“…Following a trauma, emotions once viewed as valid, acceptable, and controllable may be viewed as dangerous, uncontrollable, and requiring avoidance (Foa & Kozak, ; Litz et al, ; Paivio & Pascual‐Leone, ; Roemer, Litz, Orsillo, & Wagner, ; Tull, Jakupcak, McFadden, & Roemer, ; Tull & Roemer, ). Persons diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) tend to hold extremely negative views of emotion and commonly fear experiencing, losing control of, and behaviourally responding to high‐intensity emotions, particularly fear and anxiety (Mazloom, Yaghubi, & Mohammadkhani, ; Sippel & Marshall, ; Tull et al, ). Growing research suggests that schemas that portray emotions as dangerous are critical to the development and maintenance of PTSD symptoms, particularly avoidance‐related symptoms (Asmundson & Stapleton, ; Collimore, McCabe, Carleton, & Asmundson, ).…”