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Daniel Fryer

Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy: As Easy as ABC

Posted by Daniel Fryer Over 1 Year Ago


In a slight case of acronym overkill, Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT) is a form of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) that takes a simple-yet-cunning approach to mental wellness, where activating events (A) trigger beliefs (B) that cause consequences (C). To find out more, read on…

Pioneered and developed in the mid-1950s by a New York psychotherapist called Albert Ellis, REBT predates the more commonly practised form of CBT (developed by the psychiatrist Aaron T. Beck) by about 10 years.

Back in the humble beginnings of both, REBT was known as rational therapy (RT) and CBT was known as cognitive therapy (CT). Later, they both became two separate but similar branches of the same CBT tree.

Ellis’ REBT follows the philosophy that it’s not the things in life that disturb you, but the beliefs you hold about those things that disturbs you.

So, if you’re thinking, feeling, or acting in a way that you don’t like, but don’t seem to be able to change, REBT helps you to identify and challenge the unhealthy beliefs that you hold in the face of that event, whilst at the same time helping you to identify and re-enforce a series of much more helpful and rational beliefs. Change your beliefs and you change the way you think, feel and act.

Learning your ABCDE

REBT follows the ABCDE model of psychological health in which activating events (A) trigger beliefs (B) that cause consequences (C). These beliefs are challenged and disputed (D) to help promote a more effective (E) and rational way of looking at that original activating event.

Activating events can be anything: something that has happened in the past, something that is happening now, or something that might happen in the future. They can be real (Help, I’ve been fired!) or they can be imaginary (Oh no! I think I’m going to be fired!).

Consequences, meanwhile, are your thoughts, your feelings, your behaviours, your emotions and, even, your symptoms. Anxiety, for instance, comes with a whole of host of very real, very physical symptoms attached to it.

If your beliefs at B are unhealthy and irrational, then all your consequences at C will also be unhealthy and irrational. But, if your beliefs are healthy and rational, then all your consequences will, likewise, be healthy and rational.

And, by that, for instance, we mean the difference between unhealthily anxious (in a stomach-churning, can’t think straight kind of way) and healthily worried (in a calm, ‘I don’t like it but I can deal with it’ kind of way).

After all, it’s not always possible to change what has happened to you, but it’s always possible to change what you tell yourself about it. Healthy beliefs will always lead to a saner, more rational and much happier you.

If you would like to find a therapist that practises REBT then you’re already reading the work of one who does. But you can also find more on websites for the Association for Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (www.arebt.net) and the British Association for Behavioural & Cognitive Psychotherapies (www.babcp.com).