Title: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
1Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
- An Experiential Approach to Behavior Change
Kirk D. Strosahl PhD Patricia Robinson PhD Email
mconsultinggrp_at_embarqmail.com
2Workshop Objectives
- First An ACT Primer for novice clinicians
- Appreciate the core assumptions about human
suffering that underpin the ACT model - Appreciate the change agenda that clients bring
into therapy and why it is bound to fail - Understand the six core processes of ACT and the
role they play in promoting psychological
flexibility - Demonstrate various ACT interventions that
support work in each of the six core process
areas - We will titrate this based upon how much you
already know about ACT
3Workshop Objectives
- Next Learn how to think like and act like an ACT
therapist! - Learn a simple model for ACT case formulation
- Learn to listen with ACT ears and see with ACT
eyes - Learn how to consolidate and simplify ACT
interventions so that you can be effective
quickly - Learn how to apply ACT with children
- The focus will be on building fluency through
practice, practice and more practice!
4Last But Not Least
- We are going to have you do ACT on yourself
- Pick something in your life that you are
struggling with and havent been able to fix - We are going to ask you to take this issue along
for the ride over the next two days - We will have you practice ACT experiential
interventions on this issue over time - At the end, we will have you stand up (if you
want to) and make a commitment to do something
valuable in this area of your life
5Basic Assumptions
- Philosophical basis in functional contextualism
- Emphasis on pragmatic truth constructfunctionally
workable relationship are truth - What works for one might not work for another
- In the case of humans, there are three contextual
fields covert behavior (thoughts, feelings,
memories, sensations), overt behavior
controlling environmental influences - All contextual fields must be taken into account
if you are going to establish workability
6Basic Assumptions
- Basic Science Underpinning in Relational Frame
Theory (RFT) - Language is based on arbitrary learned relations
that are controlled within relational frames
(rule governed behaviors ,bi-directional
relations, transformation of functions) - Provides an evolutionary advantage, but also
expands the ability to feel, predict, categorize
evaluate makes behavioral avoidance possible
and cognitive dominance likely (stimulus
equivalence and equivalence class) - Experiential avoidance and cognitive fusion are
built into language and amplified by the culture
they are implicated in psychopathology (pliance,
tracking augmentals)
7Basic Assumptions
- Basic human condition is we cant live without
language . . . And we cant live with it - Eliminating verbal relations is impossible
because they are historically acquired and
automatically conditioned - All forms of human experience, both real and
imagined, can enter into relational frames and
govern behavior - Rule governed relations are insensitive to
direct environmental contingencies - All verbal relations function behind the eyes
and therefore operate directly in the moment they
exert behavioral control (i.e., they are not
transparent) - It is possible to exert control over the
FUNCTIONS but not the FORM of verbal relations
8Basic Assumptions
- The hegemony of language is embedded in the
culture language acquisition is the vehicle - Although we are the most advanced species, we are
also the only species that commits suicide - The very properties that make language so
beneficial give it a dark side (evaluate,
compare, justify and project futures, self
reference) - Language processes that serve the community may
be detrimental to the client and are often
buried in the process of thinking
9The Bottom Line
- When this powerful computer is focused inward,
the very properties that moved us to the top of
the feeding chain can become toxic - The two central culprits from a ACT point of
view are. . . - Cognitive fusion Mistaking private events as
reality - Emotional avoidance Unwillingness to make
contact with undesirable, unwanted private mental
events, leading to ever widening patterns of
behavioral constriction
10The ACT Model of Human Suffering and
Psychopathology
- Human pain (physical and psychological) is
ubiquitous, normal and self restorative - Unwillingness to have pain leads to reliance on
avoidance and control based strategies - Excessive use of control avoidance leads to a
loss of contact with committed actions vital
purposeful living - It is not physical/mental pain per se that is the
enemy but our attempts to avoid or control it
lead to disorder and suffering - This cycle of suffering is strongly supported in
