Basics of Exposure
Types of Exposure
Fear Hierarchy
Fight, Flight, Freeze, Fawn
Barriers & Self-Compassion
100

This therapy involves gradual practice of facing feared thoughts, feelings, or situations to reduce avoidance.

What is exposure therapy?

100

This is when you practice facing fears in real life, like actually driving or going to the store.

What is in-real-life (in vivo) exposure?

100

This is a list of fears from “easy” to “hard” that helps you take steps without overwhelming yourself.

What is a fear hierarchy?

100

This reaction happens when anxiety makes you feel angry, snappy, or tense.

What is fight?

100

Avoidance brings this feeling right away — but it makes anxiety stronger in the long run.

What is temporary relief?

200

Exposure therapy teaches the brain and body a new response to this intense emotion.

What is fear (or anxiety)?

200

This type of exposure has you imagine a scary situation in your mind so you can work through it safely.

What is imaginal exposure?

200

When making a hierarchy, you rank fears from the ones that are the least scary to the ones that are the ___.

What is most scary?

200

This reaction makes you want to get away or leave the situation as fast as possible.

What is flight?

200

Self-compassion helps replace harsh self-talk with this kind of inner voice.

What is a kind, encouraging voice?

300

Exposure therapy’s main aim is to reduce avoidance and build this, so clients can handle discomfort.

What is tolerance (or distress tolerance)?

300

This type of exposure helps you get used to physical sensations—like a fast heartbeat—so they don’t feel scary.

What is body-sensations exposure (interoceptive)?

300

The best way to work through a fear hierarchy is to move at this pace.

What is one step at a time?

300

This reaction makes you feel stuck, frozen, or unable to think clearly.

What is freeze?

300

Name one worry people often have before trying exposure therapy.

What is “What if it doesn’t work?” or “What if it feels too hard?”

400

When you repeat exposures, your anxiety naturally goes down. This process is called what?  

What is getting used to it (habituation)?

400

This uses technology like headsets to let you practice facing fears in a safe, digital environment.

What is virtual reality (VR) exposure?

400

In a driving fear hierarchy, the hardest step might be doing this.

What is driving on a busy road or highway? 

400

This reaction shows up as people-pleasing, apologizing a lot, or trying to keep others happy.

What is fawn?

400

Before moving up your fear hierarchy, you repeat each step until this naturally happens.

What is your anxiety goes down?

500

Exposure therapy helps calm the part of our brain that sets off the “danger alarm.”

What is the amygdala?

500

Body-sensation exposure helps teach this part of your brain that normal body feelings aren’t dangerous.

What is the part of the brain that reads body signals (the insula)?

500

Name one benefit of using a hierarchy — something it helps you with.

What is staying organized, feeling more in control, or making steady progress?

500

Name one grounding skill you can use when you feel frozen.

What is naming what you see/hear/feel (5-4-3-2-1), or wiggling fingers/toes?

500

Name one strategy you can use when you feel the urge to run away (the flight response).

What is slow breathing or saying “I am safe, I can stay here”?