Mindfulness
Acceptance
Cognitive Defusion
Values/Committed Action
F(ACT)S
100
In ACT, this part of you is able to notice you are noticing; is aware you are aware; conscious of your consciousness

The observing self

100

True or false: Acceptance means you like the emotions or thoughts

False: Acceptance is about making room for them, not liking or agreeing with them 

100

Define defusion

Stepping back and separating from our thoughts, images, and memories (Looking AT thoughts rather than FROM thoughts)

100

Define values

A chosen life direction—an ongoing quality of action that reflects what truly matters to you, guiding how you want to live, not something you can check off or achieve.


100

ACT uses this hexagon-shaped model to illustrate its six core processes.

Hexaflex

200

This coping skill involves using your senses to ground in the present moment

5, 4, 3, 2, 1 Skill

(5 things you can see, 4 things you can hear, 3 things you can touch, etc.)

200

Acceptance in ACT is similar to this skill in DBT:

Radical acceptance

200

When someone becomes inseparable from their thoughts and are so caught up that they aren't even aware what they are thinking

Cognitive fusion

200

In ACT, “self-care" is considered a value while something like “do 10 minutes of mindfulness a day" would be considered this: 


Goal

200

ACT includes six core processes that aim to increase this overarching ability:

Psychological flexibility/workability

300

This ACT term refers to being in the here and now, fully conscious of our experience, instead of being lost in our thoughts. 

Contact with the present moment

300

Define acceptance

Opening up and making room for painful feelings, sensations, urges, and emotions

300

True or False: The purpose of cognitive defusion is to feel better or get rid of unwanted thoughts.

False: The aim of defusion is to enable mindful, valued living. To see the true nature of thoughts in terms of how helpful they are rather than how true they are.

300

In ACT, values are compared to this navigational tool, while goals are like destinations along the way

A compass

300

A highly popular and widely recommended book on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

"The Happiness Trap"

400

This acronym is a type of weather that is also a mindfulness exercise in ACT.

RAIN (Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture)

400

Describe the metaphor of "dropping the rope" and how it relates to acceptance:

Instead of staying stuck in a tug-of-war with difficult thoughts and feelings, you can let go of the struggle—freeing yourself to focus on what truly matters

400

This common mindfulness metaphor in ACT involves watching your thoughts float by without grabbing onto them

Leaves on a stream
400

Noticing a difficult thought and choosing to act in line with your values anyway is an example of this kind of move.

Towards move

400

Author of "The Happiness Trap" and famous ACT practitioner 

Dr. Russ Harris

500

True or False: The mind is more in the past or future than it is in the present

True: Our mind is like an out-of-control time machine that constantly pulls us back into the past or forward into the future but we always have the ability to make contact with the present moment

500

There are 8 steps in the process of accepting emotions. Name 3.

Observe, Breathe, Expand, Allow, Objectify, Normalize, Self-compassion, Expand awareness

500

Name a technique to help yourself defuse from a thought or experience

Notice it, focused mindfulness, sing it out, silly voices, voice it, journal, metaphors

500

The FEAR acronym in ACT stands for:

Fusion, Excessive goals, Avoidance of discomfort, Remoteness from values

500

The founder of ACT

Psychologist Steven C. Hayes

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