the culture through language acquisition and
socialization
11The Principle of Destructive Normalcy
- Health is defined as the absence of distressing
private content - When you have distressing private content, that
is a sign you are not healthy and abnormal - The goal therefore is to eliminate the
distressing content in the service of being
normal (the culture of feel goodism) - In the event distressing content cannot be
readily controlled or eliminated, the human is
required to come up with a justification for why
that is so (reasons) - Reasons are culturally taught to be good causes
- The goal therefore is to eliminate and/or control
the identified reasons in the service of
achieving health
12The Paradox How the Drive for Normality Insures
Suffering
- The focus on controlling distressing content is a
retread of the mental model for solving
physical challenges in the outside world (define,
analyze, locate and eliminate) - But . . .what if those same rules guaranteed
failure if applied between the ears The RULE
of MENTAL EVENTS - Why?? Because the historical cause not only is an
arbitrary construction but also because history
cannot be eliminated - Result The harder the client tries to decrease
depression or increase confidence, the worse the
situation gets and the more the client engages in
emotional avoidance - At its worst, the client becomes functionally
dominated by historical factor X, not by virtue
of its actual causal influence, but by virtue of
the relational frame that is established in the
reason giving process
13FEAR A Formula for Human Suffering
- Fusion Attaching to unwanted private experiences
(thoughts, feeling, memories, sensations) and
their rule governed functions - Evaluation Imbuing events/experiences with
evaluative properties that become functionally
associated as primary properties - Avoidance Using behavioral or psychological
strategies designed to eliminate or constrict
exposure to distressing private content - Reason Giving Providing a socially supportable
justification for dysfunctional and unworkable
behaviors
14Your Personal ACT
- Pick a problem that is uncomfortable for you
emotionally and has persisted for at least a
while in your life. Then contemplate the
following questions - How will you know when this problem is solved?
What will you notice is different? - What have you been trying to accomplish with your
actions thus far? - What role is emotional avoidance playing?
- What role is behavioral avoidance playing?
- How would you define a healthy outcome for
this situation? Why havent you been able to
achieve it?
15Definition of ACT
- ACT uses acceptance and mindfulness processes,
and commitment and behavior change processes, to
produce greater psychological flexibility.
16Psychological Flexibility
- is contacting the present moment fully as a
conscious human being, and based on what the
situation affords changing or persisting in
behavior in the service of chosen values.
17The Six Core Processes of ACT
- Defusion Establishing new functions for
thoughts, feelings, memories, sensations - Acceptance Non-judgmental awareness
- Getting in the present moment Showing up
- Self as context Contacting the transcendental
sense of self in which all experience is safe - Valuing A process that instantiates goal
directed behavior - Committed action Engaging in behaviors that are
consistent with personal values
18(No Transcript)
19Acceptance and Mindfulness Processes
You can chunk them into two larger groups
20Commitment and Behavior Change Processes
and
Thus the name Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
21The Common Core of All of These Processes is
22One Important Caveat
- The six core processes are not empirically
derived and we dont know how they relate or even
if they exist as functionally separate processes! - We do know that psyflex as a construct shows up
as a powerful mediator of treatment effects in
ACT - Our best attempts to measure acceptance and
mindfulness have at most revealed two factors - A general factor that seems to involve
willingness to have unpleasant experience - A weak second factor involving a tendency to
approach rather than avoid situations - Oakum's razor actually helps us poor clinicians!
23What Does This Mean?
- We might be taking something that is actually
simple and making it into something that is
complex (something that eggheads have been known
to do!) - Basically, if ACT is having an impact, it will
probably be in two main areas - Increased willingness and ability of the client
to stay psychologically present when confronted
with painful content - Increased willingness to approach rather than
avoid potentially painful situations - This leads to a higher probability of workable
outcomes.
