From grimoire
Restructures distorted automatic thoughts into balanced alternatives using CBT techniques. Useful for addressing catastrophic thinking, anxiety, or depression.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/grimoire:apply-cognitive-reframingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Identify and restructure distorted automatic thoughts into balanced, evidence-based alternatives using CBT's core technique.
Identify and restructure distorted automatic thoughts into balanced, evidence-based alternatives using CBT's core technique.
Adopted by: Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy, NICE (UK), WHO mental health integration programs, US Veterans Affairs CBT programs, 80%+ of accredited CBT training curricula.
Impact: Meta-analyses show CBT (built on reframing) achieves 50-60% remission in depression (Cuijpers et al., 2019, Psychological Medicine); effect size d=0.82 vs. controls for anxiety disorders (Hofmann & Smits, 2008, Journal of Clinical Psychiatry).
Why best: Targets the cognitive triad (self, world, future) at the source — maladaptive automatic thoughts — rather than surface symptoms, producing durable schema-level change.
Sources: Beck, A.T. (1976). Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders. International Universities Press. Beck Institute clinical guidelines. NICE CG91, CG123.
Elicit the automatic thought — Ask "What went through your mind just before you felt that way?" to surface the specific cognition, not the emotion.
Name the distortion — Identify the cognitive distortion type: all-or-nothing thinking, catastrophizing, mind-reading, fortune-telling, emotional reasoning, labeling, personalization, or should statements.
Examine the evidence for — List concrete facts that appear to support the thought. Keep this brief; the purpose is acknowledgment, not reinforcement.
Examine the evidence against — Identify specific facts, past experiences, or data that contradict the thought. This is the evidentiary core of reframing.
Identify the thinking error — Name precisely how the evidence mismatch reveals a distortion (e.g., "The evidence shows you're using all-or-nothing thinking — missing one deadline doesn't equal total failure").
Generate a balanced alternative — Construct a statement that integrates the valid concerns with the counter-evidence. It must feel credible, not blindly positive (e.g., "I missed this deadline, which is frustrating, and I've met 90% of deadlines this quarter").
Rate belief and emotion before/after — Use a 0-100 scale to measure belief in the original thought and emotional intensity before and after. Even modest shifts (10-15 points) indicate progress.
Identify a behavioral experiment — Design a small real-world test to gather additional evidence (e.g., if the thought is "I'll embarrass myself if I speak up," plan one instance of speaking up and observe the actual outcome).
Assign a between-session practice — Give a thought record worksheet to capture future automatic thoughts and apply the same steps independently.
Review and consolidate — At the next session, examine completed thought records to identify recurrent distortions and target underlying core beliefs.
npx claudepluginhub jeffreytse/grimoire --plugin grimoire2plugins reuse this skill
First indexed Jun 5, 2026
Applies cognitive reframing methodology to identify and correct distorted automatic thoughts causing disproportionate distress.
Guides systematic identification and restructuring of distorted thinking patterns and avoidant behaviors using evidence-based CBT strategies.
Provides DSM-5 diagnostic criteria, evidence-based therapy modalities (CBT, DBT, EMDR, ACT, etc.), treatment planning, and progress measurement for mental health documentation.