Complex Triggers
Emotional Regulation
Cognitive Distortions
Crisis Planning
Self-Awareness
100

Explain the difference between a trigger and a craving.

A trigger is something that causes emotional or behavioral distress; a craving is an intense desire to engage in a specific behavior.

100

What’s the difference between regulating and suppressing emotion?

Regulating is managing emotions in healthy ways; suppressing means pushing them down without addressing them.

100

What is a cognitive distortion?

Cognitive distortions are inaccurate or biased ways of thinking that worsen mood or behavior.

100

What’s the purpose of a relapse prevention plan?

It helps prevent escalation by identifying early signs and strategies. 

100

What’s a belief about yourself that’s changed since starting treatment?

I used to believe I was broken, but now I know I’m healing.

200

How can interpersonal relationships serve as both supports and triggers?

A partner can be supportive but might also unknowingly pressure or invalidate feelings, becoming a trigger.

200

How does emotional dysregulation increase the risk of relapse?

Dysregulated emotions can lead to impulsive decisions, like quitting therapy or self-isolating.

200

Give an example of “all-or-nothing” thinking and how it could contribute to relapse.

“If I’m not perfect, I’m a failure”—this thinking can lead to giving up entirely.

200

What are three elements that should be in every crisis plan?

Warning signs, coping strategies, and emergency contacts.

200

How do your emotions influence your thoughts and behaviors?

When I’m sad, I start to think nothing matters—and I stop reaching out.

300

Describe a time when a positive event led to a relapse or emotional setback.

Ex: Getting a new job caused anxiety and imposter syndrome, which led to depressive symptoms.

300

Describe the “window of tolerance” and how it relates to managing intense feelings.

The window of tolerance is the emotional range where we can function well—outside of it, we shut down or become overwhelmed.

300

What distortion is at play: “If I struggle again, I’m a total failure”?

That’s “catastrophizing” and “labeling”—believing one struggle defines your entire worth.

300

Describe a time when a safety plan helped you or someone you know.

Ex: When I was anxious and suicidal, I followed my crisis plan, which included calling my therapist and going for a walk.

300

What’s something you’ve done to cope that surprised you with how effective it was?

Writing poetry actually helped me regulate way more than I expected.

400

How do internalized beliefs (e.g., “I’m a burden”) act as covert triggers?

Internalized beliefs like "I’m unlovable" can cause shame spirals and lead to self-isolation.

400

Share a grounding technique and the science behind why it works.

Deep breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system, calming the body and mind.

400

Identify and reframe this thought: “Nobody cares, so why bother?”

Reframe: “I feel alone right now, but that doesn’t mean no one cares.”

400

Create a “Relapse Emergency Checklist” with 4 actionable items.

1) Breathe, 2) Journal, 3) Text someone, 4) Use distraction technique.

400

Describe how stigma (internal or external) has affected your recovery journey.

I used to avoid therapy because I didn’t want to be labeled as “crazy.”

500

Analyze how a trauma history can influence relapse vulnerability.

Trauma can cause hypervigilance and emotional dysregulation, making stress responses more intense and frequent.

500

Role-play: You’re overwhelmed with anxiety. Walk through a regulation plan in real time.

Pause, identify my emotion, ground with 5-4-3-2-1, and text a support person or write in a journal.

500

Explain how distorted thinking impacts behavior and emotional outcomes using a CBT model.

In CBT, thoughts lead to feelings, which drive behavior—distorted thinking warps this process.

500

Design a short “Crisis Script” for calling a support person or hotline.

“I’m not okay right now. I need help. Can you stay on the phone while I calm down?”

500

Reflect: “The part of me that wants to relapse is trying to protect me from _______.”

“The part of me that wants to relapse is trying to protect me from rejection and feeling out of control.”

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