Educational content only. Partner with clinicians to rule out hearing disorders and plan any exposure or medication strategies. See our Medical Disclaimer.
Misophonia is an intense emotional/physiological response to specific trigger sounds (e.g., chewing, tapping, sniffing). Journaling differentiates it from hyperacusis (loudness sensitivity) or PTSD by capturing stimulus details, emotional response, and context. Include quick psychoeducation notes for family/roommates to reference.
Pair gradual exposure (recorded sounds, short live trials, group meals) with opposite-action scripts. Example entry: “Chewing video at low volume for 2 minutes, predicted distress 8/10, actual 6/10, opposite action = stayed in seat, relaxed shoulders, repeated acceptance phrase.”
List quick sensory resets (temperature change, tactile input), vagal-toning activities (humming, paced breathing), and connection prompts (“Share one observation, thank the partner for patience”). This prevents avoidance from reinforcing the trigger.
Document scripts for requesting accommodations (“I need a short break, not because I’m angry at you”) and consent-based touch cues. Use the app to store agreements (quiet hours, safe signals) and revisit them during therapy.
Schools can deploy the CBT journaling app for students, while individuals can Download the CBT journaling app and compare tiers via CBT journaling app pricing so coping plans live beside therapy notes.