24Core Attributes of the ACT Therapist
- Walking the walk versus talking the talk
- In addition to targeting them, ACT encourages the
therapist to model acceptance, defusion, getting
present, and values through self disclosure and
consistently applying these to oneself - ACT encourages the therapist to implement these
in the interaction between the therapist and
client so that they become defining features of
the therapeutic relationship
25Part II How to Do ACT
- Accept What is there to be experienced, fully
and without defense, for what it is, not what it
says it is - Choose Based upon your closely held values,
choose what you would like to be about here - Take Action Engage in committed actions that
embody your values, inhaling the distressing
personal content as it appears
26Three Main Polarities In ACT Practice
- AcceptanceFusion polarity contains defusion,
willingness, acceptance - This undermines emotional avoidance
- Choose mindfullymindless choosing polarity
contains self experience, evaluation/reason
giving and valuing - This undermines rule following, hidden
evaluations, reason giving and attachment to the
self story - Take action-avoidance of action polarity contains
willingness, value based goal setting to create
exposure to vitality producing life moments - This undermines behavioral avoidance
27ACT Case Formulation The Functional Analysis
- Prior to initiating ACT interventions, it is very
important to conduct a functional analysis - FA allows the therapist to innocently collect
information and reflect themes - FA provides data on core aspects of covert/overt
behavior-environment relationships - FA allows the therapist to listen strategically
and for the client to tell and invest in their
story - FA will typically reveal what the clients
approach has been to addressing distressing
content - FA allows the therapist to immediately begin
inserting the clients direct experience with
control avoidance strategies
28ACT Case Formulation
- In your functional analysis, look for the
following - To do behavior X requires me to have attribute
Z - Fusion with a rule
- I have too much (little) attribute Z, which
means Im not healthy - Evaluation
- Since I have a problem with attribute Z, I cant
do X - Avoidance
- Attribute Z is causing me not to do X Ergo,
we need to work on factor Z - Reason giving, using reasons as causes
29Case Formulation Identify the Unworkable Change
Agenda
- A depressed client might give you a string like
this - I have been put on work disability because of my
depression. (reasons as causes) - When you feel as down as I have been feeling, you
cant function on the job like the others and you
feel like a failure (evaluation) - The only way I can control my depression is by
staying away from work. (emotional and behavioral
avoidance) - I need to figure out what is causing my
depression in the first place and then I will be
able to get on top of it. (fusion) - Once my depression is under control, I can go
back to work (fusion)
30Why Doesnt the Change Agenda Work?
- In almost every case. . .
- Avoiding situations that produce unwanted private
experiences creates a paradoxical effect (missing
work creates more depression, not less
depression) - The arbitrary assumption that private events
cause behavior creates a trap you cant behave
differently until you feel differently (but since
missing work is increasing depression, the person
is now locked into the causal equation and cant
return to work) - When the conditions specified in the change
agenda cant be met, you can only explain your
predicament but there is actually little you can
do about it.
31Simplify Your Approach
- You dont have to go through all six core
processes to be doing ACT! - In more functional patients, there might be one
polarity that you are going to target - You want to use your assessment data to answer
this question - What is the main issue this client is having and
what is the best point of entry to attack that
problem? - In many cases, ACT might turn out to be a single
session therapy or a very brief intervention - As patients become more chronically distressed,
the number of polarities involved increases and
this will lengthen therapy
32Listen With ACT Ears
- Watch the video segment
- Two Groups
- Group 1 looks at the tape from a content level
focusing on insight, motivation, therapist bait - Group 2 looks at tape using an ACT framework such
as what core processes are invoked, what is the
function of the problem, role of fusion,
emotional avoidance, etc.
33Acceptance-Fusion Polarity
- Accepting the fact that things are not working as
they should (What have you tried? How has it
worked?) - Accepting the cost of this unworkable behavior
(What has it cost you?) - Accepting the paradoxical nature of mental
control, despite the seeming logic of it all
(Control is the problem) - Accepting that control is not working and wont
ever work (Creative hopelessness) - Accepting the presence of rule infested reactive
mind (Mind is not your friend) - Accepting all mental experiences for what they
are, not what they appear to be (Defusion)
34 What have you tried? How has it worked? What has
it cost you?
