TIPP Skills
ACCEPTS
IMPROVE the Moment
Self-Soothe with the 5 Senses
Radical Acceptance & Willingness (Extra Credit!)
100

This letter in the TIPP acronym stands for using ice water or cold packs to change your body temperature and rapidly lower a high heart rate.

Temperature

100

Watching your favorite movie, playing a video game, or cleaning your room are examples of this skill in the ACCEPTS acronym. 

Activities

100

Creating a relaxing fantasy in your mind, like a peaceful beach or a safe room, represents this letter in the IMPROVE acronym.

I (Imagery)

100

Lighting a scented candle, smelling a favorite perfume, or breathing in the aroma of fresh baking are ways to use this specific sense to self-soothe. 

Smell

100

This concept means completely and totally accepting reality as it is in the present moment, without fighting, denying, or judging it. 

Radical Acceptance

200

Engaging in a sprint, doing a jumping jack, or lifting weights falls under this TIPP skill.

I (Intense Exercise)

200

This skill suggests doing something kind for someone else, like baking cookies for a friend or helping a sibling with homework, to shift your focus away from your own distress. 

Contributing

200

Finding a lesson, a purpose, or a silver lining within a painful situation relates to this letter. 

M (Meaning)

200

Listening to a calming playlist, focusing on the sounds of nature or rainfall, or playing an instrument are all ways to soothe using this sense.

Hearing (sound) 

200

Radical acceptance does not mean you approve of or endorse bad behavior; it simply means you stop trying to change a past fact, preventing pain from turning into THIS. 

Suffering (Pain + Non-acceptance = Suffering)

300

This skill involves breathing deeply through your nose and exhaling more slowly than you inhale.

Paced Breathing

300

To use this skill, you might look at how your current situation could be worse, or look back at a time you survived a different difficult obstacle. 

Comparisons

300

This skill suggests taking a short, intentional mental break from the crisis, and engaging in something spiritual before returning to problem-solving. 

P (Prayer)

300

To use this sense, one might wrap themselves in a soft blanket, pet a dog or cat, take a warm bath, or focus on the texture of a smooth grounding stone.

Touch

300

This physical posture (sitting or standing with open hands, palms facing up) is used to signal to your brain and body that you are open and accepting of reality. 

Willing Hands

400

This skill involves tensing a muscle group tightly while breathing in, and completely releasing the tension on the exhale, moving systematically through the body. 

Progressive Muscle Relaxation

400

This skill involves deliberately provoking an alternative feeling by watching a funny video when you are sad, or listening to calming music when you are angry. 

(Change your) Emotions 

400

To use this skill, you focus on doing only one thing at a time in the exact present moment, rather than letting your mind drift to past regrets or future worries. 

O (One thing in the moment) 

400

Intentionally looking at a beautiful view, watching a crackling fire, looking through old photo albums, or watching a soothing video are examples of soothing through this sense.

Vision

400

This facial posture involves relaxing the face, slightly lifting the corners of the lips, and adopting a serene expression to help regulate intense, stubborn emotions. 

Half-Smile

500

This biological reflex is triggered when you submerge your face in cold water while holding your breath, instantly slowing down your heart rate and nervous system. 

Mammalian Dive Reflex

500

This skill of ACCEPTS involves putting the pain on the shelf for a while and forcing your brain to think about something else entirely. 

Pushing Away

500

This skill is a reminder to plan a small, temporary escape or treat for yourself, like a mini-trip to a park or treating yourself to a favorite dessert, to make the day more bearable. 

V (Vacation) 

500

Mindfully drinking a warm cup of herbal tea, sucking on a favorite hard candy, or really noticing the flavors of a meal (without rushing over overeating) satisfies this fifth sense.

Taste

500

This term describes a state of stubbornness where you fight reality, dig your heels in, or refuse to do what is needed in a situation, which is the exact opposite of willingness.

Willfulness

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