Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) in Massachusetts

Your thoughts shape your world; CBT helps you reshape them. At Aftermath Behavioral Health in Wakefield, Massachusetts, we use this practical, evidence-based therapy to help you feel steadier and more in control.

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What Is CBT?

CBT vs. DBT

CBT and DBT are valuable evidence-based therapies, but they serve different purposes. CBT works on shifting unhelpful thoughts that impact behavior, while DBT (dialectical behavior therapy) helps people handle intense emotions and build healthier relationships. What’s best for you depends entirely on what you’re working through.

What Is Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Used For?

CBT helps people break patterns that are holding them back. It can be used to treat a wide range of mental health conditions and is especially helpful for people who feel stuck in negative thoughts, behaviors, or emotional loops.

At Aftermath Behavioral Health, we use CBT to support recovery from:

How Does CBT Work?

CBT teaches you how to understand your inner dialogue (the way you talk to yourself) and how that affects your emotions and behavior. Instead of digging into the past, CBT focuses on what’s happening right now and gives you tools you can use right away, in real life, to feel steadier and capable.

Core Principles

CBT is built on a few practical ideas:

  • The way you think affects how you feel and what you do
  • Negative thoughts can fuel distress and unhelpful behaviors
  • Learning to reframe these thoughts can change your outlook and choices
  • Skills like problem-solving and stress management can be practiced over time

Stages of CBT

At the start, your therapist will help you clarify what’s bothering you and what you’d like to work on. From there, you’ll explore thought patterns that cause distress and try out new ways to respond. Each session has a clear goal, and between sessions, you’ll practice what you’re learning in real life, like training your mind the way you’d train a muscle.

CBT Exercises

CBT includes practical tools you can take with you, helping to reinforce your new skills. Some examples include:

  • Thought records to break down and challenge negative thinking
  • Behavioral activation to rebuild joy and motivation
  • Exposure tasks to face fears step by step
  • Problem-solving practice for stressful situations
  • Mindfulness and grounding techniques to stay present
  • “Thinking trap” tools to spot patterns like catastrophizing or all-or-nothing thinking

Outpatient Programs at Aftermath Behavioral Health

CBT is available across all of our outpatient levels of care. Whether you’re new to therapy or looking for ongoing support, we have a path that can work for you.

Psychiatric Day Treatment

Intensive Psychiatric Outpatient

Outpatient Mental Health

We partner with numerous insurance providers to make your treatment affordable and accessible.

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FAQs

Does cognitive-behavioral therapy work?

Yes. CBT is one of the most well-studied and effective therapies available. It’s shown to reduce symptoms for a wide range of mental health conditions.

CBT is based on the connection between thoughts, emotions, and actions. Changing how you think can improve how you feel and behave.

No. Cognitive processing therapy (CPT) is a specialized form of CBT used mainly to treat trauma, especially PTSD.

TF-CBT stands for trauma-focused CBT. It’s a structured therapy approach for children, teens, and their caregivers who’ve experienced trauma.

CBT is considered a top therapy for anxiety. It helps people learn to manage anxious thoughts, reduce avoidance, and feel more in control.

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