Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) is a psychological treatment that combines mindfulness meditation practices with principles from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). It could have been originally developed to help people prevent relapse in depression, but it could be also used for anxiety, stress, and emotional regulation.
Core Idea
MBCT teaches people to observe their thoughts and emotions without automatically reacting to them.
Instead of trying to change or fight thoughts, you learn to notice them as mental events, “just thoughts,” not facts.
Example:
- Thought: “I’m a failure.”
- Traditional reaction: Believe it and feel worse.
- MBCT approach: “I notice my mind is producing a self-critical thought.”
This creates psychological distance from the inner critic.
Key Components
MBCT usually could run as an 8-week program with group sessions.
1. Mindfulness Meditation
Participants practice:
- Breath awareness
- Body scan meditation
- Mindful walking
- Mindful eating
These practices strengthen attention and awareness of the present moment.
2. Cognitive Awareness
People learn to notice:
- automatic negative thoughts
- self-critical inner dialogue
- rumination patterns
This is especially relevant to depression relapse, where people often fall back into habitual thinking loops.
3. Decentering
One of the most important MBCT skills.
Decentering: seeing thoughts as mental events, not reality.
Example:
Instead of “This thought is true,” the shift becomes:
“I’m noticing that my mind is generating this thought.”
4. Breaking the Rumination Cycle
MBCT helps interrupt cycles like:
- negative mood
- self-critical thinking
- rumination
- worsening mood
Mindfulness interrupts the loop before it spirals.
Conditions MBCT Helps
Research shows benefits for:
- recurrent major depression
- anxiety disorders
- chronic stress
- trauma-related rumination
- emotional dysregulation
Many studies show MBCT can reduce relapse in depression by ~40–50% in people with multiple past episodes.
A Simple MBCT Exercise
3-Minute Breathing Space
- Awareness
Notice what is present: thoughts, feelings, body sensations. - Breathing
Focus attention on the breath. - Expanding
Expand awareness to the whole body.
This short practice is used to interrupt automatic negative thinking.
Possible Psychological Mechanism
MBCT could work through:
- metacognitive awareness
- reduced cognitive fusion
- improved emotional regulation
- decreased rumination
It could train the mind to move from “doing mode” to “being mode.”
Interesting Information
MBCT is interesting, because:
- intense self-monitoring and inner criticism can suppress intuitive cognition
- mindfulness reduces cognitive noise and evaluative filtering
Many researchers believe mindfulness increases open monitoring awareness, which may facilitate subtle perception and intuition.
Shervan K Shahhian