Shame Resilience
Radical Acceptance
Self-Acceptance
Happiness
Coping Skills
100

Which feeling can be helpful, shame or guilt?

Guilt motivates you to apologize, make amends, or change behaviors. Shame is destructive.

100

Name 1 thing radical acceptance does NOT include

approval, compassion, giving up, against change

100

True or False - The human brain is programed to look for things that are wrong with ourselves

True - The “don’t get killed” device of our ancestors helped them to survive by constantly comparing them to other members of the clan to ensure they didn’t get rejected.

100

True or False - Our brains were built for survival, not to be happy. 

True - Our brains have a tendency to orient toward the negative

100

What is grounding?

A technique that helps keep you in the present.

200

What is the difference between guilt and shame?

Guilt is feeling bad about something you've done. Shame is feeling bad about who you are.

200

True or False - When practicing radical acceptance, you must accept everything, totally and completely

False - Only accept facts that must be accepted 

200

What is the term used to describe the following: 

No matter what’s happened to us in our lives, our actual self-worth remains intact, even though we might feel crumpled, worn, and worthless.

Inherent Worth

200

True or False - Uncomfortable emotions can be helpful

True - 

  • Anxiety and anger help us protect ourselves
  • It’s normal to feel sad when we experience a loss
  • Feeling guilty can motivate us to be more mindful of others
200

How do you practice a half smile?

Relax your face, tense and relax if needed, let both corners of your lips go slightly up, try to adopt a serene expression

300
Described what Mark Manson termed the feedback loop from hell. 

You feel bad about your feelings, so you feel even worse. 

300

What's the first step in practicing radical acceptance?

Observe that you are questioning or fighting reality
300

Why is self-esteem not a helpful way to think about ourselves?

It’s an opinion you hold about the sort of person you are.

300

Name 1 key to lasting happiness

  • Gratitude
  • Kindness and compassion
  • Self-Compassion
  • Mindfulness
  • Optimism
  • Interpersonal connection
  • Forgiveness
  • Using our strengths
  • Savoring positive experiences
  • Caring for our bodies and health
300

When practicing the "Earth, Water, Air, & Fire" exercise, what represents water?

Salivation 

400

Shame needs these 3 things to grow out of control. 

Secrecy, silence, judgment

400

Name 1 thing we have to be careful to NOT accept

distortions of the past, exaggerations, catastrophic thinking, judgmental assertions

400

How can you practice self-acceptance?

Connect to your values and act accordingly

Don't try to prove yourself

Recognize your inherent worth

400

Marsha Lineman (DBT) described unhealthy reactions to primary emotions as ___________.

Secondary emotions

400

Describe the 3 things needed to experience hope. 

Goals, pathways, a sense of agency

500

Name 1 way to practice shame resilience

- recognize shame

- reality check messages and expectations

- speak about shame, share with trusted people

500

Define radical acceptance

Radical acceptance is complete and total openness to the facts of reality as they are, without fighting or struggling against them.

500

Define Self-Acceptance

  • Being ok with who you are
  • Treating yourself kindly
  • Excepting that you’re a human being and therefore imperfect
  • Allowing yourself to mess up, make mistakes, and learn from them
500

What is the "impact bias"?

We overestimate the impact a very large changes in our lives, when smaller day-to-day changes can make a big difference

500

What are the final 2 steps to accepting emotions through mindfulness practice?

1. Observe  2. Breathe  

3. _______  4. _______

3. Expand 4. Allow