What is REBT?
REBT is a practical, action-oriented approach to coping with problems and
enhancing personal growth. REBT places a good deal of its focus on the
present: on currently-held attitudes, painful emotions and maladaptive
behaviors that can sabotage a fuller experience of life. REBT also provides
people with an individualized set of proven techniques for helping them
to solve problems. REBT practitioners work closely with individuals, seeking
to help uncover their individual set of beliefs (attitudes, expectations
and personal rules) that frequently lead to emotional distress.
REBT then provides a variety of methods to help people reformulate their
dysfunctional beliefs into more sensible, realistic and helpful ones by
employing the powerful REBT technique called "disputing." Ultimately,
REBT helps individuals to develop a philosophy and approach to living that
can increase their effectiveness and satisfaction at work, in living successfully
with others, in parenting and educational settings, in making our community
and environment healthier, and in enhancing their own emotional health
and personal welfare.
But don't you need to uncover the past in order to really understand
people's problems?
Contrary to what some people erroneously believe, REBT does recognize that
we may be strongly influenced by events in early life. Much of our philosophy
of life—what we think about ourselves and our values—is learned
from past experiences. But the past is with us in the form of beliefs that
we carry in our head in the present. REBT hones in on the beliefs that
are harmful in our current emotional life and behavior—whether those
beliefs arose in the distant reaches of our youth or within the past few
weeks. REBT believes that the "nuttiness" of our past exerts
its influence in our current-day thinking patterns and beliefs. Although
we cannot change the past, we can change how we let the past influence
the way we are today and the way we want to be tomorrow. In this sense,
REBT is an optimistic approach to living and to solving problems.
I've heard that REBT tries to do away with negative emotions altogether
by making people think logically and objectively. Is that true?
This is a fundamental misconception of REBT. Perhaps more so than any other
approach, REBT emphasizes the involvement of emotions in just about every
aspect of our thinking and actions. REBT proposes that when our negative
emotions become too intense (e.g., rage, panic, or depression), not only
do we feel very unhappy, but our ability to manage our lives begins to
deteriorate. At these times, the quality of our thinking changes and we
begin to take things over-personally, blow things out of perspective, condemn
others for their transgressions and generally become less tolerant of life's
hassles and hardships. REBT helps restore the emotional balance in an individuals
life by providing methods for thinking more realistically and levelheadedly
about ourselves, other people, and the world.
But aren't feelings such as anger and anxiety normal and appropriate?
Of course! But it is the quality of feelings that is important. Experiencing
intense irritation and displeasure when things go wrong can motivate you
to change frustrating conditions. Feelings of rage, on the other hand,
often land you in a smoldering stew, where you're likely not to take any
action at all, or to act in ways that are impulsive and self-defeating.
A bit of anxiety or some degree of concern about facing the boss can add
an edge of excitement that sharpens performance; excessive anxiety, however,
can interfere with thinking and action. While REBT tries to minimize debilitating
emotions, that does not mean that it's unhealthy to experience keen feelings
of sorrow or displeasure when you experience misfortune.
With REBT's emphasis on reducing emotional upsets in the face of unfairness
or misfortune, doesn't it encourage the preservation of the status quo?
(Not to mention take away energy to make things better?)
One of REBT's favorite maxims (first expressed by Reinhold Neibuhr) is: "Grant
me the courage to change the things I can change, the serenity to accept
those that I cannot change, and the wisdom to know the difference." REBT
seeks to empower individuals both by helping them more effectively handle
their own painful emotions, and by enabling them to change their own behavior
and improve their world where possible. When you get too upset, it is much
more difficult to behave in constructive ways. By gaining better control
over upsetting emotions, you become far more able to act assertively to
change bad outside circumstances.
With all this emphasis on "me," doesn't REBT encourage
selfishness? Don't we already have too much selfishness in this world?
A very good question. Yes, many people are too selfish for their own and
others' good. REBT provides people with the skills and attitudes to become
less selfish. Selfishness is often motivated by ego-gratification. Many
selfish people tend to be very needy and demanding and are intent on getting
what they want at any cost in order to feel good about themselves. REBT
helps people to reduce their own neediness and specifically their need
to prove themselves to others. To discourage selfishness, REBT teaches
what Albert Ellis calls the value of rational self-acceptance. According
to Ellis, healthy people are usually glad to be alive and accept themselves
just because they are alive and have some capacity to enjoy themselves.
They refuse to measure their intrinsic worth by their extrinsic accomplishments,
materialistic possessions and by what others think of them. They frankly
choose to accept themselves unconditionally; and then try to completely
avoid globally rating themselves—meaning their totality or their "essence." They
attempt to enjoy rather than prove themselves. Thus, rather than acting
out of selfishness, they learn to operate from responsible self-interest.
