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Glossary›Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy

Glossary

Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy

A psychotherapeutic approach founded by Albert Ellis in 1955 that identifies irrational beliefs as the source of emotional disturbance and uses cognitive, emotive, and behavioral techniques to challenge them.

What is Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy?

Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) is a form of cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy that posits emotional suffering stems primarily from irrational beliefs rather than external events themselves. Developed by psychologist Albert Ellis in the mid-1950s, REBT operates on the premise that humans naturally develop both rational and irrational thought patterns, and that psychological distress arises when rigid, absolutistic beliefs—typically structured as “musts,” “shoulds,” and “oughts”—collide with reality. The therapeutic model uses the ABC framework: Activating events (A) trigger Beliefs (B), which produce emotional and behavioral Consequences ©. REBT practitioners work to identify and dispute (D) irrational beliefs, replacing them with rational alternatives to achieve effective new philosophies (E) and more adaptive emotional responses.

Origins & Lineage

Albert Ellis introduced Rational Therapy—later renamed Rational Emotive Therapy in 1961 and Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy in 1993—on January 1, 1955, after growing disillusioned with psychoanalysis. Ellis had trained as a psychoanalyst in the 1940s but found the approach inefficient and overly focused on historical factors rather than present cognition. Drawing from ancient Stoic philosophers including Epictetus (“Men are disturbed not by things, but by the views which they take of them”) and Marcus Aurelius, as well as Buddhist thought and the pragmatist philosophy of John Dewey, Ellis synthesized a directive, educational approach that challenged patients’ belief systems directly.

The formal establishment of the Institute for Rational Living (later renamed the Albert Ellis Institute) in 1959 in New York City created an organizational center for training and dissemination. REBT predated Aaron Beck’s cognitive therapy by nearly a decade and is considered one of the first cognitive-behavioral therapies, influencing the entire CBT movement that followed. Ellis himself practiced and taught REBT until shortly before his death in 2007, conducting famous Friday Night Workshops at the Institute where he demonstrated the approach with volunteer clients before audiences.

How It’s Practiced

REBT sessions are typically active, directive, and educational rather than passive or purely exploratory. The therapist acts as a teacher-collaborator who helps clients identify the “musturbatory” thinking patterns underlying their distress. A practitioner listens for absolutistic language (“I must succeed,” “People should treat me fairly,” “Life ought to be easy”) and employs Socratic questioning, logical analysis, and direct challenges to help clients recognize how these demands create unnecessary suffering.

The approach integrates cognitive techniques (logical disputation, reframing, bibliotherapy), emotive techniques (rational emotive imagery, shame-attacking exercises, forceful self-statements), and behavioral techniques (exposure homework, skill training, reinforcement strategies). A distinctive element is the use of humor and irreverence to deflate the self-defeating seriousness clients attach to their demands. Practitioners may assign homework including self-monitoring forms, behavioral experiments, and readings from REBT literature.

Sessions focus less on childhood origins or lengthy emotional processing and more on present beliefs and their logical consequences. The therapist teaches clients to perform their own disputation, making REBT inherently educational with the goal of clients becoming their own therapists.

Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy Today

REBT is practiced by licensed mental health professionals who have received training through institutions like the Albert Ellis Institute or similar CBT training programs. It remains less prevalent than Beck’s cognitive therapy in contemporary practice but maintains a dedicated following, particularly among therapists who appreciate its philosophical foundations and confrontational style. The approach is applied to anxiety disorders, depression, anger problems, addiction, and personality disorders.

Seekers encounter REBT through individual therapy sessions with certified practitioners, workshops, and intensive training programs. The Albert Ellis Institute offers public lectures, professional training, and archival recordings of Ellis’s demonstrations. Self-help books including Ellis’s “A Guide to Rational Living” (1961) and “How to Stubbornly Refuse to Make Yourself Miserable About Anything” (1988) remain widely read. Some meditation and mindfulness communities incorporate REBT principles, recognizing the parallel between Ellis’s disputation methods and Buddhist examination of attachment to views.

Common Misconceptions

REBT is not positive thinking or affirmation-based self-help. Ellis explicitly rejected the notion that repeating optimistic statements creates change; instead, REBT requires rigorous examination of the logical validity of beliefs. The approach does not claim emotions are “wrong” or should be eliminated—rather, it distinguishes between healthy negative emotions (concern, sadness, regret) and unhealthy ones (anxiety, depression, guilt) based on their underlying belief structures.

REBT is not purely rational or cerebral. Despite its name, the approach incorporates emotive and behavioral elements and acknowledges that intellectual insight alone rarely produces change. Ellis emphasized “elegant” change requiring both intellectual understanding and emotional reconditioning through practice.

The confrontational style associated with Ellis’s personal demonstrations is not definitionally required. Contemporary REBT practitioners adapt their approach to client needs and cultural contexts, though the method remains more directive than person-centered or psychodynamic therapies.

How to Begin

Those interested in REBT can start with Albert Ellis’s “A Guide to Rational Living” (co-authored with Robert Harper), which outlines the core ABC model and common irrational beliefs. “The Myth of Self-Esteem” offers Ellis’s mature thinking on ego and unconditional self-acceptance. The Albert Ellis Institute website provides a therapist directory for those seeking professional treatment.

For self-directed exploration, begin by monitoring your own “should,” “must,” and “ought” statements during emotionally charged situations, then practice questioning whether these demands are logically defensible or practically useful. Online resources and workbooks by Windy Dryden, a prominent British REBT practitioner, offer structured self-help approaches. Many CBT therapists incorporate REBT techniques even if not exclusively practicing the model, making it accessible through general cognitive-behavioral treatment.

Related terms

cognitive behavioral therapystoicismmindfulnessbuddhist psychologyshadow workinner critic
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