Relationships
Basic Emotions
CBT
DBT
Coping Skills
100

These are the three roles in the drama triangle.

Victim, rescuer, persecutor.

100

This emotion is often felt when the well-being of you or someone you care about is being threatened and communicates a need for safety and security.

Fear

100

CBT stands for this.

Cognitive behavioral therapy

100

DBT stands for this.

Dialectical behavior therapy

100

TRUE or FALSE: the purpose of coping skills is to make difficult emotions go away and replace them with more enjoyable emotions.

FALSE

200

This is the process of finding a kernel of truth in someone else's perspective or situation and/or verifying the facts of a situation.

Validation

200

This emotion is often felt when an important goal is being blocked, you or someone you care about is being attacked/insulted, or the integrity of your social group is being threatened and communicates a need for respect, consideration, and problem solving.

Anger

200

This is the name for irrational and unhelpful thought patterns (ie. black and white thinking, catastrophizing, jumping to conclusions, etc.).

Cognitive distortions.

200

This is the idea behind dialectics and DBT in general that aims to help people begin balancing black and white thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and behaviors.

Two seemingly opposite things can still both be true and valid at the same time.

200

4-4-4-4, 4-4-8, and 4-7-8 are all types of this set of coping skills.

Deep breathing exercises

300

This is a manipulation tactic using psychological methods to get someone to question their own sanity, reality, or powers of reasoning.

Gaslighting

300

This emotion is often felt when something or someone has been lost permanently or things are not the you wanted or expected and hoped for them to be and can indicate a need for connection, trust, and understanding.

Sadness

300

According to the cognitive model, after a person experiences an event/trigger, arrange the following in the correct order of what comes next: behaviors, thoughts, feelings.

Thoughts -> feelings -> behaviors

300

According to DBT and Wise Mind, this is the part of a person that analyzes the world from a purely analytical viewpoint and makes decisions and judgements based only on the facts and evidence of a situation.

Rational Mind

300

The purpose of this type of coping skills is not to facilitate relaxation, but rather help distract away from intense emotional/trauma responses and urges by actively engaging in specific physical, mental, and soothing techniques.

Grounding techniques

400

Someone in this dysfunctional family role often flies under the radar, can spend a lot of time alone, and can later struggle to establish and/or maintain healthy relationships.

Lost child.

400

Often used interchangeably, the difference between envy and jealousy is that envy is felt when (fill in the blank) and jealousy is felt when (fill in the blank).

Envy - somebody has something you want or need but don't have.

Jealousy - you have something important to you that's at risk of being taken away, damaged, or lost.

400

According to CBT, these are at the root of our irrational thoughts, behaviors, and rules for ourselves.

Irrational core beliefs

400

This DBT skill focuses on identifying unhealthy behaviors that emotions may urge us to act on and instead implement alternative behaviors to break the cycle of unhelpful emotions keeping themselves around.

Opposite Action

400

This skill involves deliberately tensing and releasing different muscle groups to facilitate full body relaxation and can be a good alternative to guided meditations.

Progressive muscle relaxation

500

These are the three types of boundaries.

Rigid, porous, and flexible.

500

Often used interchangeably, the difference between guilt and shame is that guilt is felt when (fill in the blank) and shame is felt when (fill in the blank).

Guilt - you regret your behavior and/or your behavior violates your own morals and values.

Shame - you perceive there is something inherently wrong with you and/or you fear rejection by others if personal characteristics/behaviors are made public.

500

This CBT skill involves identifying necessary, routine, and pleasurable activities that have decreased or fallen off due to worsening mental health symptoms and actively scheduling them back into each week.

Behavioral activation

500

This DBT skill provides a framework for effective communication with others to healthily express needs and boundaries and resolve conflicts.

DEARMAN

500

Often referred to as a defense mechanism, this coping strategy involves releasing pent up emotions into socially acceptable avenues such as art, music, and exercise.

Sublimation

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