id: "4bbb9191-446d-599d-b33d-e954078ab418" name: "CBT-based Self-Acceptance and Perspective Shift Protocol" description: "A structured CBT-informed macro-protocol for clients with interpersonal difficulties rooted in negative self-perception; focuses on building self-acceptance as prerequisite to relational change, then systematically shifting cognitive perspective toward positivity and strengths." version: "0.1.0" tags:
- "self-acceptance"
- "cognitive reframing"
- "strengths-based"
- "interpersonal CBT"
- "CBT protocol"
- "认知行为疗法"
- "profile:psychology::认知行为疗法"
- "axis:疗法"
- "class:认知行为疗法"
- "kind:child"
- "document_merge_state:active"
- "canonical:true" triggers:
- "Client presents with interpersonal distress linked to low self-worth or self-criticism"
- "Client exhibits rigid negative self-appraisal and difficulty identifying personal strengths"
- "Therapist has confirmed absence of acute safety risk" examples:
- input: "Client says: 'I ruined the group project because I’m socially incompetent.'" output: "Therapist responds: 'Let’s slow down—what’s the evidence that this one event proves global incompetence? And what’s one thing you did contribute, even if small?'" notes: "Targets global labeling and invites strength-spotting without invalidating distress."
- input: "Client reports avoiding dorm conversations after mispronouncing a peer’s name." output: "Therapist asks: 'What’s one alternative explanation for how that peer might have experienced it—and what strength does trying to learn their name reflect?'" notes: "Shifts perspective while anchoring in observable effort and intention."
CBT-based Self-Acceptance and Perspective Shift Protocol
A structured CBT-informed macro-protocol for clients with interpersonal difficulties rooted in negative self-perception; focuses on building self-acceptance as prerequisite to relational change, then systematically shifting cognitive perspective toward positivity and strengths.
Prompt
Begin by anchoring self-acceptance as foundational: explicitly link self-criticism to interpersonal withdrawal. Use guided Socratic questioning to surface automatic thoughts about the self, then collaboratively identify evidence for and against rigid self-judgments. Introduce 'imperfection tolerance' as a skill—not as goal achievement but as practiced stance. Next, shift focus to perspective: elicit recent neutral or mildly stressful events (e.g., class interaction, family call), and guide client to generate at least one plausible positive or adaptive interpretation—emphasizing agency and observable strength. Finally, scaffold problem-solving generalization: when new challenges arise, co-construct a brief 'strength-based response plan' naming one personal strength and one concrete action step. Maintain this sequence across sessions; do not advance phases until prior phase shows consistent verbal/behavioral markers of integration.
Objective
Establish foundational self-acceptance and restructure maladaptive cognitive framing to enable sustainable interpersonal improvement
Applicable Signals
- Verbal self-labeling (e.g., 'I'm just awkward', 'I always mess up')
- Avoidance of social opportunities despite desire to connect
- Inability to name personal strengths without prompting or disclaimers
Contraindications
- Client is in active crisis (e.g., suicidal ideation, severe dissociation)
- Client lacks capacity for cognitive reflection (e.g., acute psychosis, severe cognitive impairment)
- Primary presenting issue is behavioral dyscontrol without clear cognitive mediation
Intervention Moves
- Socratic questioning on self-appraisal rigidity
- Evidence-for/evidence-against charting for self-statements
- Strength-based behavioral experiment design
- Imperfection tolerance scaling (0–10) with reflection
Workflow Steps
- Phase 1 (Sessions 1–6): Establish self-acceptance foundation via cognitive restructuring of global self-statements; introduce imperfection tolerance exercises; track self-talk frequency and valence.
- Phase 2 (Sessions 7–12): Systematically practice perspective reframing using real-time interpersonal vignettes; train strength-spotting through behavioral activation logs.
- Phase 3 (Sessions 13–18): Generalize skills via 'challenge-response mapping': client names an anticipated interpersonal stressor, identifies a relevant strength, and co-constructs a micro-behavioral experiment.
Constraints
- Must be delivered across ≥12 sessions with weekly consistency
- Requires baseline psychoeducation on CBT model (e.g., thought-feeling-behavior link) before Phase 1
- No phase advancement without observable evidence of client's use of self-acceptance language or strength identification in session
Cautions
- Avoid premature strength listing that feels dismissive; always pair with validation of struggle
- Do not frame perspective shift as 'positive thinking'—emphasize realistic reinterpretation, not denial
- If client resists self-acceptance framing, explore underlying fears (e.g., 'What would it mean if you stopped criticizing yourself?') before re-engaging
Output Contract
- Client consistently applies self-acceptance language (e.g., 'I'm learning to accept that I don't have to be perfect to belong') and identifies at least two personal strengths when describing challenges—demonstrated across three non-consecutive sessions without therapist prompting.
Example Therapist Responses
Example 1
- Client/Input: Client says: 'I ruined the group project because I’m socially incompetent.'
- Therapist/Output: Therapist responds: 'Let’s slow down—what’s the evidence that this one event proves global incompetence? And what’s one thing you did contribute, even if small?'
- Notes: Targets global labeling and invites strength-spotting without invalidating distress.
Example 2
- Client/Input: Client reports avoiding dorm conversations after mispronouncing a peer’s name.
- Therapist/Output: Therapist asks: 'What’s one alternative explanation for how that peer might have experienced it—and what strength does trying to learn their name reflect?'
- Notes: Shifts perspective while anchoring in observable effort and intention.
Files
references/evidence.mdreferences/evidence_manifest.json
Triggers
- Client presents with interpersonal distress linked to low self-worth or self-criticism
- Client exhibits rigid negative self-appraisal and difficulty identifying personal strengths
- Therapist has confirmed absence of acute safety risk
Examples
Example 1
Input:
Client says: 'I ruined the group project because I’m socially incompetent.'
Output:
Therapist responds: 'Let’s slow down—what’s the evidence that this one event proves global incompetence? And what’s one thing you did contribute, even if small?'
Notes:
Targets global labeling and invites strength-spotting without invalidating distress.
Example 2
Input:
Client reports avoiding dorm conversations after mispronouncing a peer’s name.
Output:
Therapist asks: 'What’s one alternative explanation for how that peer might have experienced it—and what strength does trying to learn their name reflect?'
Notes:
Shifts perspective while anchoring in observable effort and intention.