Isn't REBT just about intellectual disputing?
REBT does help people by teaching them to recognize and change those aspects
of their thinking which are not sensible, accurate or useful. This is probably
what is meant by intellectual disputing. However, it also uses a host of
other emotional and behavioral methods designed to reduce upset feelings
and increase personal effectiveness. These include rational-emotive imagery;
assertiveness, self nurture, risk-taking, and other behavioral homework
assignments; communication skill training; and "shame-attacking" exercises.
I've heard that REBT is only really useful with very intelligent
people.
REBT can work very well with very bright people. Good brain power can help
certain people analyze more quickly the ways in which their thinking is
illogical when they are upset. However, just because you have the potential
to quickly see the irrational qualities of your thinking, doesn't mean
you will use your potential to help yourself. Many very bright people are
more motivated to argue the "rightness" of their beliefs than
to consider they might be wrong. Over the years, REBT methods have been
adopted for children as young as five or six years old, and even for the
learning-impaired. Rational emotive behavior therapists are trained to
tailor REBT to meet the wide variety of intellectual, cognitive-developmental
and other personal characteristics of clients.
I've heard that REBT therapists do a lot of confronting. This doesn't
sound very empathic or supportive.
REBT practitioners are very concerned about establishing a helpful, supportive,
and facilitative alliance with people. They realize that not all people
come to therapy ready for action and change, and that some people—because
of their personalities and problems—require a great deal of support
and empathy before they are ready to change. At the same time, REBT practitioners
tend to take an active role with their clients. They help provide people
as quickly as possible with the tools to help them change their beliefs
leading to disturbing emotions, thus freeing them to confront their everyday
problems with all their resources.
By being so active, aren't REBT therapists "controlling" the
client?
REBT practitioners have excellent insight into the nature of problems in
living and how to help clients free themselves from their emotional misery
about them. They are conscious that many clients find it difficult to address
the main problems in their lives and their own inner obstacles to happiness.
Rational emotive behavior therapists work collaboratively with clients
to clarify existing problems, and to identify important general problems
to work on together. And yes, REBT practitioners are active in teaching
clients new methods for changing their thinking, feelings and behavior.
However, REBT does not control the client. Rather, it empowers people to
manage their own emotional problems more effectively and to take control
of their own behavior in order to try to obtain more of what they want
in life.
Does REBT force its own beliefs about what's rational on people?
REBT defines rational beliefs as those which help people live satisfying,
healthy, and fulfilled lives. Over the years, Albert Ellis has identified
a set of rational beliefs or values which abet a person's happiness and
survival. For example, rational self-acceptance—which involves people
giving up the self-rating game—seems to help people significantly
reduce anxiety and increase feelings of self-acceptance. High frustration
tolerance, which encourages people to accept (not like) life's hardships
and other people's imperfections, leads to greater perseverance, patience,
and the ability to get along with others. REBT practitioners are careful,
however, not to impose "rational" beliefs. REBT accepts that
there are also other "non-rational" belief systems that can
help people achieve happiness. REBT accepts the value system of the client
and works within that framework to facilitate the client's goals.
By emphasizing the individual's beliefs and values and eliminating "should's," isn't
REBT incompatible with religious values?
REBT has discovered that when people impose rigid expectations on themselves,
other people, and the world they are likely to experience unnecessary emotional
distress. In REBT, these expectations are expressed as absolutistic "shoulds," "oughts," and "musts." For
example, "I should be successful in important things I do at work" can
get you into emotional hot water when you make mistakes or fail. REBT affirms
the value of achievement, but helps clients give up their demanding ness
for total success at all times. REBT advocates instead a more preferential
system of values: one which encourages people to work toward their professional
goals, but never to condemn and damn themselves when they fail to achieve
them. In a similar way, REBT is useful in helping people from diverse religious
backgrounds to be more self-accepting, as well as more accepting of other
people who may not share their particular values.
REBT makes sense, but I can't seem to apply it to myself—I
understand it "intellectually," but not "emotionally."
When you think about it, what REBT sets out to accomplish sounds pretty
ambitious: its goal is no less than changing core irrational beliefs that
you've spent your whole life rehearsing, living, and "feeling." For
many people, it takes some time before the emotional "gut" follows
what their head already "knows." Learning new ways of thinking
and new beliefs can be compared to a horse-driven carriage which has had
the same driver and horse for years. The horse knows where to go without
having to be told by the driver. Once you change the driver (new ways of
thinking), the horse still goes in the same direction (old emotions and
behaviors), but the driver has to strain at the reins to produce a change
in direction (new emotions and behaviors). The positive aspect of the strain
you may experience in using REBT is that it shows you are learning new
ways of feeling and behaving and that you are taking charge of your own
direction in life. |