Read Insomnia and Anxiety (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders) Online
Authors: Jack D. Edinger Colleen E. Carney
Thought Record
113
alone may adequately address many problematic sleep beliefs that contribute to
insomnia. Nonetheless, there are many instances where this form of intervention is
not sufficient and a more potent cognitive intervention may be needed. In such
cases, a more intense and structured intervention as described in the following text
should be considered.
Thought Record
The Thought Record is a tool for modifying thoughts and beliefs. In the short term,
it is meant to target the thought–distress connection and interrupt the automaticity
of this process. In the long term, the goal is belief modification, which would pre-
sumably decrease future cognitive vulnerability to insomnia. The Thought Record
itself is fairly simple and enjoys many years of use as a cognitive therapy tool
across multiple disorders. Although various renditions of Thought Records exist,
the main components are the recording of the situation in which the troubling
thought or mood occurred, the mood, and the associated problematic thoughts.
The Thought Record also typically includes a column or space wherein the veracity,
utility, or accuracy of the thought is challenged. Most Thought Records ask for a
rerating of mood after the disputation to assess if the thought modification was
associated with a mood improvement. We will discuss the type of Thought Record
used in our (CEC and JDE) clinics and clinical trials. The exact record form we use
is shown in Fig. 8.1 (Edinger & Carney, 2008).
Situation
: This column asks for the situation in which the person noticed a trouble-
some mood or thought. One of the reasons for recording the situation is that some-
times there is a relationship between certain situations or settings and recurrent
troubling thoughts or moods. In such cases, one can develop a preemptive plan to
decrease the likelihood that these thoughts and moods might arise. For example,
Mr. R monitored his thoughts, mood, and the situation in which it occurs on the first
three columns of a Thought Records for 1 week (Fig. 8.1). When Mr. R returned to
therapy, he discussed his Thought Records and noticed that he tended to worry
about whether he was going to sleep well when he sat down to watch television at
night. He noticed that it was the first time each day that his surroundings were quiet,
and something about that situation made him anxious about his ensuing night’s
sleep. In addition to teaching Mr. R how to challenge catastrophic thoughts on the
Thought Record, he began a relaxation practice at this time in the evening and
noticed that he no longer had these anxious thoughts.
Mood
: The mood column is used to record emotions and their intensity. The main chal-
lenge facing people when completing this column is the tendency to confuse thoughts
with moods. Moods are often best described using a single word rather than a phrase.
Thus, feeling “blasé” may be a mood but “I feel like I can’t get anything accomplished,”
may be best conceptualized as a thought about feeling “blasé.” This column also
provides a rating of the intensity of the mood (usually 0–100%). This rating can serve
114
8 Cognitive Strategies for Managing Anxiety and Insomnia
Mood
Do you feel
(Intensity 0-
Evidence for the
Evidence against
Adaptive/Coping
Situation
Thoughts
any
100%)
thought
the thought
statement
differently?
Sitting
Anxious
It feels like
I have trouble
It is not 100%
Telling myself
Anxious
on my
(90%)
I’m going to
sleeping when
true that I
that I’ll
(40%)
couch
have a panic
I feel anxious
will NEVER be
never sleep
watching
attack.
like this.
able to sleep.
makes me feel
evening
Something’s
more anxious.
It just feels
I’ll
news
wrong.
The truth is
like I won’t
definitely
sleep at least
that I will
I should have a
sleep, so I
a little.
absolutely
beer.
won’t.
Just because
sleep and I
I need to find
it feels like
can’t know how
a way to calm
I won’t sleep
well.
down.
doesn’t mean I
I’ve noticed
won’t—that
I have a really
that yoga
emotional
big day
helps with my
reasoning.
tomorrow.
anxiety, maybe
I feel really
if I do
What am I going
sleepy, so it
something
to do? I can’t
is possible I
relaxing, I’ll
keep going on
could sleep
improve my
like this.
well.
odds of
I’ll go
There is
sleeping well.
“crazy” if
likely a cost
this continues.
to telling
I am never
myself that
going to get to
I’ll never get
sleep.*
to sleep. It
could become a
self-
fulfilling
prophesy.
Fig. 8.1
Thought Record for Mr. R
as a precognitive challenge value that can be compared to the postcognitive challenge
mood rating to assess whether mood improved. In the case of Mr. R, he rated anxiety
as his prominent mood and rated it quite high (90%).
Thoughts
: This column is where people record their thoughts for analysis in subse-
quent columns of the record. Some of these thoughts are automatic and perhaps
out-of-awareness. It may take some encouragement to expose what is truly occur-
ring underneath the thought process in the situation. In cases wherein it is difficult
for someone to identify many thoughts, it may prove helpful to use techniques such
as the “downward arrow.” Some of the questions that facilitate further exploration
can include “And then what?” For example, if someone records the thought, “I am
going to get sick if this continues,” it may be helpful to ask “So you are concerned
that you might get sick? And then what would happen? What would happen if you
were to get sick?” When people examine their thoughts in this way, it often uncov-
ers catastrophic thinking. In the example above, it would not be uncommon to
uncover fears about becoming disabled, committing suicide, becoming seriously
mentally ill, or finding out that insomnia is linked to a fatal condition. In the case
of Mr. R, he acknowledged a fear of “going crazy.” Catastrophic thoughts can be
typical in those with insomnia (Harvey & Greenall, 2003), and the downward arrow
technique can make these fears more explicit. Other helpful questions include: “If
this thought is true, what’s so bad about that?” or “What’s the worst part about
that?” or “What does that thought mean to you?” It is important for the person to
Thought Record
115
fully explore their thoughts on the issue without censorship, or the Thought Record
will become a superficial and not particularly helpful exercise.
