Your question reveals a lack of understanding of what CMT is about to such an extent that it would be impossible to answer your question without giving you a very long statement explaining the entire theory. Why not read "How Psychotherapy Works" by Joseph Weiss so you can find out what the theory is about? It's fairly easy to read and is not a very big book. Or why not read some of the postings here at this forum that explain the theory in bits and pieces so you can figure out what you would be likely to find in "How Psychotherapy Works"? One of the reasons postings remain at this forum is so that people will read them and ask questions about postings that do refer to the theory with some explanations. You can go to earlier postings that have explantions of some parts of CMT and then ask questions within a thread for those earlier postings in which you ask for more explantion of something explained about CMT in earlier postings. You can order "How Psychotherapy Works" from Guilford Press, which can be found from an Internet search. You could even ask someone to give you a summary statement of what CMT is all about, but the most likely reply would be what I have just written....that you could begin by reading earlier postings here or by reading some of the printed literature that has been published in the form of books and journal articles. If explaining CMT were so easy a matter as just explaining to you whehter nail biting is or is not a case of unconscious processes according to CMT theory, there would have been no need to write any of the books and articles that explain CMT.
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