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Emotional Reasoning: When Your Emotions Replace Reality

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
4 min read

"I feel rejected, so I am rejected." "I feel worthless, so I am worthless." "I sense my relationship is falling apart, so it is." This reasoning seems logical, but it rests on a fundamental error: mistaking your emotions for facts. Émotional reasoning is one of the most insidious cognitive distortions identified by Aaron Beck, because it disguises itself as intuition.

Definition of Émotional Reasoning

Émotional reasoning is the tendency to use your emotions as evidence of reality. The underlying logic: "If I feel it, then it must be true."

Burns (1980), a student of Beck, placed it among the 10 fundamental cognitive distortions. It's one of the hardest to detect because emotions are experienced as indisputable realities.

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Émotional Reasoning in Relationships: Examples

  • "I feel insecure in this relationship, so it's dangerous" — When insecurity stems from your abandonment schema, not your partner's behavior
  • "I don't feel butterflies, so I'm no longer in love" — When mature love manifests differently from initial passion
  • "I feel guilty, so I must have done something wrong" — When guilt can be the result of a self-sacrifice schema
  • "I feel angry, so he disrespected me" — When anger can be a reaction to a cognitive distortion

Why Is Émotional Reasoning So Convincing?

The Power of Émotions

Émotions are intense, bodily experiences. When anxiety manifests (racing heart, knotted stomach, tension), your body screams that there's danger. It's extremely difficult to question a message so visceral.

The Émotion/Fact Confusion in Society

Current culture values listening to your emotions: "Trust your instinct," "Listen to your heart." These well-intentioned pieces of advice can become problematic when emotions are distorted by anxiety, dépression, or early schemas.

The Consequences in Your Relationship

  • Impulsive décisions: leaving your partner under the spell of a fleeting émotion
  • Conflicts based on feelings: "I sense you betrayed me" with no evidence whatsoever
  • Mutual invalidation: both partners defend their emotional truth with no space for facts
  • Chronic doubt: anxiety is interpreted as a legitimate alarm signal

Overcoming Émotional Reasoning: 4 CBT Tools

1. Name It to Tame It

Research in neuroimaging (Lieberman et al., 2007) has shown that naming an émotion reduces its intensity by activating the prefrontal cortex and calming the amygdala. Say: "I notice I'm feeling anxious" rather than "My relationship is in danger."

2. The Key Question

"Is this émotion giving me reliable information about reality, or is it telling me about my current inner state?"

3. The Fact Test

List observable facts (not interpretations) that support your émotion, and those that contradict it. Often, the contradictory facts are more numerous.

4. Buying Time

Intense emotions rarely last more than 20 minutes at the physiological level. Wait before acting: "I'll wait for my émotion to subside before making a décision."

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Conclusion

Émotional reasoning is the most subtle trap of our psychology: it makes us believe our emotions are reality. Learning to distinguish "I feel" from "it is" is one of the most liberating lessons of CBT. Your emotions are precious — they deserve to be heard, not blindly obeyed.

Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist

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Watch: Go Further

To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:

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