The Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Anxiety

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170 The Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook


ExAMPLE: LINDA’S OPPOSITE-A CTION PLANNING WORKSHEET


Emotion Emotion-Driven
Behavior

Opposite
Action

Time Period Outcomes

Feeling rejected,
angry

1. Withdrawing

2. Attacking

3. Little
revenges

Say what hurt
me in a soft,
nonattacking
voice. Be
civil; end the
conversation
quickly. Do
something for
myself rather than
planning revenge.

As long as the
conversation lasts

My conversations
were calmer, they
didn’t escalate
into fights. I
expressed how I
felt in a civil way.

Guilt 1. Being
“phony nice”

2. Attacking

Apologize straight
up, but let people
know I don’t
like how I was
treated.

As long as the
conversation lasts

People appreci-
ated my honesty.
I expressed how I
felt in an honest
way.

Over several weeks, Linda monitored her opposite-action outcomes to see how the new
behavior worked. What she found was that her anger passed more quickly when she followed her
opposite-action plan. Using a quiet voice and saying out loud what hurt her seemed to soften the
upset. At first, she had been afraid to acknowledge her feelings of rejection because it made her
more vulnerable. But after trying it several times (for example, telling her father she was sad not to
be with him on Christmas day), Linda found that her anger often shifted to something less sharp,
less painful. And she spent less time ruminating about ways she felt victimized.
Opposite action isn’t easy. We won’t pretend that it is. But opposite action quickly dulls the
razor edge of overwhelming emotions. Fear often turns to empowerment, sadness to engagement,
anger to detachment, and shame and avoidance to willingness. Planning opposite-action strategies
can give you an incredibly effective tool for emotion regulation.

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