- Functionally analyze the scope of avoidance
- Look at all the things the client has tried to
solve the problem - Consider that coming into therapy itself is
another problem solving attempt - Have client define what solving the problem
means - Look for controlling distressing content as the
goal - Ask the client to rate whether past actions have
indeed solved the problem - Ask client to consider whether the problem has
actually worsened over time - If appropriate, ask the client to assess the
cost of using these solutions
35Creative Hopelessness
- Experientially, the client has to make contact
with this paradox - The harder you try to control an unwanted private
experience, the bigger it gets - Control and experiential avoidance might work
temporarily, but rarely do their effects last and
most often there is a rebound effect that makes
things worse - As logical as this approach seems, it will NEVER
work - It isnt that YOU are hopeless, but that this
STRATEGY for addressing these unwanted events is
hopeless - Before you can try something new, you have to
stop what doesnt work
36Creative Hopelessness
- Person in the hole metaphor
- A basic ACT intervention
- Gives therapist a language tag to use
throughout therapy - Are you digging right now?
- Refusing to walk in order to avoid holes sounds
like a pretty boring life - Analyzing how you fell in the hole isnt going
to help you get out - Blaming life for producing holes wont eliminate
the holes
37Control Is the Problem, Not the Solution
- It is important to give this trap a name
- Trying to avoid Mr. Anxiety
- Checking out rather than checking in
- This trap has the paradoxical effect of adding
to, rather than subtracting from, suffering - Clean vs. Dirty Suffering
- Would you be willing to have the clean stuff if
we could find some way to reduce the dirty stuff? - The experiential cost
- Gain control of your feelings, lose control of
your life - Monsters on the bus exercise makes this point
38Acceptance as the Alternative to Control
- When is acceptance called for?
- Remember the serenity prayer?
- With natural, conditioned uncontrollable private
experiences such as emotions, memories, thoughts,
sensations - When a situation cannot be changed
- Presence of chronic disease, pain, terminal state
- The attitudes, beliefs and behaviors of others
- When change or control strategies produce
paradoxical results (i.e., try not to think about
X)
39When is control called for?
- When the event in question is under the
organisms direct stimulus control - Behavioral responses in the present moment
- Willingness to enter into a situation
- Being present
- Holding values
- Making commitments
40Willingness and Acceptance
- Often confused as being one and the same but they
are not - Willingness is an action of willfully exposing
oneself - Purposely putting oneself in front of distressing
content - This type of willingness is addressed as a part
of acceptance - Acting and continuing to act in a particular way
even though the action produces distressing
content - This type comes up in the context of committed
action - Acceptance is a stance of holding distressing
content without evaluation or struggle
41Role of Willingness
- Without willingness, there is no acceptance, but
there can be no acceptance even though
willingness is present (you expose yourself on
purpose and then struggle with what shows up,
even though you dont run) - Behavioral avoidance is mainly caused by low
willingness - Would you be willing to go to the super market
even though doing so will push your buttons? - Experiential avoidance is mainly caused by low
acceptance - Can you simply watch your anxiety without trying
to suppress, control or eliminate it?
42Role of Willingness
- Willingness work tends to come earlier than
acceptance, but sometimes they can be paired - Do not assume that low levels of willingness
automatically predict low levels of acceptance - Client might be behaviorally avoidant but quite
capable of accepting distressing content. - This could be a fusion or values issue, rather
than an acceptance issue - Willingness-suffering-workability exercise is a
form of emotional willingness practice that you
can use very early to begin preparing the client
for acceptance work
43When Lack of Acceptance Is A Problem
- Usually, it starts with unwillingness statements.
- I wont go there if I have to feel anxious or sad
- Unwilling to get in front of unpleasant feelings
- Thinking about my divorce is just too painful
- Unwillingness to be in the presence of grief,
loss or self critical thoughts - I want to put this behind me and get rid of it
- Unwillingness to make contact with personal
history or present moment - I just want to get over this
- Unwillingness to be exposed to distressing
content
44When Lack of Acceptance Is a Problem
- But it can morph into a problem with taking an
accepting posture, usually as a result of fusion - I just cant get my mind to stop giving me these
thoughts - These memories are just too scary for me to stay
with them - Why cant I feel normal like everyone else
- I know I shouldnt believe these thoughts but
they are just so real - Im having so much chest pain right now that I
cant focus on my anxiety
45Your Personal Work
- Look at your problem situation from this angle
- What is showing up in the situation that is
pushing my hot buttons? - Write down any thoughts, feelings, memories,
physical sensations that come along for the ride - Up to now, how willing have you been to enter
into this situation and deal with it somehow? - What would you have to be willing to accept to
allow you to stay in the situation and deal? - Have you been accepting this stuff or have you
been avoiding it?
