Feeling Triggered? A CBT Exercise to Separate Facts from Assumptions

Reduce distress. <10 minutes. CBT.

For so many of us, when we feel a big emotion — panic, shame, anger, or fear — it’s easy for the mind to fill in blanks.

 “They’re mad at me.”

 “This always happens.”

 “I can’t handle this.”
That’s normal; it’s your nervous system trying to predict danger and regain control.
But when you’re unsure if your reaction fits now or echoes then, that’s the cue to check the facts.


When to use: You feel a big reaction; you’re not sure if it fits now or echoes then.

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5 steps to a more grounded calm.

Step 1: Catch the story

“The story I’m telling is…”

This is your brain’s automatic meaning-making.
It’s not “bad” — it’s just what your mind does to stay safe.


Examples:

  • “They’re ignoring me.”
  • “I’m in trouble.”
  • “I’ll get rejected if I say no.”

Tip: Keep it short — one sentence.

Step 2: Write down the facts


“What I can observe is…”

Facts are observable, verifiable, and measurable.

Ask yourself:

  • Would a neutral person in the room agree this happened?
  • Can it be captured on camera or repeated as a quote?
  • Is it something my senses noticed — not what I assumed?

Examples of facts:

  • “They haven’t replied to my message for two hours.”
  • “They raised their voice when they spoke.”
  • “My heart is pounding; I’m clenching my jaw.”

Not facts:

  • “They’re mad.”
  • “They don’t care.”
  • “They’re disrespecting me.”

"I've grown a lot since doing this, and it's helped build confidence."

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Step 3: Check the fit

“Does my emotion fit these facts — or the past they remind me of?”

proportional emotion fits the current event.
A historical emotion fits a past event that your body still tags as unsafe.

Ask:

  • How intense is my feeling (0–10)?
  • Would someone else in this same situation likely feel this strongly?
  • Does this remind me of a familiar old pattern (being ignored, criticized, left out, controlled)?

If it feels familiar but bigger than the situation, it’s likely historical.
That doesn’t mean it’s wrong — it means your system is trying to protect you with old data.

Step 4: Fact-check the evidence

If your emotion is intense, but facts are thin, run through this quick checklist:

  • What proof do I have for my story?
  • What proof do I have against it?
  • Have I experienced a similar moment that turned out differently?

Step 5: List alternatives

  • What’s another possible explanation that fits the facts?
  • If I had to bet money on this story being true — would I?

Example:
Story → “They’re mad at me.”
Facts → “They replied ‘k’ to my text.”
Against → “They were in a meeting when I texted.”
Alternative → “They were distracted or tired.”
Decision → “Wait until I have more data before assuming rejection.”

Example self-talk:

“This feels like old rejection, not current danger. I’m safe right now. I’ll check in tomorrow instead of spiraling tonight.”

The Author : Lara Gregorio, LCSW

Lara Gregorio, LCSW, is a licensed therapist with more than 25 years of experience helping people better understand themselves, navigate emotions, and build healthier, more resilient lives. Through 4C Mental Health, she translates evidence-based mental health concepts into practical, approachable tools that people can actually use in everyday life.

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