Motivation & Mindfulness
Function of Emotions
3 Component Modle/ARC
Cognitive Flexibility
Avoidance & EDBs
100

This is what we do before starting group to share where you are at with yourself and each other.

What is a relational check-in?

100

This is what represents your emotional experience of that day in one snapshot.

What is an EDA?
100

This includes thoughts, physical sensations, and behaviors/urges. 

What is the a 3-component model?

100

This exists deep within our brains, and they influence  how we think about multiple situations.  

What is core beliefs?

100

This refers to any strategies we might use to avoid  feeling strong emotions or to prevent our emotions  from becoming more intense.    

What is emotional avoidance?

200

This is what DARN-C stands for.

What is Desire, Ability, Reasons, Needs, and Commitment?
200

This emotion helps us do our best and anticipate possible challenges that would arise.

What is anxiety?

200

This is what helps understand how emotional experiences unfold over time.

What is the ARC?

200

This is when you automatically predict that the worst  possible scenario is going to happen, without considering other possible outcomes.

What is catastrophizing? 

200

This concept is when people are asked to not think about something, they actually become overly focused on it and cannot help but think about it.

What is the Paradoxical Effect of Suppression?

300

This is what we do when we think of a situation in your life that is difficult, that is causing you stress, calling the situation to mind, and seeing if you can atually feel the stress and emotional discomfort in your body.

What is a self-compassion break?

300

This is when reactions are functional, adaptive,  helpful  AND and directly related to the cues in the situation/memory. 

What is primary emotions?

300

 This information influences how we respond to future situations.

What is Consequences? 

300

The function of this tool is to bring about insight and facilitate new learning, which may not be a ‘feel-good’ experience.

What is the downward arrow?

300

The three types of emotional avoidance.

What is subtle behavioral avoidance, cognitive avoidance, and safety signals?

400

This exercise was designed to help people directly address ambivalence for change by exploring the pros and cons (benefits and risks) of both stating the same and changing.

What is a decisional-balance worksheet?

400

This is being aware of how our body feels in certain emotions can be extremely helpful in telling us when there’s a threat or connection or safety is compromised.  

What is physical sensations?

400

This pertains to anything that happened minutes, hours, or days prior to the emotional response.

What is earlier antecedents? 

400

The goals of this concept is to increase flexibility in your thoughts.

What are cognitive appraisals? 

400

These are avoidant behaviors, while relieving us from the experience of intense or uncomfortable emotions in the short term, can actually limit our lives in important ways, or even be harmful.  

What are Emotion-Driven Behaviors?

500

These are the four concepts to remember when thinking about mindfulness.

Paying attention (1) on purpose, (2) with purpose, (3) in the present moment, and (4) without judgement. 

500

This is when emotions are often not based upon the present moment context; they are often based upon what has happened before, or what we think might happen in the future.

What is secondary emotions?

500

You are expected to utilize the ARC this many times a day.

What is TWO?

500

This can reduce our flexibility when we encounter certain situations, and this can maintain and reinforce the negative thoughts and emotional response cycle.

What are thinking traps?

500

These are what we might try instead of that (ED) behavior.

What is opposite action?