46The Role of Fusion
- Basically, problems with acceptance and
willingness originate in fusion - Fusion with rules about the dangerous nature of
private experience (negative feelings are bad for
you traumatic memories create more trauma to
establish health, you must be able to control
these events) - Taken literally, rules make it impossible to
participate in direct experience because of its
perceived toxicity - Thus, you must experientially and behaviorally
avoid participating, but this doesnt work either
47Defusion and Acceptance
- Basically, defusion strategies are designed to. .
- Create a space between thought and thinker
- Undermine the clients confidence in the utility
of minding their mind in certain circumstances - Appreciate the limits of brain behavior as
applied to natural, whole human behaviors - To look at mental events for what they are, not
what they appear to be - All in the service of stalling sense making and
reason giving - Defusion promotes willingness willingness
promotes acceptance
48Principles of Defusion and Experiential Exercises
- Principle 1 Find metaphors that structure
seeing the process of mental activity for what
it is - Phishing
- Sunglasses
- Two computers metaphor
- Alien
- Im having the thought that. ..
- Who am I talking to right now?
49Principles of Defusion and Experiential Exercises
- Principle 2. Notice the automatic nature of
mental events and their ease of programming - No pain, no gain
- What are the numbers?
- Blah, Blah, Blah
50Principles of Defusion and Experiential Exercises
- Principle 3. Notice their paradoxical nature when
you try to control them -
- Blondes have more
- Red Volkswagen
- Try really hard to be spontaneous
-
-
51Principles of Defusion and Experiential Exercises
- Principle 4. Create a context that weakens the
the illusion of literality - Reactive Mind and Wise Mind
- Milk, milk, milk
- There are four of us in here
- Thank your mind for that thought
- Funny voices
-
-
52Principles of Defusion and Experiential Exercises
- Principle 5. Notice their limitations and
attachments - Tell me how to walk
- Sunrise-Sunset
- Get off your buts
53Principles of Defusion and Experiential Exercises
- Principle 6. Reveal how these operations are
hidden within language -
- Observe a person
- Study an object, evaluate an object
- Kaleidoscope
54Your Personal Work
- We are going to do an experiential exercise
called railroad crossing - Prime yourself with the private events that you
find unacceptable in your hot button situation
(i.e., read them to yourself several times, so
you can bring them up when the time comes) - We are going to practice putting these events on
railroad cars one by one and observe them cross
your vision - If you get pulled out of the exercise by some
other mental event, put that on a railroad car - We are going to do this for 10 minutes or so
55Choose Mindfully-Mindless Choosing Polarity
- Being mindful that reactive mind leads to living
in the past or future, not the present
(attachment to conceptualized self) - Being mindful that reactive mind traps you in an
illusory process of sense making and story
telling (description-evaluation) - Using wise mind to offset the mindless rule
following of reactive mind (do what works, not
what ought to work) - Getting in the present moment allows you to see
the world the way it actually is (Mindfulness
exercises) - Using wise mind to reveal your true values
(values work exercises) and the course you are
on (Bulls Eye) - Using wise mind to respond flexibly in the
present moment (workability)
56Addressing Obstacles Posed by the Conceptualized
Self
- In ACT, we talk about each patient having a
story that can function like a lockbox - Heres who I am and how I came to be that way and
why nothing can ever change my reality - The key is to get the client to lose confidence
in the sanctity and unquestioned truth of the
story - Autobiography re-write exercise
- Self story wheel
- Time line
- DONT argue about how rational the story is
let the experiential exercise show that each
story is arbitrary and there are endless possible
stories
57Two Forms of Self Experience Comprise Wise Mind
- Present Moment Awareness
- Being in the moment and absorbing what is there
without mental interference (observer self) - This is an attention skill that can be learned
- Simple Awareness
- The you that is aware of the present moment
- The you that is your consciousness
- The you that has always been there
- This is not a skill but rather is a result of
sustained present moment awareness that is a skill
58Getting in the Present Moment
- In session, the therapist looks for shifts,
tries to elicit avoided experiences and models
this openness - What just showed up for you?
