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Treatments
Want more information about our treatments and treatment approach? Then check out these pages to learn more about the different types of therapy U-center offers.
Mentalization Based Treatment (MBT) is an effective psychotherapy that teaches you to understand and change the relationship between your thoughts, emotions and behaviors. English professors Anthony Bateman and Peter Fonagy first developed MBT for Borderline Personality Disorder. In this, you have difficulty controlling your emotions, causing unstable relationships, an unstable self-image and violent mood swings. But the treatment method also proved to work well for many other psychological disorders. For example, depression, anxiety, trauma, antisocial personality disorder and addiction.
Do you recognize this? Someone says something to you that hurts you. You feel angry, sad or ashamed. And you show it, too. But if you think about it for a moment, you know the other person didn't mean it that way. It was an expression of his or her emotions. Then you decide to respond more calmly. That process of thinking about the situation and directing your emotions is called mentalizing.
Many emotional problems come from not being able to mentalize properly. That's what Mentalization Based Therapy is based on. You don't sufficiently understand your own emotions and those of others. What thoughts, feelings or intentions are behind them? As a result, you are too quick to give them a negative interpretation. And that in turn can lead to unhealthy reaction patterns. Think of a negative self-image, hypersensitivity, distrust, outbursts of anger or impulsive behavior. MBT helps you empathize better with yourself and others. You also learn to identify and change negative beliefs. Because if you think more positively, it is easier to control your mood and behavior.
With Mentalization Based Treatment, you discover how to control your emotions more easily. Even though breaking patterns takes some effort at first. For example, are you angry with someone? Then you learn to think about why that is. Do you feel rejected, for example? Are you afraid of losing track of things? Or are you embarrassed? Once you know that, you try to change your negative thoughts. That way you avoid reacting impulsively and you can respond more calmly and wisely. With MBT, you learn several effective communication strategies for this purpose.
Anyone struggling with emotional problems can benefit from MBT. Especially if you have problems with social contact, relationships and/or impulsive behavior. This often involves two or more psychological problems, on which mentalizing has an influence. U-center is a specialist in dealing with this "comorbidity.
Mentalization Based Therapy can be taken individually, in a group or both. It depends on your situation and preference.
During a session you get theory about mentalization and what influence it has on your problems. And above all, you practice a lot: with the therapist and/or each other. Because the problems you have in daily life with emotions will also play out between you, your therapist and/or group mates.