Quote:
Originally Posted by hankster
Thank you for your comments. It was not my intention to sound patronizing. I identified a lot with the original post. I was often complaining that something was wrong at work or in my therapy, and that i had a better way, and that it was very important we do things my way. I now believe this behavior was not in my best interest, but it was the best i could do at the time. Nevertheless, i was acting out a childhood pattern of being overly responsible, as my parents neglected me, so i had to take care of myself. I often panicked. I detected the same note of panic in the original post.
So i suggested finding and using these specific lessons of dbt here. It is a little unusual, but i think it would work. And i thought Scarlet would find it intriguing, challenging, yet solvable. Personally i hate boring silly made-up problems. But i do love a good metaphor, and in this way, Scarlet would be tending her own dbt garden and hopefully she would enjoy a tasty and healthy harvest.
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I personally didn't find your post judgmental or patronizing.
From what little I do know, DBT isn't about invalidating emotions. It's about trying to perceive "the grey" instead of black and white....use the "wise mind" instead of reacting purely off of logic or emtions. So my understanding is that DBT is about balance. You meet your needs by acknowledging both the emotions and logic before simply reacting to a situation. (Please correct me if I'm wrong!!!).
So in this case, I should identify my needs, prioritize my needs, and then... I'll figure out the rest
Sorry I don't know much about "wise mind". They don't have a mindfulness module; they just mix it in throughout the other modules. They haven't really included any mindfulness yet
But I will go skim my workbook about it. It's a great challenge for me. Exactly what I want when I'm trying to learn.
Thank you Hankster