Joy Meets Pain
Join Dr. Dorcas in recognition of Mental Health Awareness Month as she explores the harmful patterns and problematic practices that often keep mental health in the grey zone. In this episode, she unpacks the cognitive distortion known as all-or-nothing thinking — the tendency to see ourselves, others, and the world in extremes. This rigid mindset can prevent us from pursuing goals, completing small tasks, and appreciating progress unless everything is done perfectly. Dr. Dorcas also examines how black-and-white thinking shapes our relationships, identities, and worldviews, making it harder to recognize that human behavior, personality, and perspective exist along a spectrum — and that our personal worldview is only one lens through which reality is understood. Show Notes:04:47 How many of you recognize if you struggle with this all or nothing thinking?12:47 We can also understand why cancel culture is so popular12:49 We can also understand why people are quick to cut off from their families17:43 The clock gives you 24 hours but life doesn’t give people the same weight to carry inside those hours.18:59 Some people use their time to chase goals. Others use their time to heal, cope or survive. Both are work but only one gets celebrated. Resources Gebhardt, C., Alliger-Horn, C., Mitte, K., & Glaesmer, H. (2017). All-or-nothing thinking: The processing of emotional expressions in traumatized post-deployment soldiers. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 47, 69–74. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.janxdis.2016.12.004 [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.janxdis.2016.12.004] Wesaiditanyway(n.d.)“We all have the same 24 hours”[Instagram Reel].Instagram https://www.instagram.com/reel/DVLds_Hk6gg/?igsh=MWVxZHJldGhmZXBoaw [https://www.instagram.com/reel/DVLds_Hk6gg/?igsh=MWVxZHJldGhmZXBoaw]==
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