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470: Ask David: Rhonda's Three Questions!

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Release Date: 10/06/2025

490: Dr. Taylor Chesney on Sexting, Bullying, and Social Media show art 490: Dr. Taylor Chesney on Sexting, Bullying, and Social Media

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Sexting, Bullying, and Social Media-- A Compassionate, Practical Guide for Parents of Teens Today, we welcome back one of our favorite guests, Taylor Chesney, director of the Feeling Good Institute in New York City. Taylor specializes in TEAM-CBT with children and adolescents and brings a rare combination of clinical expertise and real-life wisdom as the mother of four. Parents everywhere are worried about social media, sexting, porn, bullying, and the fear that their kids are doing “who knows what” behind closed doors. In this episode, Taylor offers a refreshing and deeply practical...

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Feel Better Fast: A Short Message from Dr. Burns show art Feel Better Fast: A Short Message from Dr. Burns

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Download the amazing Feeling Great app today for FREE at FeelingGreat.com! This is my $99 GIFT for you.  – Dr. David Burns

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489: Meet Richard Lam, Master TEAM CBT Teacher and Therapist show art 489: Meet Richard Lam, Master TEAM CBT Teacher and Therapist

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Meet Richard Lam-- Master TEAM CBT Teacher and Therapist! Today we chat with Richard Lam. Richard is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in private practice in Mountain View, California. He is a graduate of Palo Alto University. He currently provides short-term therapy for anxiety, OCD, habits/addictions, depression, and relationship concerns using Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Richard also trains other therapists in David Burn's model of CBT called TEAM-CBT Therapy. He is a certified Level 5 Master Therapist and Trainer in TEAM-CBT Therapy.  And today, Richard has gifts for you!...

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If You're Procrastinating Right Now, Listen to This show art If You're Procrastinating Right Now, Listen to This

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Let’s face it. We ALL procrastinate. Attempts to “help” nearly always backfire. Dr. David Burns gets it. Procrastinators don't want help — they want something that actually works. In his upcoming free webinar on February 25, Dr. Burns introduces his paradoxical approach and ten powerful TEAM CBT tools that deliver results.  Sign up now at FeelingGoodWebinar.com. Everyone is welcome! Therapists can purchase two CE credits if they attend the live event. See you there!

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488: Meet the Incredible Dr. David Antonuccio, Part 2 of 2 show art 488: Meet the Incredible Dr. David Antonuccio, Part 2 of 2

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

(featured photo shows David, his wife Yvonne, and son, Joey, when young) Meet the Incredible Dr. David Antonuccio, Part 2 of 2 Shrink, Songwriter, and Hero Today we continue our conversation with my dear friend and esteemed colleague, Dr. David Antonuccio, a true scholar, clinician, researcher, musician, and champion of scientific transparency. The Nicotine Patch Study David revisited his landmark research on the nicotine patch, a costly trial involving roughly 600 participants who were randomly assigned to receive either a real nicotine patch or a sham patch. The goals were to assess safety...

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487: Meet the Incredible Dr. David Antonuccio, Part 1 of 2 show art 487: Meet the Incredible Dr. David Antonuccio, Part 1 of 2

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Stories from a Giant and Gadfly Discover the Protest Music of !-- like "The Antidepressant Blues!" Today, we are delighted to spend some time with a dear friend and highly esteemed colleague, Dr. David Antonuccio. David is a retired Clinical Psychologist and Professor Emeritus in the Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Nevada, Reno, School of Medicine. In addition to his academic work, David had his own clinical practice for 40 years. He has published over 100 academic articles and multiple books, primarily on the treatment of depression, anxiety, or smoking...

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486: Doctor, why won’t you ever tell me how you really feel? show art 486: Doctor, why won’t you ever tell me how you really feel?

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

“Doctor, why won’t you ever tell me how you really feel?” Therapist Self-Disclosure-- Featuring Dr. Carly Zankman This week, Dr. Carly Zankman joins us to discuss a really interesting and controversial topic—self-disclosure by a therapist. When is it helpful? And when is it an ethics violation? When I was a psychiatric resident, my supervisors (mainly psychoanalytic) cautioned me NEVER to share my feelings with patients. This felt really awkward at time, but is there some wisdom in that advice? And if so, what IS the wisdom? How does it work or help? And if that rule—never sharing...

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485: Ask David: Schizophrenia; OCD--What REALLY Works? show art 485: Ask David: Schizophrenia; OCD--What REALLY Works?

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Helping a Loved One with Schizophrenia Treating OCD! My Hands Might Be Contaminated! How To Mend an Angry, Broken Heart The answers to today’s questions are brief and were written prior to the show. Listen to the podcast for a more in-depth discussion of each question. Here are the questions for today’s podcast. Joel asks: How can we use TEAM CBT to help a patient or loved one struggling with schizophrenia? Jean asks: Since CBT won’t work with OCD, should we use exposure or the Hidden Emotion Technique instead? Jim asks: When someone has objectively hurt you, like your partner has had...

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484: Live Work with Madeleine, I'm Helpless! Part 3 of 3 show art 484: Live Work with Madeleine, I'm Helpless! Part 3 of 3

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Live Work with Madeleine I'm Helpless! Part 3 of 3 Today, we are pleased to present the live and unedited follow-up session with Madeleine, a loving mother who became terrified when she realized that her oldest beloved daughter might be in mortal danger during her hear abroad while in college.  Part 3 of 3 We were a bit rushed near the end of M = Methods in Part 2 because of a mistake that I (David) made. I forgot that we had extended this webinar by 30 minutes, so we wouldn’t be rushed at the end, so I wrongly concluded we were running out of time when we weren’t! In order to...

