Coping Skills in Action
Emotional Awareness
Recovery Thinking
Therapy Concepts
Communication and Boundaries
100

This skill uses the senses and immediate surroundings to help a person reconnect with the present moment when feeling overwhelmed.

Grounding

100

This type of emotion may show up on the surface, while a more vulnerable feeling, such as hurt, fear, or embarrassment, exists underneath.

Secondary emotion

100

This term describes feeling pulled in two directions, such as knowing help is needed while still wanting to do things the old way.

Ambivalence

100

This therapy model focuses on the connection between thoughts, feelings, and behaviors.

CBT

100

This communication tool focuses on a person’s own feelings and experience instead of blaming the other person.

"I" statement

200

These are the body-based warning signs, such as clenched fists, fast breathing, or pacing, that can show up before a person fully realizes they are angry or anxious.

Physical cues/body signals

200

This emotion often says, “I did something wrong,” and can motivate repair or accountability.

Guilt

200

This early signal may include isolating, minimizing cravings, or avoiding supportive people before things get worse.

Warning sign/relapse risk

200

This DBT concept means two seemingly opposite things can both be true, such as “I am struggling” and “I can still make progress.”

Dialectics

200

This pattern involves saying yes to avoid conflict, then feeling resentful later.

People-pleasing/poor boundaries

300

This skill involves choosing a healthier behavior that goes against an unhelpful emotional urge, such as reaching out instead of isolating.

Opposite Action

300

This emotion often says, “Something bad might happen,” even when there is no immediate danger.

Anxiety

300

This thinking trap shows up when someone sees one mistake as proof that everything is ruined.

All-or-nothing thinking

300

This motivational interviewing term refers to a client’s own statements that support movement toward change.

Change talk

300

This skill involves clearly stating what behavior is acceptable or unacceptable, such as refusing to continue a conversation while someone is yelling.

Setting a boundary

400

This CBT skill involves questioning whether a thought is fully accurate, helpful, or supported by evidence.

Challenging a thought aka cognitive restructuring

400

This pattern involves shutting down, disconnecting, or saying “I don’t care” to avoid feeling something painful.

Emotional avoidance/numbing

400

These are internal or external situations, such as stress, boredom, conflict, or loneliness, that can increase risk.

Triggers/high-risk situations

400

This pattern gives short-term relief by staying away from painful thoughts, feelings, memories, or situations, but often keeps the problem going.

Avoidance

400

This listening skill involves showing understanding by repeating or summarizing what another person said before responding.

Reflective/active listening

500

This skill involves noticing an urge, allowing it to rise and fall, and delaying action instead of immediately giving in.

Urge surfing or delaying the urge

500

This skill involves identifying an emotion, noticing the urge connected to it, and choosing whether acting on that urge would be helpful.

Emotional regulation

500

This recovery concept involves accepting that old coping methods are no longer working and becoming willing to try something different.

Surrender/Willingness

500

This practice involves being present, aware, and nonjudgmental in the current moment.

Mindfulness

500

This communication style is direct and respectful without attacking, avoiding, or shutting down.

Assertive communication