
and/or others?
Intentionality: what were you intending to accomplish? Was the
experience a barrier or support?
Analysis
Analysis occurs pragmatically. Is the element helpful or harmful
to the individual and his/her goals? Are they rewarded or punished
by the element being analyzed? Is the cue, thought or sensation
a threat or comfort; loss or gain; or indicative of a hostile or
amiable relation? One may also examine whether the judgement or
valuation is true, in the sense of examining the context of the
element and the frame of reference.
Cues and recall: What other cues or memories exist in the inner
or outer environment that may support or deny the perception made?
Through metaperception, the person can be asked to relive the situation
from associated or dissociated positions to see if any other observations
can be made. They can be asked to review their journals to see if
other aspects exist which were overlooked.
Body sensations: are the sensations pleasant or unpleasant? Are
the sensations connected to specific types of events? When pleasant
sensations occur, what is happening. What labels are used to define
the sensations? How frequently do they occur and in what intensity?
Is there anything that reduces the intensity of unpleasant feelings?
Is there any way to avoid events and experiences which cause unpleasant
feelings? Is such avoidance helpful? Is there any way to increase
the occurrence of pleasant feelings?
Automatic thoughts: Do these thoughts fall into the 'cognitive
error' list? What kinds of cognitive errors occur? Are there one
or two consistent errors? Are the thoughts correct/true? Are they
helpful?
Intentionality: Does the concern ideation and subsequent thoughts
and feelings interfere with the intentions/goals/summum bonum? Do
you have a clear goal implementation plan?
Alternatives:
If the analysis demonstrates that the concern ideation and subsequent
thought and feeling are interfering with the intentions; the client
clearly needs to seek alternatives or suffer the continuation of
the problem. If hostile attribution continues to create difficult
interpersonal relations - it must either be changed or there will
continue to be such interpersonal problems which are barriers to
the client reaching his/her goals.
Cues and recall: it is difficult to change perceptions until one
changes the concern ideation. In order to do this, several prostheses
might be used:
- clients might develop mantras which self instruct to look for
other cues or to avoid accepting the present cue structure.
- clients might keep journals in which they record the cue and
an alternative cue.
- clients might metapercieve common events in which problem cues
occur and perceive them with other more positive cues occurring
Body sensations:
- clients might reconsider the label that they have applied to
the sensations generated: changing the intensity of the feeling.
- clients might metapercieve the experience and examine the sub-modalities
of the body sensations and change them.
- clients can practice and use relaxation techniques to change
the intensity of the sensations.
Automatic thoughts:
- clients can create alternative thoughts which are made into
a mantra to be repeated consistently [reframing].
- clients can use journals to slow down the thoughts so that they
can be reconsidered.
Intentionality: clients can revise their goal implementation plans
to incorporate the alternative strategies. Clients can develop self
reward statements for all achievements of implementation steps.
Adaption
Clients will implement their goal implementation plans using all
of the alternative measures in their arsenal. This process is formatted
as a self management strategy in which the person self instructs,
self evaluates and self rewards. When difficulties arise, clients
can 'future pace' to develop anticipatory strategies for events
and experiences which are difficult and to inoculate themselves
against relapse.
Closure
The client must ultimately choose to resolve his/her problems in
living. There are many reasons why change may not be perceived as
beneficial. Hopefully the clinical practitioner has been able to
identify these and resolve them However, it always boils down to
client choice. They can choose to be crazy.
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