1 / 39

ACT Made Simple Dr Russ Harris

ACT Made Simple Dr Russ Harris. You can download this presentation from the Therapists and Coaches page on:. www.thehappinesstrap.com. Workshop Aims. Understand the ACT model Experience the 6 core processes Learn practical tools and techniques Have some fun

nascha
Download Presentation

ACT Made Simple Dr Russ Harris

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACT Made SimpleDr Russ Harris You can download this presentation from the Therapists and Coaches page on: www.thehappinesstrap.com

  2. Workshop Aims • Understand the ACT model • Experience the 6 core processes • Learn practical tools and techniques • Have some fun • Leave here inspired to learn more

  3. What is ACT? •  Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: an empirically- supported mindfulness-based therapy, created by Steven Hayes in 1986 • Acceptanceof what is out of your personal control and Commitmentto taking action that enriches your life. • The aim of ACT is to create a rich full and meaningful life, while accepting the pain that inevitably goes with it. • Symptom reduction is not the goal

  4. What is ACT? • ACT teaches psychological skills (mindfulness skills) to deal with painful thoughts and feelings more effectively – in such a way that they have much less impact and influence. • ACT helps you to clarify what is truly important and meaningful to you (your values) - then use that knowledge to guide and motivate behavioral change, to improve your quality of life.

  5. What Is Mindfulness? • Mindfulness: awareness with openness and curiosity • Buddhism is often cited as the origin of mindfulness practice, but actually you can find it in all the world’s great religions • ACT is not a religion. It is a scientific evidence-based behavioral therapy, based on applied behavioral analysis.

  6. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Defusion Watch your thinking Committed action Do what works Self-as-context Pure awareness

  7. The Mindfulness “Formula” • 1. Notice X • 2. Let your thoughts come and go • 3. Let your feelings be as they are • 4. Drift off, come back

  8. The Mindfulness “Formula” • Alternatives to “notice”: observe, focus, pay attention to, be aware of • Alternatives to “acceptance”: allow it, open up, make room, create space, let it be, sit with it, drop the struggle, hold it gently, hold it lightly, soften up around it

  9. Workability • Is what you are doing working in the long term to make life rich, full and meaningful? • If yes, keep doing it • If no, do something different • Don’t be a “mindfulness Nazi” • Fusion and avoidance are NOT inherently bad. We only target them when they get in the way of a rich and full life.

  10. “Creative Hopelessness” • AKA “Confronting the agenda” • Client’s agenda: I want to control how I feel • Control is the opposite of mindfulness • 3 questions: • What have you tried? • How has it worked? • What has it cost?

  11. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Defusion Watch your thinking Committed action Do what works Self-as-context Pure awareness

  12. Defusion techniques • Leaves on a stream • Let your thoughts come and go like passing cars, clouds in the sky etc. • Your mind is a story teller; thoughts are stories; • Your mind is like a radio - let it play on in the background • Use your hand as a “chatterbox” • “Hands as thoughts” metaphor

  13. Defusion techniques • I’m having the thought that … • I notice I’m having the thought that … • Sing thoughts, e.g. to Happy Birthday • Hear thoughts in silly voices • Put thoughts on a computer screen and play with font, color, case, format; or animate them; or add a karaoke ball

  14. Defusion techniques • Notice what your mind is telling you • How old is this story? • What happens when you get caught up in it? • Does it help you to hold this story tightly? • Does it help you to let this story run your life/ bully you around/ dictate what you do?

  15. Defusion techniques • Naming the story – if we put every thought, feeling memory linked to this issue into a book or movie, what would you call it? • Repetition • Pop-up thoughts: • Children should be seen and … • Blondes have more … • Every cloud has …

  16. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Defusion Watch your thinking Committed action Do what works Self-as-context Pure awareness

  17. The Mindfulness Formula • 1. Notice X • 2. Let your thoughts come and go • 3. Let your feelings be as they are • 4. Drift off, come back!

  18. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Defusion Watch your thinking Committed action Do what works Self-as-context Pure awareness

  19. Values • You are 80 years old looking back on today. Complete these sentences: • I spent too much time worrying about … • I spent too little time doing things such as ….

