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Empowering Families in Recovery Blog

A Key to Lasting Change

10/22/2014

2 Comments

 
Coping Skills Help Make Behavior Change Last
~Carrie Wilkens, Ph.D., Center for Motivation and Change

Making a change in your life is a pretty big deal. If you’ve moved into the action stage of change, we’d first like to first offer you a huge congratulations! This is a bold move, and one that deserves a lot of praise! Next we’d like to offer you some helpful tips to help make this change a little bit easier, and hopefully a lot more permanent!

Learn a few coping skills

You may have heard this term, coping skills, before and you may not really know what it means. Coping skills are things that you can do to help tolerate a difficult time by using constructive and positive strategies. More specifically, coping skills are what you need to tolerate the difficult moments that come along with making a significant change in your life (like giving up an unhealthy habit, learning a healthy behavior, not giving into impulses, etc.).

When we talk about coping skills, we can break them up into two categories, internal (things that happen in your own head, no one can necessarily tell that you’re doing them) and external (things that happen outside your own head, more active and visible to others).

You already have a ton of coping skills that you use daily (even hourly!) without realizing it. The goal is to start to recognize what you do to manage different life situations and apply those skills to the changes you are trying to make, in a more “conscious” manner. This way, when you feel a little shaky or insecure about achieving your new behavioral changes, you can apply some of the skills that already come naturally to you. As you try to change a habit however, you may realize you are lacking some skills and that you need to learn a few more!

What is the best way to learn new coping skills? Involve other people! When you are making a change, whether it is eating healthier, or trying to exercise more regularly, or stopping/changing your use of substances, support from other people can be hugely helpful. Studies have found that we often make similar changes as our peer group. In other words, behavior change (both healthy and unhealthy) is contagious and we learn to make changes from watching other people make them. By listening to and watching other people you will speed up your own learning process as you figure out new coping skills to make the changes you are working towards. If you surround yourself with good role models, you will learn a lot. It can also be helpful to find a therapist or mentor who can teach you some of the skills you might be lacking as you face new changes.

Spending time with other people who are trying to make changes, or who have already been successful at making them can also be especially helpful in those moments when your motivation to keep up those changes has waned. Organizations like AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Weight Watchers, and others use the idea and power of a supportive community to help their members maintain difficult changes. Why does this work? There are many reasons, but one of the more powerful ones is that they can cheerlead us when we need a little extra help. You may feel like rolling your eyes at the thought of having/needing a cheerleader in your corner, but give it a chance! Cheerleaders can help pump you up in times when your energy level is low, and help keep you going even when you don’t want to. Sports teams have cheerleaders for this very reason, and you should have some, too.

Another new coping skill? Remembering to reward yourself. You’ve made a bold decision to make a change in your life. Big decisions like this come along with a certain amount of angst, and a certain amount of effort to actually implement the change. At the end of all of this, you deserve a reward. Even if this change is something that you feel you’re “supposed” to be doing, like eating healthier, or stopping using drugs, at this point in your life, it is a change and something that deserves an extra little something. Also, if you know you have a reward coming, it might help you through those tough moments.

What constitutes a reward? Well, that’s different for each person. Whatever you find rewarding (and holds with your stated goals and personal values) can be a reward. Maybe it’s a nice meal (if your goal isn’t food related), or it’s that new outfit you’ve been thinking about buying yourself. Try and pick something that’s immediate, and not too big (you don’t want to use your biggest guns just yet!). You may also want to identify some rewards that are farther away (like a concert that you want to see) which can help you to maintain motivation moving forward.

Starting to make a major change is both exciting and a bit scary. Asking for help and surrounding yourself with good role models or teachers can really help. And rewarding yourself for your efforts and for tolerating all the ups and downs of behavioral change can keep you motivated long enough to really make lasting change.

Dr. Wilkens is a Clinical Director of the Center for Motivation and Change in NYC which she co-founded with Dr. Jeffrey Foote. She specializes in motivational treatments and group psychotherapy, and has worked with traumatized populations in both individual and group modalities.

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30 Journaling Prompts for Self-Discovery 

10/14/2014

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It’s part of building a healthy relationship, or rather a friendship, with yourself. 

