Mindfulness Skills
Distress Tolerance Skills I
Distress Tolerance Skills II
Distress Tolerance Skills III
Emotion Regulation
100

Mindfulness Definition

What is the practice of being present and aware in the moment without judgement?

100

Skills designed to help individuals endure and cope with overwhelming emotions or crises without making the situation worse.

What is Distress Tolerance Skills?

100

Changing your attention onto something different, using an activity to change focus.

What is Distracting?

100

Imagine facing a fork in the road and having to turn toward the path of acceptance and away from the road of rejecting reality.

What is Turning the Mind?

100

The skill set taught to help individuals understand, identify, and manage their emotions in a healthy way, aiming to reduce vulnerability to negative emotions and increase positive emotional experiences, essentially allowing them to control and influence their emotional responses to situations.

What is Emotion Regulation?

200

Paying attention and noticing the present moment with your senses without any judgement.

What is Observing?

200

Using your senses - looking at sunsets, taking a hot bath, smelling a perfume you like, using lotion that is calming, eating foods that comfort.

What is Self-Soothing?

200

Acting in the opposite way of how you feel in order to reduce the intensity of the emotion.

What is Opposite Action?

200
Having an open posture with our hands to help accept reality.

What is Willing Hands?

200

Three major functions of emotions.

What is: To communicate to others

             To communicate to ourselves         

             To motivate action

300

Improving communication by putting words to what is observed within one's self or outside of one's self.

What is Describing?

300

Skills to help calm yourself physically and mentally: using cold water, intense exercise, paced breathing, progressive muscle relaxation.

What is TIPP Skills?

300

Using a gentle, relaxed facial expression to help accept reality.

What is Half-Smiling?

300

Being open, accepting, and engaged in the present moment. Being flexible and open to change.

What is Willingness?

300

Our immediate, first reactions to a prompting event.

What is a Primary Emotion?

400

Making choices using this state of mind that's a balance between emotion and logic.

What is Wise Mind?

400

Complete and total acceptance of reality when you cannot change the reality you are in. Accepting emotions and situations you cannot change and not fighting it.

What is Radical Acceptance?

400

Being sober but being aware of the potential triggers or warnings you may relapse.

What is Clear Mind?

400

Combination of not using substances but also preparing for how to get back to sobriety after a relapse?

What is Dialectical Abstinence?

400

Reactions to our primary emotions.

What is a Secondary Emotion?

500

Being fully immersed in the present moment, letting go of fear and shame, getting into "flow" state.

What is Participating?

500
A skill used when making a decision between two or more options. Explore advantages and disadvantages of each potential decision.

What is Pros and Cons?

500

Replacing the immediate event that has caused unpleasant emotions with a more positive act, thereby making the moment easier to tolerate.

What is Improving the Moment?

500

Engaging in activities that are more rewarding than substance use. Building a positive support system, environment, and activities to help stay clean and sober.

What is Community Reinforcement?

500

Name at least 3 factors that make it difficult to regulate emotions?

What is:

1. Biology

2. Lack of skill

3. Reinforcement of emotional behaviors

4. Moodiness

5. Emotional Overload

6. Myths About Emotions