Automatic Spirals usually refers to patterns where,...
- shahhian
- 23 hours ago
- 1 min read
“Automatic Spirals” usually refers to patterns where thoughts, emotions, or behaviors rapidly feed into each other without conscious control. In mental health, this maybe connected to anxiety, depression, trauma responses, panic, or rumination.
A spiral often starts with a trigger:
A thought
A memory
A bodily sensation
A social interaction
An imagined future event
Then the mind automatically escalates it.
Example of an anxiety spiral:
“What if I embarrassed myself?”
Increased anxiety
Body sensations (heart racing, tension)
“Something is wrong with me.”
More fear and self-monitoring
Catastrophic predictions
Stronger anxiety
The process becomes self-reinforcing.
Common types of automatic spirals may include:
Negative thought spirals: repetitive pessimistic thinking
Emotional spirals: emotions intensify themselves
Behavioral spirals: avoidance, isolation, compulsions, etc.
Trauma spirals: triggers activating memories, hypervigilance, or dissociation
Shame spirals: self-criticism leading to deeper shame
Anger spirals: escalating interpretation of threat or disrespect
These spirals could be driven by:
Habitual neural pathways
Cognitive biases
Conditioning
Fear-based prediction systems
The mind’s threat-detection mechanisms
A key insight in therapies like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy is that automatic spirals are not necessarily objective reality, they are patterns of mental processing.
Possible helpful interventions may include:
Noticing the spiral early
Labeling thoughts rather than believing them automatically
Slowing physiological arousal (breathing, grounding)
Cognitive reframing
Mindfulness and psychological distancing
Interrupting avoidance behaviors
Self-compassion instead of self-attack
A simple interruption technique:
“I notice I’m entering a spiral”
instead of
“Everything is actually falling apart.”
That small shift may create psychological distance between awareness and the automatic process.
Shervan K Shahhian
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