Distress Tolerance Tools
Resilience Model
Things we go back to often
Words/Definitions
Random 2
100

Used to help you remember how you want to think and act when things are hard

My Mantra

100

The final section of the resilience model

Building Connections

100

Can be practiced by writing letters to those we care about, look up to, or love

Gratitude

100

Created to help you understand what happens to your brain under stress and how to manage the effects to get you back online as quickly as possible

The resilience model

100

Relevant, Measurable, Specific, Time-Oriented, Achievable

SMART Goal

200

In for you, out for me.

Compassionate Breathing

200

Controls the basic bodily functions like heartbeat, breathing, digestion, sleep, and being awake. (Brainstem and Cerebellum)

Hindbrain

200

The first 4 categories of the resilience model

Triggering events, emotional hijacking, distress tolerance tools, sensation and emotion

200

Helps quiet your body, your midbrain, and your hindbrain so you can engage your thinking and get your forebrain back online

Distress Tolerance Tools

200

The tendency to relate everything around you to yourself. (If something goes wrong, or someone is mad, it is your fault)

Personalizing

300

Helps gain a wider perspective rather than narrowing of attention that occurs when emotions are high

The Binocular Trick

300

The process of living life mindfully, with clarity and alignment with your goals and values.

Go with the flow

300

Being aware of what is happening right now

Mindfulness

300

Head, Chest, Neck and Shoulders, Hands, Stomach, Legs, Whole Body

My Sensations

300

Name all 10 rating categories that you start your check-in and check out with.

Anxiety, sadness, suicide thoughts, self-harm thoughts, anger or frustration, shame, fear, hope, peace, energy level

400

proceed, take a breath, stop, observe

The STOP Method

400

Emotional events, your own thoughts or your interpretations of these things, behaviors and statements of others

Triggering events

400

SMART goal, potential roadblocks, tools, my plans to deal with bored

Weekend Plans

400

Your survival brain takes over and decides what you feel, think, and do based on your fight, flight or freeze response.

Emotional Hijacking

400

You take the less painful approach in the moment and use behaviors like anger, blame, self victimizing, withdrawl, fault-finding

Deflecting

500

(E)motions, (R)eplace the thought, (D)isengage, (I)nvolve yourself in other things, (N)eeds, (V)iewpoint

DRIVEN

500

Learning how to use the tools that guide you in determining whom to trust

Building Connections

500

Content, Sad, Anxious, Angry, Joyful, Confident

The emotion wheel

500

You let your emotions build up until they suddenly surface over something small. You have a much bigger reaction than would be expected in the situation

Road Rage

500

Scott's last name

Cecil

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