  20. Values • A value = a desired quality of ongoing action • Compass metaphor: a value is like a direction you want to move in e.g. West • Committed action is like actually travelling West • Goals are like the bridges or mountains or rivers you aim to cross. • To be loving and supportive = value • Marriage = goal

  21. Values Clarification • Routine questions: what would you start/stop if this was no longer an issue? • What gives you a sense of meaning and purpose? • When do you feel most alive? • What really matters, in the big picture? • For suicidal clients: what has stopped you from killing yourself?

  22. Values Clarification • 80th Birthday • Magic wand • Role models • Childhood dreams • Values questionnaires • Documentary of you – now and later

  23. Values Clarification • Tombstone • Eulogy • Funeral • You know you only have one week to live,but you can’t tell anyone

  24. The “I Don’t Know” Monster • What is the function of “I don’t know”? • If genuine lack of understanding: Explain values, and/or provide a list • If automatic response: Defusion • If avoidance: Defusion, Values & Workability. Facilitate willingness, then do experiential exercises

  25. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Committed action Do what works Defusion Watch your thinking Self-as-context Pure awareness

  26. Committed Action • Values to goals: short, medium and long term • What’s the smallest, simplest, easiest step you can take in the next 24 hours? • Live person’s goals • Specific goals • Break goals down into actions • On a scale of 0 – 10, how likely are you to do this? If client scores 5 or less, reassess!

  27. Committed Action • Write yourself a personal goal, in line with a core value, that you will do in the next week • As you do this, notice what your mind says • Now commit to doing it: tell your partner what you will do – and as you do it, notice a) how you feel and b) what your mind tells you

  28. Barriers to Action • F.E.A.R. • Fusion • Excessive goals • Avoidance of discomfort • Remoteness from values

  29. The Antidote to FEAR • D.A.R.E. • Defusion • Acceptance of discomfort • Realistic goals • Embracing values

  30. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Defusion Watch your thinking Committed action Do what works Self-as-context Pure awareness

  31. Self-as-context • AKA self-as-perspective, the observing self, the silent self, the silent witness, • My opinion: the best term is “pure awareness” • The “part of you” that is aware of everything else • The “place” from which you observe • The chessboard metaphor

  32. Self-as-context • Thinking Self versus Observing Self: playing tennis, watching a sunset • The stage show of life: on that stage is everything you can see, hear, touch, taste and smell, plus all your thoughts and feelings • You can watch any part of the show, or all of it at once • The show changes continually; the part of you that observes the show does not

  33. 6 Core Processes of ACT The Present Moment Be here now Acceptance Open up Values Know what matters Psychological Flexibility Defusion Watch your thinking Committed action Do what works Self-as-context Pure awareness

  34. Acceptance • Observe it: location, size, outline, depth, temperature, hot spots, cold spots, movement, weight, vibration, pulsation • Breathe into it • Open up/ make room/ create space • Allow it: you don’t have to like it or want it or approve of it; just let it be • Physicalize it: if it was an object, what shape color, texture, temperature, weight, surface would it have?

  35. Acceptance • Choice: 1) no pain, but you lose your capacity to love and care or 2) you get to love and to care, but you feel pain when there’s a gap between what you want and what you’ve got. Which do you choose? • Place a hand on the pain • Soften up/ loosen up around the pain • Hold it gently, like a crying baby or a frightened puppy

  36. Acceptance • Normalize: this tells you’re alive and you have a heart; this is what humans feel when there’s a gap between what you want and what you’ve got. • Expand awareness: This pain is one actor on the stage – bring up the lights on the rest of the stage show

  37. Conceptualization • 1. What direction does the client want to take their life in? • 2. What’s stopping them? • a) What are they fused with? • b) What are they avoiding? • c) What ineffective actions are they taking?

  38. Conceptualization ACTION ACTION Mindless Fused Avoidant Ineffective Mindful Valued Willing Effective WORKABILITY

  39. A.C.B.S. – Why Join? • www.contextualpsychology.org You can download this presentation from the Therapists and Coaches page on: www.thehappinesstrap.com

More Related