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A new paper by Robert Leahy of Weill-Cornell Medical College, published in the Journal of Clinical Psychology and covered by Psychology Today, takes a different approach to the emotion by mapping the specific thoughts that feed it. Using Emotional Schema Therapy, Leahy identifies 12 cognitive distortions that turn a manageable feeling into a full-scale internal disaster.
The framework is built around the idea that jealousy is driven by the stories people tell themselves about their emotions, including the belief that the feeling will never pass, that it’s shameful to have, and that it’s somehow unique to them. Attachment style factors in, too. Securely attached people tend to let jealous thoughts move through without much damage. Anxiously attached people, already running on a low-grade fear of abandonment, can find that a completely innocent work happy hour becomes a four-hour mental meltdown.
Ryan, a 44-year-old man Leahy treated for extreme jealousy, spent the early part of therapy just learning to name what was happening. He’d pay attention to which distortions showed up throughout the day, then bring them to a dedicated 15-minute “Worry Time” session each evening rather than letting them run 24 hours. Put the jealousy on a schedule. Stop letting it freelance.
Here are the 12 thoughts, per Leahy’s research:
The point of naming them isn’t to pile shame onto people who already feel bad. Most of these thoughts are automatic, fast, and feel completely airtight in the moment. The exercise is catching them before they compound.
Getting comfortable with not knowing everything was the hardest part for Ryan. But he got there. He also came to see his jealousy as a signal that he actually gave a damn about the relationship. Way healthier than checking your partner’s location for the fourth time before bed.
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