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Catastrophic Thinking

Always expecting the worst

Shirley J. Davis
5 min readOct 29, 2021
Photo by Caleb George on Unsplash

Have you ever believed the worst about a situation that may or may not have happened? For instance, you call home from work, and your partner doesn’t answer. Immediately, you believe that there has been a horrible accident, and you just don’t know about it yet.

That is called catastrophic thinking.

This article will focus on this phenomenon and how to overcome this rumination of doom.

What is Catastrophic Thinking?

Catastrophic thinking is an anxious behavior that may be part of the symptoms of generalized anxiety disorder or other anxiety disorders. With catastrophic thinking, one thinks and ruminates on the worst possible scenario of what is or could happen. Most of the time, it is a subconscious thought pattern, and we are not aware we are dwelling on them.

The cause of catastrophic thinking depends upon the person involved. However, the main answer is that we often associate it with another mental health condition, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and dissociative identity disorder (DID).

There are two primary reasons people with an anxiety disorder, OCD, or developed catastrophic thinking:

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Shirley J. Davis
Shirley J. Davis

Written by Shirley J. Davis

I am an author/speaker/grant writer in the U.S. My passion is authoring information about mental health disorders, especially dissociative identity disorder..

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