As Eleanor Roosevelt said, “Friendship with oneself is all important, because without it one cannot be friends with anyone else in the world.” 

Here are 30 prompts, questions and ideas to explore in your journal to get to know yourself better. 

  1. My favorite way to spend the day is… 
  2. If I could talk to my teenage self, the one thing I would say is… 
  3. The two moments I’ll never forget in my life are… Describe them in great detail, and what makes them so unforgettable. 
  4. Make a list of 30 things that make you smile. 
  5. “Write about a moment experienced through your body. Making love, making breakfast, going to a party, having a fight, an experience you’ve had or you imagine for your character. Leave out thought and emotion, and let all information be conveyed through the body and senses.” (A prompt from Barbara Abercrombie ’s creative book  Kicking In The Wall: A Year of Writing Exercises, Prompts and Quotes To Help You Break Through Your Blocks And Reach Your Writing Goals. )
  6. The words I’d like to live by are… 
  7. I couldn’t imagine living without… 
  8. When I’m in pain — physical or emotional — the kindest thing I can do for myself is… 
  9. Make a list of the people in your life who genuinely support you, and who you can genuinely trust. (Then make time to hang out with them.) 
  10. What does unconditional love look like for you? 
  11. What would you do if you loved yourself unconditionally? How can you act on these things whether you do or don’t? 
  12. I really wish others knew this about me… 
  13. Name what is  enough for you. 
  14. If my body could talk, it would say… 
  15. Name a compassionate way you’ve supported a friend recently. Then write down how you can do the same for yourself. 
  16. What do you love about life? 
  17. What always brings tears to your eyes? (As Paulo Coelho has said, “Tears are words that need to be written.”) 
  18. “Write about a time when work felt real to you, necessary and satisfying. Paid or unpaid, professional or domestic, physical or mental.” (Also a prompt from Abercrombie’s  Kicking in the Wall .)
  19. Write about your first love — whether a person, place or thing. 
  20. Using 10 words, describe yourself. 
  21. What’s surprised you the most about your life or life in general? 
  22. What can you learn from your biggest mistakes? 
  23. I feel most energized when… 
  24. “Write a list of questions to which you urgently need answers.” (This is probably my favorite prompt from Abercrombie’s book.) 
  25. Make a list of everything that inspires you — from books to websites to quotes to people to paintings to stores to the stars. 
  26. What’s one topic you need to learn more about to help you live a more fulfilling life? (Then learn about it.) 
  27. I feel happiest in my skin when… 
  28. Make a list of everything you’d like to  say no to. 
  29. Make a list of everything you’d like to  say yes to. 
  30. Write the words you need to hear. 
Journaling helps us figure out who we are, what we need and what we want. It can help us make better decisions, and focus on the very things that support us in taking compassionate care of ourselves and others. 

- See more at: http://spiritualityhealth.com/articles/30-journaling-prompts-self-discovery#sthash.1mH4pOD7.dpuf
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    Timothy Harrington is passionate about ways to assertively strengthen the link between treatment and long-term recovery for the family.

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  • Home
  • About
    • Why I Do What I Do
    • What Is Sustainable Recovery? >
      • Disclaimer
    • When Should I Start?
    • How Does This Work?
    • Where Am I Located?
    • Client Testimonials
    • Pricing
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • What's Strong with You? Store
    • Unisex Organic Cotton T-shirt w/ Mandala
    • Canvas Wall Hanging
    • Eco Tote Bag
    • Unisex Cotton Tee w/ Graphic & Quote
    • iPhone Case
    • Unisex Organic Tee w/Embroidered Mandala
    • Baseball Cap
  • Resources
    • Families >
      • Intervention/Invitation to Change
      • My Family Guidance
    • Clients/Loved Ones >
      • Change Coaching
      • Men
      • Mindfulness
      • Books
      • Alternative Mutual-Aid Groups for People in Recovery
      • Suggested Wellness Training Program
      • Smart Phone Apps
      • Trauma
      • Shame
      • Preparing to Meet the Psychiatrist
      • 5 Questions to Ask Yourself Why You are Here
    • Professionals >
      • William White
      • Pearls to Ponder
      • Addiction as a Psychiatric/Mental Health Disorder