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483: Live Work with Madeleine, I'm Helpless! Part 2 of 3 show art 483: Live Work with Madeleine, I'm Helpless! Part 2 of 3

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Live Work with Madeleine I'm Helpless! Part 2 of 3 Today, we are pleased to present the exciting conclusion of our work with Madeleine, a loving mother who fears that her eldest daughter might be in mortal danger during her year abroad. Last week, you heard about the T = Testing and E = Empathy phase of the live work with Madeleine, a mother feeling intense panic and helplessness and inadequacy because she fears that her daughter could be in grave danger of abduction and worse. This week, we will focus on A = Paradoxical Agenda Setting, using the Miracle Cure Question, Magic Button, Positive...

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More Episodes

Procrastination: Be Gone!

And "Physician, Heal Thyself!"

Really? Why?

The answers to today’s questions are brief and were written prior to the show. Listen to the podcast for a more in-depth discussion of each question.

This will be podcast #470 on 10/6/2025

Procrastination: Be Gone!

And Physician, Heal Thyself! Really? Why?

The answers to today’s questions are brief and were written prior to the show. Listen to the podcast for a more in-depth discussion of each question.

  1. Rhonda asks: Why do people procrastinate?
  2. Rhonda asks: Wouldn't you first deal with the negative thoughts that are a part of the procrastination before working on it?
  3. Rhonda asks: Here is a question I have: You often say, "physician heal thyself," and encourage personal work by the therapist. Why does the therapist have to face their own issues to help someone else? A heart surgeon doesn't have to have heart surgery in order to conduct surgery on their patient. Why does a therapist have to do their personal work?

Rhonda writes:

I have been thinking a lot about procrastination since we met last week.  Why do people procrastinate?

It's one thing not to put away a stack of files on your desk, it's another thing to procrastinate on something major, like finishing your dissertation, doing your taxes, or some things that have a major consequence.  It's a habit like anything else so there is a cue, the pattern, and the reward.

Cue: I don't want to finish my dissertation because it's overwhelming and I don't think I am smart enough to finish it, and I don't want to face it.

Pattern: Procrastinate

Reward: Relief that I have avoided it another day.

So, wouldn't you first deal with the negative thoughts that are a part of the procrastination before working on it?

I've also been thinking a lot about positive reframing. I always do it, even with a client who has done it before, to remind people, and keep alive, their positive qualities, and to encourage more embracing/accepting of their symptoms as beautiful parts of themselves. With clients who have experience doing Positive Reframe, reframing their THOUGHTS, not just their feelings, can give a lot of insight.

Here is a question I have, you often say, "physician heal thyself," and encourage personal work by the therapist.  Why does the therapist have to face their own issues to help someone else?  A heart surgeon doesn't have to have heart surgery in order to conduct surgery on their patient.  Why does a therapist?

David replies

  1. People procrastinate because they don’t want to do the thing they are putting off. There is no one reason, since we’re all different. And we all tend to avoid things that seem unpleasant, and gravitate towards things that are more pleasant. I classify it in the general category of “Habit / Addiction.”
  2. For years I dealt with the reasons people procrastinate as a first step, including the thoughts they have at the moment they procrastinate. I thought my job was to “help” the person who was procrastinating. This was universally unsuccessful, and not their failure became MY failure. This allowed them to continue procrastinating, since the doctor was trying to help them, and responsible for helping them.

I decided, instead, to go with an approach that works. It took a number of years to figure that out! But it was a huge relief!

  1. We don’t say that a psychiatrist or psychologist has to have schizophrenia or be cured of schizophrenia to help someone with schizophrenia. And we don’t say that a mental health professional has to have OCD to treat someone with OCD effectively. No one has ever claimed that.

What I am saying is that a heart surgeon has to have credibility and training in successful heart surgery to get the license practice surgery. But how does a mental professional get credibility?

Well, let’s say that you’ve once had severe public speaking anxiety, as I have had. And social anxiety as well. So, when a patient comes to me with social anxiety or public speaking anxiety, I can say, “Oh, I’ve had that too, and I know exactly how awful that can feel. And, it’s going to be a pleasure to show you the way out of the woods.”

This message is generally welcomed by patients because it conveys two messages:

  1. I know how much you’re suffering, because I’ve experienced it myself.
  2. I have the skills and the confidence to treat you successfully.

Would you want to go to a therapist for the treatment of your own public speaking anxiety, or shyness, if you knew that the therapist had these problems and still hadn’t found a cure for themself?

There are other powerful reasons for doing your own personal work:

  1. You can see the impact of therapist errors if colleagues have tried to treat you without good empathy or methods.
  2. You can see what recovery / enlightenment mean at a much deeper level!
  3. You can see how and why certain techniques can be so critically important and helpful, and why many others will not be helpful.
  4. Once you have done your own work successfully, and experienced your own “enlightenment” or “recovery” or whatever you want to call it, you are no longer a mental health professional / technician type of therapist. You graduate to the “healer” class!

During the live show, I went through the structure of the new approach to procrastination, and she sent this email right after finishing her “Mission Accomplished” or “I stubbornly refused” task.

Dear Matt and David!

Successfully completed!

Thank you,

Rhonda

Thanks for listening today!

Rhonda, Matt, and David