- Can you stay with that for just a minute?
- Is there anything about this that is actually
toxic to you right here and now? - Im willing to stay right here if you are
willing to be here - Mindfulness exercises can help defuse the
threatening aspects of being in the present
moment
59Simple Awareness
- A transcendent sense of self that is bigger
than all of the products of consciousness - Contact with this space can have life changing
impacts - Various ACT exercises make the point
- Chessboard metaphor
- Leaves on a stream
- The you that you call you
- Various meditation and mindfulness exercises
60Your Personal Work
- Loving Kindness Meditation
- We are going to have you think about all aspects
of your problem situation (your history with it,
your resentments, your attachments, your fears,
hopes, etc.) - We want you to meditate on this situation with
soft eyes and inject into it the four right
paths, done one at a time - Compassion
- Temperance
- Prudence
- Justice
- We will practice this meditation for about 15
minutes
61Role of Values
- Values are seldom talked about in relation to
mindful action they are normally thought of as
the top end of committed action - Important to distinguish values from valued
actions - Valued actions ARE the twin of commitment
- In ACT, values perform a number of important
purposes - Contact with values organizes present moment
experience - Values allow the clients to parse contingencies
in the present situation (i.e., you cant know
whether something is working unless there is an
existing framework for knowing what working is)
62Workability, Vitality and Values
- The pathway to vitality is basically engaging in
actions that resonate with personal values - Workability is the ACT term for the extent to
which actions are or are not consistent with
values. It is the yardstick for measuring how
therapy is working. - Workability can be assessed situation ally.
- How did it work for you to get drunk last night
when your wife got angry at you? - Workability can also be assessed globally.
- How do you feel your life is working right now in
terms of giving you a sense of vitality purpose
and meaning? - Workability is a good place to go to when you get
stuck in session!
63Clinically Important Properties of Values
- Values are a product of wise mind and thus can be
suppressed, but not eliminated, by certain
activities of reactive mind - Fusion with a toxic self story
- Excessive pliance
- Excessive behavioral control through reason
giving - Not based upon reasons, but rather represent
starting assumptions (I stand for X) and cannot
be intellectually derived - Cannot be obtained by any single achievement and
thus exerts continuous behavioral control (there
is always more west to go) - Values function as the fuel for committed
action
64What Freud Said!
- The foundation of freedom from neurosis is the
successful pursuit of three main objectives in
living - Work
- Love
- Play
- Consider this Freud was the ultimate
contextualist!
65Areas for ACT Values Assessment
- Work/career/community usefulness
- Love/intimate relationships
- Family/parenting
- Friends/social connectedness
- Personal growth
- Health and hygiene
- Spirituality
66ACT Value Clarification Strategies
- Many techniques, but the core approach
- Use the common sense language of free choice
- Ask what they really want
- Shape the answer by
- distinguishing values from goals
- confronting pliance and avoidance
- being completely and sincerely supportive
- Funeral Exercise is the most often used ACT
strategy
67Your Personal Work
- Bulls Eye Exercise
- Think about the area of living that is being
pulled for in your hot button situation - Sometimes, only one or two areas of personal
valuing are impacted by a painful situation - Complete the bulls eye values exercise in the
area (s) involved (health, work/play,
relationships) - Rate how on target you think you are in this hot
button situation. How do you feel about this? - What behaviors are consistent? Inconsistent?
68Take Action-Avoid Action Polarity
- Commit to voting with your feet, in accordance
with your values (valued actions) - Take action knowing that it will trigger
distressing content and commit to continuing to
act (willingness the overt behavior) - Committed actions are choices that are made with
reasons, but not for reasons (choosing versus
deciding) - Committed acts are qualities no matter how small
or large as you want them to be (like jumping) - Committed action triggers a process that never
ends until you do (journey metaphors) - Re-attaching to the self story is the main
barrier to following the path of committed action
(who would be made right if you got healthy)
69Role of Committed Action
- ACT is ultimately an old school behavior
therapy this is all about finding more effective
ways of behaving in the world - All of our prior work is for naught if the client
does not engage in ever widening patterns of
workability - Acceptance for acceptances sake diminishes the
work - Mindfulness that does not lead to valued action
is called MBCT!
