Mind Reading in Relationships: Why You're Misinterpreting Everything
"I know exactly what you're thinking." This phrase, spoken with absolute certainty, is a sign of one of the most devastating cognitive distortions in relationships: mind reading. You're convinced you know your partner's intentions, feelings, and thoughts—without ever checking. And most of the time, your interpretation is negative.
What Is Mind Reading in CBT?
Aaron Beck described mind reading as the tendency to attribute mental states to others without sufficient evidence. In relationships, this distortion takes on a particularly toxic form because intimacy creates the illusion of knowing the other person perfectly.
Common examples:
- He sighs → "He's tired of me" (reality: he's exhausted from his day)
- She doesn't reply to the message → "She's deliberately ignoring me" (reality: she's in a meeting)
- He looks at his phone → "He's texting someone else" (reality: he's checking the weather)
- She suggests going out alone → "She doesn't want to be with me anymore" (reality: she needs alone time)
Why Does the Brain Engage in Mind Reading?
Confirmation Bias
Once a negative interpretation forms, the brain filters reality to only retain elements that confirm it. If you think your partner is distant, you'll notice every moment he doesn't look at you—and ignore all the moments he does.
Projection
We often project our own internal states onto others. If you're angry, you'll see anger in your partner's expression. If you're anxious, you'll read anxiety into his gestures.
Attachment Style
People with anxious attachment are particularly prone to mind reading: their alert system constantly scans for signs of rejection. Those with avoidant attachment often project intrusiveness: "She wants to control me."
The Consequences in Relationships
- Conflict escalation: you react to what you believe the other person thinks, not to what they actually say
- Communication breakdown: why talk if the other person "already knows" what you think?
- Sense of injustice: the "read" partner feels misunderstood and falsely judged
- Self-fulfilling prophecy: your reactions to the interpretation end up creating what you feared
5 CBT Stratégies to Stop Mind Reading
1. Behavioral Verification
Instead of deciding alone what the other person thinks, ask: "I get the feeling you're angry—am I wrong?"
2. Separating Fact from Interpretation
Distinguish the observable fact from your interpretation:
- Fact: he hasn't replied to my message for 2 hours
- Interpretation: he's ignoring me
- Other possibilities: he's busy, his phone is on silent, he didn't see the message
3. The Evidence Test
Ask yourself: "What evidence do I have that this interpretation is correct? What evidence do I have against it?"
4. External Perspective
"If my best friend told me this situation, what would I tell them?" This question engages the rational part of your brain.
5. Curiosity Instead of Certainty
Replace "I know that you…" with "I wonder if…" or "I'd like to understand…". Curiosity opens dialogue; certainty closes it.
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No one can read another person's mind—even after 30 years together. Every time you replace certainty with a question, you create space for authentic communication. It's in that space that genuine intimacy can be built.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist🧠
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To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
Rethinking Infidelity - Esther Perel | TEDTEDRetrouvez cet article sur le site principal avec des ressources complementaires.
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