Journal article

'I'm unlikeable, boring, weird, foolish, inferior, inadequate': how to address the persistent negative self-evaluations that are central to social anxiety disorder with cognitive therapy

E Warnock-Parkes, J Wild, G Thew, A Kerr, N Grey, DM Clark

Cognitive Behaviour Therapist | Published : 2022

Open access

Abstract

Patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD) have a range of negative thoughts and beliefs about how they think they come across to others. These include specific fears about doing or saying something that will be judged negatively (e.g. 'I'll babble', 'I'll have nothing to say', 'I'll blush', 'I'll sweat', 'I'll shake', etc.) and more persistent negative self-evaluative beliefs such as 'I am unlikeable', 'I am foolish', 'I am inadequate', 'I am inferior', 'I am weird/different' and 'I am boring'. Some therapists may take the presence of such persistent negative self-evaluations as being a separate problem of 'low self-esteem', rather than seeing them as a core feature of SAD. This may lead t..

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University of Melbourne Researchers