70Clinical Aspects of Committed Action
- Actions which are consistent with ones
self-identified values - These actions are choices that will be made in
the presence of reasons, but not for reasons - Not choosing is a form of choice, often involving
succumbing to reason giving - Committed action is a qualitative rather than
quantitative act - The workability of life in the present moment is
generally greatest when actions are consistent
with values - Committed actions invariably elicit distressing
private content! To be alive means to invite
these in the door.
71Clinical Use of Choice
- Choice is one of the trickier concepts in ACT and
is not always understood and can generate
resistance. - Think of choice as a for the sake of which
behavior. It occurs as an act of free will.
(Diving on a hand grenade to protect other people
from being hurt) - However, choices are ongoing behavioral
processes, not outcomes. You have to choose over
and over again (a good example is recovery from
addiction) - You dont HAVE to choose a particular act over
any other actyou get to pick. It is OK to let a
client choose NOT to change! - Reframe reason giving as choice making.
- Dont use choosing as a way of brow beating the
client!
72Principles for Promoting Committed Action
- Think small and accumulate positives
- Focus on the qualitative aspect of committing
to an action - Jump from a paper, book, chair
- Small committed actions can stimulate large
amounts of distressing content - Eye contact exercise
- Goals are the process by which the process
becomes the goal (vitality is in the seeking, not
the acquisition) - Swamp metaphor, hiking metaphor, skiing metaphor
73Addressing Barriers to Committed Action
- Are skills deficits going to be an issue?
- If so, provide skills training
- Being righteous rather than being real
- Corpus Delecti no body, no crime
- Forgiveness to give the grace that came before
- Fish hook metaphor
- Being response-able and responsible
- Choose each step exercise
- Inhale broken commitments, name them honestly
- Hop A Long Cassidy metaphor
74ACT with Children Data
- High levels of EA mediate the relationship
between childhood abuse and poor outcomes in
adulthood, including psychological distress and
substance abuse (Marx Sloan, 2002 Simons,
Ducette, Kirby, Stahler, Shipley, 2003) - Children with anxiety disorders more likely to
propose avoidance solutions to ambiguous
scenarios than diagnosis-free and externalizing
children (Barrett et.al., 1996)
75ACT Strategies with Children Teens
- Use less logical and literal methods (metaphors,
paradox, experiential exercises) - Children as young as 3-6 yrs. Prefer and
demonstrate greater compliance with metaphorical
vs. literal language during progressive muscle
relaxation (Heffner, Greco, Eifer, 2003) - Less instructive quality of metaphor and paradox
invites less rebellion from teens
76ACT Strategies with Children and Teens
- Dominance of literal language is less established
in teens than adults (shorter hs of living in
their minds) - Capacity for abstract thinking emerges
- Teens are ready to question rules
- Teens may be particularly receptive to learning
strategies that increase psychological
flexibility - Opportunity for PREVENTION (rather than
remediation) of maladaptive rule following,
fusion, and experiential control
77Suggestions
- Allow metaphors to develop out of context of
treatment - Use props, artwork, games, visual aides
- Include parents, teachers, and peers/sibs
whenever possible and appropriate (Morris
Grecco, 2002 Murrell, Coyne, Wilson, 2004)
78Suggestions
- Use with Behavioral Parent Training
- All ages, particularly with adolescence with
their parents - Boost impact of behavioral family therapy/ parent
training with children with multiple behavior
disorders
79 Apply ACT to One of Your Difficult Cases
- Create an ACT formulation of the clients
problem. - Which polarity is likely to be the best point of
entry? - Think of one or two strategies you could use.
- What challenges might you run into when you try
these strategies? - How can you model what you want your client to
learn? - Discuss this case with your partner
80Your Personal Work
- Time to stand up and be counted! Go back to your
bulls eye exercise, to the last page. - Are you willing to once again expose yourself to
this situation? - Are you committed to accepting what shows up for
you in that situation? - Are you willing to carry the four noble truths
along with you? - Will you commit to a specific action or set of
actions that are consistent with your values?