What is a Thought Diary?

A thought diary helps identify and challenge negative or anxious thoughts. Writing them down gives perspective and can reduce their emotional intensity.

 How to Use a Thought Diary:

1. Trigger

What happened?

Example: “My manager asked to meet me suddenly.”

2. Emotion

What did you feel? (Rate intensity 0–100%)

Example: Anxiety – 80%, Fear – 60%

3. Automatic Thought

What thought popped into your head?

Example: “I must have done something wrong.”

4. Evidence Supporting the Thought

What facts support your thought?

Example: “He looked serious.”

5. Evidence Against the Thought

What facts go against your thought?

Example: “He often calls team meetings like this.”

6. Alternative Thought

Is there a more balanced way to view this?

Example: “It could be a routine discussion.”

7. Re-rate the Emotion

How do you feel now?

Example: Anxiety – reduced to 40%

Tips for Maintaining a Thought Diary

Be consistent – write daily or when anxious.

Be honest – even if thoughts feel irrational.

Keep it simple – use short bullet points.

Use a notebook or an app like CBT Thought Record Diary.