Your view of yourself can change day to day, so it doesn't really matter what you think about yourself. In a study comparing meta-cognitive therapy (MCT) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), it was found that changing meta-beliefs in MCT had a greater impact on core beliefs about oneself than directly working on core beliefs in CBT. This finding surprised the researcher and highlights the importance of addressing meta-cognitive beliefs for transforming one's self-perception.
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What is metacognitive therapy? How does MCT differ from CBT, DBT, and other mental health therapy paradigms? How do we know we're spending time worrying about the right things? How much time spent worrying is actually useful? How aware are we of our own tendencies to ruminate on certain negative thoughts? Does MCT avoid all content-based problem-solving? What is the state of the evidence for MCT?
Dr. Pia Callesen is one of Denmark's most educated and experienced metacognitive psychologists. She has more than 25 years of experience as a therapist and has completed the official 2-year metacognitive certification training in Manchester at the MCT Institute and the subsequent 1-year advanced level masterclass in Oxford by Professor Adrian Wells. At the end of 2016, she completed her PhD at Manchester University with Professor Adrian Wells. The PhD contained a large randomised controlled trial with research into the effects of metacognitive therapy treatment for depression.
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