YouVersion logo
Dugme za pretraživanje

Don't Believe Everything You ThinkUzorak

Don't Believe Everything You Think

DAN 6 OD 8

The cognitive distortion of “negative filtering” involves focusing only on the negative aspects of different situations, and rarely (if ever) noticing the positive aspects. One example might be if someone performed in a play, and afterward, everyone told them how good their performance was except for one person, who jokingly said, “You could have done better.” Negative filtering would mean focusing almost exclusively on this one comment and using it as evidence that they embarrassed themselves onstage.

Some people are more naturally melancholy or pessimistic, while others are more naturally upbeat and optimistic. From a moral point of view, one temperament isn’t necessarily better than the other, but sometimes the more negative point of view can have negative mental health effects for those who hold it. The pessimist may say that they’re more prepared for bad things when they do happen (almost every pessimist likes to say that they’re “a realist”), but there is a cost to anticipating negativity at every turn.

How dark life seems also depends to some extent on how long of a view we’re taking on it. Today, this week or this month might be terrible—but at the end of the story of Christianity, as Revelation 21:5 puts it, “There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain.” Life may indeed be brutal at times, but in the end, happiness wins out, joy wins out, and love wins out.

Just because we more naturally notice the negative aspects of life doesn’t mean there aren’t also positive aspects. When our minds naturally drift in the direction of the negative, it takes work to train them to also notice the positive. As we said in our section on overgeneralizing, writing down things we’re grateful for, and positive things that happen can have a positive impact on our mental health, and over time can help break us out of the distortion of negative filtering.

Sveto Pismo

Dan 5Dan 7

O ovom planu

Don't Believe Everything You Think

Sometimes we are warned not to believe everything we read. Other times we are warned not to believe everything we hear. With AI-generated images, we are learning not to believe everything we see. But we aren’t reminded nearly as often to question our own thought processes—to remember not to believe everything we think. In this short devotional, our goal is to help you learn to recognize distorted and harmful patterns of thinking in your own life, lean into Biblical wisdom to disrupt these patterns and equip and empower you to share these strategies with others.

More