A common strategy when using Thought Records is to circle the “hot” thought
(bolded in the case of Mr. R in Fig. 8.1); that is, the thought most tied to the intense
mood in the Mood column. In some cases, there is not a thought that is most linked
to the identified mood state in which case it may be that the mood has not been ade-
quately characterized. For example, someone may choose to record angry feelings,
ignoring sad or hurt feelings. Thus, the thoughts may be more linked with loss and
sadness while the mood is rated as angry. The other, more likely explanation is that
the thoughts recorded do not include the most troubling thought, but simply “scratch
the surface” and avoid the most difficult cognitions. Asking some of the questions
above can make the Thought Record more productive. In addition, there are several
helpful Cognitive Therapy resources available to elicit “data-rich” thoughts on the
Thought Record (Beck, 2005; Beck, 1995; Greenberger & Padesky, 1995).
Evidence for the Thought
: Gathering the evidence for the thought is not included in
all versions of the Thought Record. The purpose is to acknowledge the kernel of
truth in the person’s thoughts. It can be validating for individuals to hear that their
thoughts are not ridiculous and there is a “reason” why they find the thoughts so
compelling. This exercise may be helpful in combating resistance that can develop
during the disputation or challenge part of the Thought Record. Thus, the evidence
for the thought that “I am going to become sick” may be that a depression devel-
oped subsequent to the insomnia. It is important that evidence written in this col-
umn be factual. Thus, Mr. R’s evidence that “It just feels like I won’t sleep, so I
won’t” is an example of emotional reasoning and not factual. Socratic Questioning
(that is, using questions to elicit particular responses) focused on factual evidence
in this column, which can be used to challenge cognitive errors and communicate
the idea that thoughts are not facts. We generally ask people to modify the piece of
evidence listed in this column so that it is factual, or we ask them to consider cross-
ing it out if it is not really an evidence. In other cases, we ask them to address the
cognitive error in the evidence against the thought column.
Evidence against the Thought
: This is the column most associated with Cognitive
Therapy as it is the column wherein the disputation occurs. It is here wherein the
veracity or the utility of the thought comes under scrutiny. Traditional Cognitive
Therapy focuses on thoughts being erroneous. In some cases, clients might receive
a list of Cognitive Errors along with reasons for why they are incorrect to aid them
in disputing thoughts. For example, they may receive information that
“Catastrophizing” is an example of a cognitive error because it overestimates the
likelihood of the most extreme possible alternative occurring. Or “all or none/
dichotomous thinking” is an error because it considers only two extreme outcomes
and ignores the far more likely moderate “everything in between.” For example, the
thought that “I didn’t sleep at all last night” is highly unlikely as most people sleep
sometime (however, briefly) during a 24-h day. It may be that the person only slept
for 2 h but claims to have not slept
at all
. This type of thinking fuels anxiety, so we
ask people to modify it to something more accurate and thus more helpful.
116
8 Cognitive Strategies for Managing Anxiety and Insomnia
In Mr. R’s Thought Record, he addresses the emotional reasoning listed in the
evidence for the thought by acknowledging that it was not a fact in the evidence
against the thought column and added that just because something feels as though
it is true does not necessarily mean that it is true.
There are many questions that can help with the evidence against the thought
column. For example, a classic restructuring question is whether something is true
100% of the time. Mr. R acknowledged that it is not 100% certain that he would not
sleep well. Another common question is to ask whether there is a particular down-
side to having that particular hot thought. We do not advocate focusing on “errors”
exclusively as it is often more helpful to focus on the adaptiveness or cost of buying
into particular thoughts instead. In Mr. R’s case, we do not focus on whether it is
accurate that he will have a panic attack. Arguably, we could say that he is catastro-
phizing by assuming that his anxiety symptoms will culminate into the worst possible
outcome – a panic attack, especially since these symptoms did not actually end in
a panic attack in this instance. Instead, we focus on the
cost
of focusing on whether
he will have a panic attack – in his case, the cost is feeling more anxious, thus making
it more likely that he could have had a panic attack. Focusing on the accuracy of
thoughts can become tricky when people are accurately perceiving negative out-
comes, but focusing on the adaptiveness of particular thoughts is a useful endeavor
(i.e., that some thoughts are anxiety-provoking and thus not helpful).
Adaptive, balanced, coping thought
: This column attempts to acknowledge the kernel
of truth in the evidence for the thought while focusing on the evidence against the
thought. Thus, the thought is modified into a more helpful, adaptive, and balanced
cognition. We refer to it as a coping thought because we encourage people to write
down the thoughts that are most helpful to consider when they are particularly dis-
tressed. Mr. R’s examples are: “Telling myself that I’ll never sleep makes me feel more