Across
- 2. deeply ingrained assumptions about human nature, time, and ultimate reality, developed within one's sociocultural setting.
- 3. Drawing a conclusion without sufficient supporting evidence (distortion)
- 6. The inferential error where a counselor interprets everything through the lens of a model that is currently most available in their consciousness
- 7. explains emotional disturbances using the ABC formula, where the counselor actively works to Dispute (D) the irrational beliefs (B).
- 9. is the error of perceiving a causal link between two independent events
- 10. an error where events are placed into two opposing, mutually exclusive categories (e.g., perfect or awful)
- 12. helps the client clarify what they are avoiding by staying unwell is The Question, asked as: "What would be different if you were well?"
Down
- 1. developed by Prochaska and DiClemente, posits five main stages of change. The stage where a client acknowledges a problem but is ambivalent is called Contemplation.
- 4. focuses on consequences
- 5. Unconditional Positive Regard (UPR) and Accurate Empathic Understanding.
- 8. defined as cognitive generalizations about the self, derived from past experience, that organizes the processing of self-related information
- 11. focuses on antecedent conditions(stimulus-response elicitation)
